How To Liberate The Oppressed Using The Philosophy Of Freire Essay

PAGES
4
WORDS
1327
Cite

Freire's Pedagogy Of The Oppressed And The Philosophy Of Education Freire (2000) emphasizes the importance of love, charity, reflection (critical thinking), humility and dialogue -- which effects the "indivisible solidarity" -- important for the oppressed to become the liberators of themselves (p. 90). If I were to apply Freire's ideas about philosophy of education, including his ideas about "dialogue," "critical thinking," and the "indivisible solidarity," my classroom would look radically different from what the typical classroom of today looks like. In fact -- there would be no classroom at all. The world would become my classroom, and just as Socrates taught in the marketplace and made the world his classroom, so too would I return to this ancient practice of one of the greatest partakers of dialogue in human history and take myself and my students into the world where we could engage with reality and take serious critical thinking to the next level and apply ourselves to real-world concepts and real-world people, all while maintaining our efforts to achieve that transcendental aim of Freire's philosophy of education, which is true enlightenment/liberation.

This may not seem like a practical application of Freire's philosophy -- but it is really the most faithful application of Freire's philosophy. Freire (2000) asserts that "if I do not love the world -- if I do not love life -- if I do not love people -- I cannot enter into dialogue ... [and that] dialogue cannot exist without humility" (p. 90). To love the world, life, and the people in it, and to enter into dialogue with those people in order to better understand them and ourselves, it is essential to come into contact with them. And one cannot really come into contact with the world by building four walls and sitting inside them, which is what being in a classroom is all about. This raises the question: why have a classroom? Is it in and of itself...

...

Make the field your classroom -- learn from experience: be part of the world and engage -- but do so honestly and directly, like a child, without pretension, without guile, always alert for the truth of things.
But this is merely describing the physicality of the classroom and Freire intends for more than physicality to be re-examined. Yet, in this manner, the ideas that Freire insists upon can be put into practice: humility, for example. What is more humble than being like a poor Franciscan friar? That is how Socrates was in a way -- but he was so social, polite, compelling and focused on truth and wisdom that he had many friends who became real allies and carriers of the flame. In this manner, the content of the "classroom" in which Freire's philosophy is kept alive would be carried out into the world, so that the students can connect with one another and their surroundings, becoming "reflective" and transcendent in their dialogues with the outside world. This is what Freire (2000) means when he states, "It is absolutely essential that the oppressed…

Cite this Document:

"How To Liberate The Oppressed Using The Philosophy Of Freire" (2015, October 05) Retrieved April 16, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/how-to-liberate-the-oppressed-using-the-2157364

"How To Liberate The Oppressed Using The Philosophy Of Freire" 05 October 2015. Web.16 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/how-to-liberate-the-oppressed-using-the-2157364>

"How To Liberate The Oppressed Using The Philosophy Of Freire", 05 October 2015, Accessed.16 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/how-to-liberate-the-oppressed-using-the-2157364

Related Documents

Oppressed Edible Woman The Edible Woman -- Margaret Atwood The Edible Woman offers a look at the conventionalized aspects of society that result in a version of cultural violence which is gender-oppressive. In kaleidoscopic fashion, the protagonist undergoes a series of transformations that are fundamental to her self-identity, her current and future places in society, and her rediscovery of mediating levers to overturn the cultural violence boulder that has come to rest

Online Learning Higher educational institutions have adopted online degrees and courses as a substitute for the conventional classroom instruction. A United States higher institutions study on online education discovered that about 80% of the entire course content those institutions deliver were online courses (Song, 2010). In spite of the definition, an initial sign of the prevalent popularity of about 862 education courses delivered online are contained in a study carried out

Pedagogy -- Langston Hughes and Frederick Douglass Critical Pedagogy in Literature There are two phenomena -- discrete even in their close relation -- called structural violence and cultural violence that I have recently learned to call by their socio-political monikers. A discussion about structural and cultural violence is relevant to the topic of the paper since both exemplify the foundation upon which racial prejudice and justification for social class rests. To

Vocational Education Purpose of Vocational Education and Its Oppressive Nature: Inequality in Education as Japanese Woman (A Reflection of Oppressive Outside World). Education is often viewed as the panacea to social marginalization; it is a tool members of society can use to obtain better wages, acquire social recognition and become socially mobile. Unfortunately, education can also be a tool used for subjugation. It is a tool that aids in continuing the support

Sork What Does Sork Means
PAGES 2 WORDS 689

The most obvious of these limitations is the fact that not everyone learns in the same way. Many people are visual learners, where they need to see something being done before they understand it. Others feel like they have to read about something and study it that way. There are still other people who learn much better by listening, and they really do not retain everything that they need

Moving to a Liberation Theology Introduction The traditional doctrines of Salvation and the Holy Spirit can be viewed differently when approached from the perspective of Liberation Theology. The theological position of the liberation theology is that social justice and the liberation from oppression is the key to executing the philosophy and teachings of Christ on Earth. According to Juan Luis Segundo in The Liberation of Theology, the central premise of Christianity is