Education for Social Change in Indian Context
Education for Social Change in Indian Context
1. More
than a century ago, Emile Durkheim said that education “can be reformed only if
society itself is reformed.” He argued that education “is only the image and
reflection of society. It imitates and reproduces the latter…it does not create
it”.
2 Most
mainstream proposals for improving education assume that our society is
fundamentally sound, but that for some reason, our schools are failing.
Different critics target different villains: poor quality teachers, pampered,
disruptive or ill-prepared students, the culture of their families, unions, bureaucrats,
university schools of education, tests that are too easy, or inadequate
curriculum. But if Durkheim was correct, a society has the school system it
deserves. Denouncing the poor quality of education is like blaming a mirror
because you do not like your reflection.
3 The
first step in improving education is to recognize that the problems plaguing
our schools are rooted in the way our society is organized. We live in a
competitive economy where businesses and individuals continually seek advantage
and higher profits, and where people on the bottom rung of the economic ladder
are stigmatized as failures and blamed for their condition. Our culture
glorifies violence in sports, movies, video games, and on evening
news broadcasts that celebrate the death of others through hygienic
strategic bombings. It is a society where no one feels obligated to pay
taxes for the broader social good and where welfare “reform” means denying
benefits to children if their parents cannot find work; a society that promotes
the need for instant gratification and uses youthful alienation to sell
products; a society where those who do not fit in are shunned (Bowles &
Gintis, 1976).
4 Under
the circumstances, it is not surprising that our school system is designed to
sort children out and leave many uneducated. To legitimize the way our society
is organized, its schools teach competitive behaviour and social inequality as
if they were fundamental law of nature. Just as with the economy, some are
rewarded in school, others are punished, and both groups are taught that
rewards and punishment are the result of their own efforts (Kohn, 1999).
5 As
a teacher educator and a public high school social studies teacher, we try to
avoid being overwhelmed by pessimism during debates over school reform. Even
though we believe that education will not be changed in isolation, we recognize
that efforts to improve schools can be part of a long term struggle to create a
more equitable society in the United States. We also believe that students,
especially high school students, must be part of this struggle and that an
important part of our job as teachers is to help prepare them to participate as
active citizens in a democratic society.
6 Should teachers encourage high school students to work for social change? Thomas Jefferson believed that, in a democratic society, teachers do not really have a choice. According to Jefferson, freedom and republican government rest on two basic principles: “the diffusion of knowledge among the people” and the idea that “a little rebellion now and then is a good thing.” Jefferson supported the right to rebel because he recognized that the world was constantly changing. The crucial question was not whether it would change, but the direction of change. Education was essential so that ordinary citizens could participate in this process, defending and enhancing their liberties.
6 Should teachers encourage high school students to work for social change? Thomas Jefferson believed that, in a democratic society, teachers do not really have a choice. According to Jefferson, freedom and republican government rest on two basic principles: “the diffusion of knowledge among the people” and the idea that “a little rebellion now and then is a good thing.” Jefferson supported the right to rebel because he recognized that the world was constantly changing. The crucial question was not whether it would change, but the direction of change. Education was essential so that ordinary citizens could participate in this process, defending and enhancing their liberties.
7 In
the United States, there has frequently been a close connection between
advocacy for mass public education and demands for expanding democracy, social
equity, and political reform. For example, in the mid-19th century, Horace Mann
championed public education because he believed that the success of the country
depended on “intelligence and virtue in the masses of the people.” He argued
that, “If we do not prepare children to become good citizen...then our republic
must go down to destruction” (The New York Times, 1953).
8 John
Dewey (1939) saw himself within this intellectual tradition. He believed that
democratic movements for human liberation were necessary to achieve a fair
distribution of political power and an “equitable system of human liberties.”
However, criticisms have been raised about limitations in Deweyan approaches to
education, especially the way they are practiced in many elite private schools.
Frequently, these schools are racially, ethnically, and economically
segregated, and therefore efforts to develop classroom community ignore the
spectrum of human difference and the continuing impact of society’s attitudes
about race, class, ethnicity, gender, social conflict, and inequality on both
teachers and students. In addition, because of pressure on students to achieve
high academic scores, teachers maintain an undemocratic level of control
over the classroom. Both of these issues are addressed by Paulo Freire, who
calls on educators to aggressively challenge both injustice and unequal power
arrangements in the classroom and society.
