Critical Pedagogy – Week 9 Guidelines
Next week we will continue to explore inclusive pedagogy with a focus on the tenets of critical pedagogy and work of Paulo Freire. Before seminar, please read the Kincheloe article and go through Dr. Fowler’s PowerPoint slides (on Canvas) to familiarize yourself with Paulo Freire’s pedagogy. Many of you are likely familiar with the often-anthologized chapter two from Pedagogy of the Oppressed, but please read or review that chapter as well as the selections from Pedagogy of Freedom, and come to class ready to talk about them – perhaps armed with a good nugget (or two). If at all possible, please also have a look at Freire’s video on curiosity and June Jordon’s Report from the Bahamas.
As usual you may post about whatever resonates with you.
Questions to keep in mind as you read and prepare for class next week:
- What does Freire’s approach to teaching and learning emphasize and why?
- How does Freire define dialogic engagement?
- What would a critical pedagogical praxis look like in your discipline?
- What is the difference, for Freire, between being an “authority” vs. being “authoritarian”?
Image: After the bath (Efter badet’), 1971-76, limestone, by Swedish artist Pye Engström, Västertorp, Stockholm, Sweden. From left to right: Elise Ottesen-Jensen, Paulo Freire, Sara Lidman, Mao Tse-Dong, Angela Davis, Georg Borgström and Pablo Neruda. By Boberger. Photo: Bengt Oberger (Own work) [CC BY-SA 3.0], via Wikimedia Commons