“La conscience et le monde sont donnés d’un même coup: extérieur par essence à la conscience, le monde est, par essence relatif à elle.” (Consciousness and the world are given in the same stroke: external in nature to consciousness, the world is, in essence relative to it.) ~ Paulo Freire, Pedagogy of the Oppressed
In the excerpt from Pedagogy of the Oppressed that I read for Honors Orientation this week, Paulo Freire argues that the existence of the world as we know it is dependent on the fact that we know it. What differentiates our earth, our world, from any other planet in the galaxy is the fact that it is populated by beings who think and understand, thus giving the earth meaning.
Freire tells the story of a Chilean man who was talking with an educated anthropologist about culture. The man said, “Now I see that without man there is no world.” The anthropologist asked him to clarify, wondering if all the men on the planet died, but the animals, trees, and so on remained on the earth, if that would still be a world? “Oh no,” the Chilean peasant said. Because “there would be no one to say: ‘This is a world’.”
If you know me at all, you know that I like ideas. This idea of the existence of a world as dependent on human beings and their understanding of that world is so interesting to me. Oh, I know, it’s philosophical, and a little bit out there, but bear with me. God said, “Let there be light, and there was light” (Gen. 1:3). Until God—a thinking, understanding, knowing being—said “this is a world,” the earth was formless and empty. It was his partially his knowledge and most definitely his power to create that caused an otherwise empty ball of nothingness to become a perfect place for his creation to live—a world.
But what does it take to know something? Before reading this chapter, I may have given you some answer about knowledge being related to learning, memorizing, and being taught by a teacher or read in a book. All of these things are still true, but Freire makes some interesting arguments in this chapter concerning the way students are taught and the effect the method of education has on students’ knowledge and understanding of the material. His arguments made me think about what it means to really educate and learn, especially in a classroom situation.
Freire sets forth two educational models: “banking” and “problem-posing.” In the banking concept of education, knowledge is mute and unchanging and is to be imparted by all-knowing teachers into the empty, open minds of students, who memorize and regurgitate this knowledge and are evaluated on the excellence of their regurgitation. Problem-posing is a much more fluid educational concept, consisting of students and teachers cooperating to discuss problems and issues posed by the teacher for the students’ interactive discussion. Both teacher and student are open to learning new insights about the subject; they are challenged by and directly involved with the problem. Problem-posing education considers more than just the subject, but the subject in relation to people and the world.
Reader, have you tasted and partaken in each of these teaching methods? Let me give a few examples.
One of the things that I like the most about some of my classes here at JBU is that I, as a student, am extremely involved in the classroom learning process. I am not there with an empty mind waiting for my professor to pour all of his knowledge into my head. Instead, I am given texts to read before class and then asked to discuss what I learned from the text with my fellow classmates and my professor. We all learn from each other. I still recognize and respect the superior knowledge and understanding of my professor, but at the same time, I am being asked to personally engage with the often challenging texts and come to my own conclusions with his guidance. His knowledge is still being imparted, and I am still expected to store that knowledge and be able to effectively access it later, but I am directly involved in the learning process in these classes, and I love it.
Even as a homeschooled student, I still had the opportunity to engage the topics I was learning, because most of my education centered on reading and understanding books. I was expected to understand, interpret, and store the knowledge I acquired. I engaged issues and learned from them, mostly by teaching myself from good books.
Both these classroom situations, where problem-posing is the dominant educational method, lead to freedom through knowledge, according to Freire.
But come with me into a different classroom. Here the teacher stands before a group of bored, dispassionate students. We are expected to listen to what he says, because later we will be expected to regurgitate the facts deposited into our heads onto a piece of paper that claims to assess our knowledge. This classroom experience is an example of the banking approach to education. I still acquired knowledge in this classroom, but I would argue that for me, this method was not nearly as engaging or as effective as the afore-mentioned scenario. In the “banking” classroom, I only remembered what I had to. That knowledge was disposable; I learned it, did what I needed to with it (passed a test), and then it had served its purpose and could be left by the wayside to make room for new information. The knowledge never became part of me and the way I perceive the world around me.
In this type classroom situation, no one, teacher or student, really cares much about whether the student actually engages the subject, wrestles with it, and learns from it, as long as they are able to accurately parrot back what they have learned on a test. This sort of domineering control over students’ learning is what, Freire argues, leads to oppression, hence the title of his book.
On one hand, there is nothing new here. Theories about education have abounded over the years, and these are not the only two ways to approach it. But, at the same time, this reading has asked me to think about a subject that I hadn’t really engaged before. What is the power of knowledge and education? How does the way a subject is taught affect the students? Can education lead to freedom or oppression? How does my time here at JBU fit into that? Once again I’ve been made to think, and that’s a good thing.
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