9 Paulo
Freire was born in Recife in northeastern Brazil, where his ideas about
education developed in response to military dictatorship, enormous social
inequality, and widespread adult illiteracy. As a result, his primary
pedagogical goal was to provide the world’s poor and oppressed with educational
experiences that make it possible for them to take control over their own
lives. Freire (1970; 1995) shared Dewey’s desire to stimulate students to
become “agents of curiosity” in a “quest for...the ‘why’ of things,” and his
belief that education provides possibility and hope for the future of society.
But he believes that these can only be achieved when students are engaged in
explicitly critiquing social injustice and actively organizing to challenge
oppression.
10 For
Freire, education is a process of continuous group discussion (dialogue) that
enables people to acquire collective knowledge they can use to change society.
The role of the teacher includes asking questions that help students identify
problems facing their community (problem posing), working with students to
discover ideas or create symbols (representations) that explain their life
experiences (codification), and encouraging analysis of prior experiences and
of society as the basis for new academic understanding and social action
(conscientization) (Shor, 1987).
11 In
a Deweyan classroom, the teacher is an expert who is responsible for organizing
experiences so that students learn content, social and academic skills, and an
appreciation for democratic living. Freire is concerned that this arrangement
reproduces the unequal power relationships that exist in society. In a Freirean
classroom, everyone has a recognized area of expertise that includes, but is
not limited to, understanding and explaining their own life, and sharing this
expertise becomes an essential element in the classroom curriculum. In these
classrooms, teachers have their areas of expertise, but they are only one part
of the community. The responsibility for organizing experiences and
struggles for social change belongs to the entire community; as groups exercise
this responsibility, they are empowered to take control over their lives.
12 We
agree with Freire’s concern that teachers address social inequality and the
powerlessness experienced by many of our students. We also recognize that
it is difficult to imagine secondary school social studies classrooms where
teachers are responsible for covering specified subject matter organized
directly on Freirean principles. Maxine Greene (1993a; 1993b;1993c), an
educational philosopher who advocates a “curriculum for human beings”
integrating aspects of Freire, Dewey, and feminist thinking, offers ways for
teachers to introduce Freire’s pedagogical ideas into the classroom.
13 Greene
believes that, to create democratic classrooms, teachers must learn to listen
to student voices. Listening allows teachers to discover what students are
thinking, what concerns them, and what has meaning to them. When teachers learn
to listen, it is possible for teachers and students to collectively search for
historical, literary, and artistic metaphors that make knowledge of the world
accessible to us. In addition, the act of listening creates possibilities for
human empowerment; it counters the marginalization experienced by students in
school and in their lives, it introduces multiple perspectives and cultural diversity
into the classroom, and it encourages students to take risks and contribute
their social critiques to the classroom dialogue.
14 Greene’s
ideas are especially useful to social studies teachers. Just as historians
discuss history as an ongoing process that extends from the past into the
future, Greene sees individual and social development as processes that are
"always in the making." For Greene, ideas, societies, and people are
dynamic and always changing. She rejects the idea that there are universal and
absolute truths and predetermined conclusions. According to Greene, learning is
a search for “situated understanding” that places ideas and events in their
social, historical, and cultural contexts.
15 Greene
believes that the human mind provides us with powerful tools for knowing
ourselves and others. She encourages students to combine critical thinking with
creative imagination in an effort to empathize with and understand the lives,
minds, and consciousness of human beings from the past and of our contemporaries
in the present. She sees the goal of learning as discovering new questions
about ourselves and the world, and this leads her to examine events from
different perspectives, to value the ideas of other people, and to champion
democracy.
16 During
the Great Depression, striking Harlan County, Kentucky coal miners sang a song
called “Which Side Are You On?” (lyrics available on the web at
www.geocities.com/Nashville/ 3448/whichsid.html). In a book he co-authored with
Paulo Freire, Myles Horton (1990) of the Highlander School argued that
educators cannot be neutral either. He called neutrality “a code word for the
existing system. It has nothing to do with anything but agreeing to what is and
will always be. It was to me a refusal to oppose injustice or to take sides
that are unpopular” (p. 102).
17 James
Banks (1991; 1993), an educational theorist whose focus is on the development
of social studies curriculum, shares the ideas that “knowledge is not neutral,”
and that “an important purpose of knowledge construction is to help people
improve society.” Although Banks is a strong advocate of a multicultural
approach to social studies, he argues that a “transformative” curriculum
depends less on the content of what is taught than on the willingness of teachers
to examine their own personal and cultural values and identities, to change the
ways they organize classrooms and relate to students, and to actively commit
themselves to social change.
18 The
main ideas about education and society at the heart of the philosophies of
Dewey, Freire, Greene, Horton, and Banks are that society is always changing
and knowledge is not neutral—it either supports the status quo or a potential
new direction for society; people learn primarily from what they experience;
active citizens in a democratic society need to be critical and imaginative
thinkers; and students learn to be active citizens by being active citizens.
Assuming that we agree with these ideas, we are still left with these
questions: How do we translate educational theory into practice? What do these
ideas look like in the classroom?
19 In
Alan Singer’s high school social studies classes before becoming a teacher
educator, he promoted transformative goals through direct student involvement
in social action projects as part of New York State’s “Participation in
Government” curriculum. In New York City, periodic budget crises, ongoing
racial and ethnic tension, and the need for social programs in poor communities
provided numerous opportunities to encourage students to become active
citizens. Class activities included sponsoring student forums on controversial
issues, preparing reports on school finances and presenting them as testimony
at public hearings, writing position papers for publication in local newspapers,
and organizing student and community support for a school-based public health
clinic. One of our most successful programs was organizing students across the
city to struggle for a condom availability program in the high schools.
20 During
each activity, social studies goals included making reasoned decisions based on
an evaluation of existing evidence, researching issues and presenting
information in writing and on graphs, exploring the underlying ideas that shape
our points of view, giving leadership by example to other students, and taking
collective and individual responsibility for the success of programs.
21 Singer
now works with a number of teachers who are part of the Hofstra University New
Teachers Network and who share a commitment to empower students as social
actvists and critical thinkers. Michael Pezone is a high school social studies
teacher in a working-class, largely African American and Caribbean public high
school in New York City where many of his students have histories of poor
performance in school. Pezone is a former student in the Hofstra University
School of Education and Allied Human Services, a cooperating teacher in the
program, and a mentor teacher in our alumni group. Virtually ever social
studies teacher education student in the Hofstra program at one time or another
visits Pezone’s classroom, where he has involved his students and the
pre-service teachers in exploring the possibility of political action.
22 During
the Fall semester of 2001, in response to the destruction of the World Trade
Center, the New York City Board of Education required all public schools to
lead students in the Pledge of Allegiance at the beginning of each school day
and at all school-wide assemblies and school events (Pezone, 2002). Pezone’s
students were confused about the law governing behavior during the flag salute
and concerned with defending the first amendment rights of fellow students.
They contacted the New York Civil Liberties Union to clarify legal issues and
learned that participation was not required by law. They decided to monitor
both compliance with the directive’s requirement that the Pledge of Allegiance
be recited each day and freedom of dissent. They also circulated a
questionnaire in the school that asked students about their opinions on the
issues, encouraged students to behave respectfully and responsibly during the
pledge, informed them of their legal right not to participate, and asked them
to report violations of the law. The results of the student survey and student
comments were later distributed in the school’s magazine.
23 The
next year (Fall, 2002), New York City initiated a new metal detector program
that made students up to one hour late for class every morning. Pezone’s
students organized to petition fellow students while they were waiting for
admission to the building. As a result of their efforts, the problem was
highlighted on a television news broadcast and finally addressed by district
administrators.
24 At
the center of Pezone’s pedagogy is a project he calls the democratic dialogue
(Pezone and Singer, 1997; Pezone, Palacio & Rosenberg, 2003). It has been
adopted by a number of colleagues in the New Teachers Network who first
participated in the project when they visited Pezone’s classroom. Pezone believes
that the success of the dialogues depends on the gradual development of caring,
cooperative communities over the course of a year. To encourage these
communities, he works with students to create an atmosphere where they feel
free to expose their ideas, feelings, and academic proficiencies in public
without risking embarrassment or attack and being pressed into silence. He
stresses with students that the dialogues are not debates; that as students
learn about a topic the entire class “wins or loses” together.
25 The
student dialogues are highly structured. Pezone believes that structure
maximizes student freedom by insuring that all students have an opportunity to
participate. It also helps to insure that classes carefully examine statements,
attitudes, and practices that may reflect biases and demean community members.
26 Pezone
uses dialogues to conclude units, however, preparation for the dialogues takes
place constantly. At the start of the semester, he and his students decide on
the procedures for conducting dialogues so that everyone in class participates
and on criteria for evaluating team and individual performance. Usually
students want the criteria to include an evaluation of how well the team works
together; the degree to which substantive questions are addressed; the use of
supporting evidence; the response to statements made by the other team; whether
ideas are presented effectively; and whether individual students demonstrate
effort and growth. These criteria are codified in a scoring rubric that is
reexamined before each dialogue and changed when necessary. Students also help
to define the question being discussed. After the dialogue, students work in
small groups to evaluate the overall dialogue, the performance by their team,
and their individual participation.
27 During
a unit, the class identifies a broad social studies issue that they want to
research and examine in greater depth. For example, after studying the recent
histories of India and China, they discussed whether violent revolution or
non-violent resistance is the most effective path to change. On other occasions
they have discussed if the achievements of the ancient world justified the
exploitation of people and whether the United States and Europe should
intervene in the internal affairs of other countries because of the way women
are treated in some cultures.
28 The
goal of a dialogue is to examine all aspects of an issue, not to score points
at the expense of someone else. Teams are subdivided into cooperative learning groups
that collect and organize information supporting different views. The teams
also assign members as either opening, rebuttal, or concluding speakers.
During dialogues, teams “huddle-up” to share their ideas and reactions to what
is being presented by the other side. After dialogues, students discuss what
they learned from members of the other team and evaluate the performance of the
entire class.
29 An
important part of the dialogue process is the involvement of students in
assessing what they have learned. In Pezone’s classes students help develop the
parameters for class projects and decide the criteria for assessing their
performance in these activities. The benefit of this involvement for students
includes a deeper understanding of historical and social science research
methods; insight into the design and implementation of projects; a greater
stake in the satisfactory completion of assignments; and a sense of empowerment
because assessment decisions are based on rules that the classroom community has
helped to shape.
30 Pezone
uses individual and group conferences to learn what students think about the
dialogues and their impact on student thinking about democratic process and
values. Students generally feel that the dialogues give them a personal stake
in what happens in class and they feel responsible for supporting their teams.
Students who customarily are silent in class because of fear of being ridiculed
or because they are not easily understood by the other students, become
involved in speaking out. For many students, it is a rare opportunity to engage
in both decision making and open public discussion “in front of other people.”
31 From
the dialogues, students start to learn that democratic society involves a
combination of individual rights and initiatives with social responsibility,
collective decision-making, and shared community goals. They discover that
democracy frequently entails tension between the will of the majority and the
rights of minorities and that it cannot be taken for granted. It involves
taking risks and is something that a community must continually work to
maintain and expand. Another benefit of the dialogue process is that it affords
students the opportunity to actively generate knowledge without relying on
teacher-centered instructional methods.
32 Pezone
finds that the year long process of defining, conducting, and evaluating
dialogues involves students in constant reflection on social studies concepts,
class goals, student interaction, and the importance of community. It makes
possible individual academic and social growth, encourages students to view
ideas critically and events from multiple perspectives, and supports the
formation of a cooperative learning environment. He believes that when students
are able to analyze educational issues, and create classroom policy, they gain
a personal stake in classroom activities and a deeper understanding of
democracy.
33 A
number of the teachers related to the Hofstra New Teachers Network consider
themselves transformative educators, yet none of them, including either of us,
has created a model transformative classroom. It may simply be that, although
the educational goals discussed above provide a vision of a particular kind of
classroom, transformative education, like history, is part of a process that is
never finished.
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