BA (Hons) Sociology - Joint Honours Pathways: Level 1 Ideas, Knowledge & Education'
BA (Hons) Sociology - Joint Honours Pathways: Level 1 Ideas, Knowledge & Education'
BA (Hons) Sociology - Joint Honours Pathways: Level 1 Ideas, Knowledge & Education'
Born in Vienna in 1926 Illich attended school from 1931 to 1941, and after being
expelled along with his family (under the anti-Semitic laws of the Nazis), he
completed his secondary studies in Italy and then studied theology and
philosophy in Rome later obtaining his doctorate in history at the University of
Salzburg.
Earmarked by the Vatican for their diplomatic service, Illich chose a less
prestigious pastoral ministry and was appointed assistant parish priest at a
New York church with an Irish and Puerto Rican congregation.
From its foundation until the middle 1970s, CIDOC was a meeting-place for
many American and Latin American intellectuals wanting to reflect on education
and culture.
During this period vigorous debates between Paulo Freire and Ivan Illich (on
education, schooling and the awakening of awareness) took place, in order to
search for ways to transforming the whole of life into a learning experience -
usually outside of the school system.
His now famous paper School: the sacred cow (CIDOC, 1968) is the first of a
series of works in the field of education. In this - Illich fiercely criticizes the
centralization, internal bureaucracy, rigidity and, above all the inequalities
inherent within public schooling systems.
I do this because I believe that most of the research now going on about
the future tends to advocate further increases in the institutionalization of
values ... We need research on the possible use of technology to create
institutions which serve personal, creative, and autonomous interaction and
the emergence of values which cannot be substantially controlled by
technocrats. We need counterfoil research to current futurology. (Page 1 of
Deschooling Society).
http://reactor-core.org/deschooling.html
East Lancs Institute of Higher Education. Page 2
BA (Hons) Sociology Joint Honours Pathways: Level 1
INTRODUCTION
2. PHENOMENOLOGY OF SCHOOL
3. RITUALIZATION OF PROGRESS
4. INSTITUTIONAL SPECTRUM
5. IRRATIONAL CONSISTENCIES
6. LEARNING WEBS
Other basic institutions might differ from one country to another: family, party,
church, or press. But everywhere the school system has the same structure, and
everywhere its hidden curriculum has the same effect. Invariably, it shapes the
consumer who values institutional commodities above the nonprofessional
ministration of a neighbour.
Everywhere the hidden curriculum of schooling initiates the citizen to the myth
that bureaucracies guided by scientific knowledge are efficient and benevolent.
Everywhere this same curriculum instils in the pupil the myth that increased
production will provide a better life. And everywhere it develops the habit of self-
defeating consumption of services and alienating production, the tolerance for
institutional dependence, and the recognition of institutional rankings. The hidden
curriculum of school does all this in spite of contrary efforts undertaken by
teachers and no matter what ideology prevails.
Paulo Freire (1921 - 1997), is arguably the most influential thinker about
education in the late twentieth century - with his emphasis on dialogue (debate)
and his concern for the oppressed.
No one has done more to move the struggle forward, relating to the role of
education as a vehicle for liberation (via praxis) than Paulo Freire.
From being jailed by the Brazilian military (in 1964), to his exile and continuing
struggle on behalf of peasants and the working class throughout the world - he
has captured the political imagination of educators around the world.
The Culture of Silence, in which dominated individuals lose the means by which
to critically respond that which is forced on them by those that dominate.
Banking education
The banking concept of pedagogy is still the most widely accepted method of
delivery in classrooms of all types today.
Teaching according to this method is based on the premise that the teacher
educates while the students memorize and feed back to the teacher the
information they absorb.
With this type of pedagogical approach, there is little room for interaction
among the students and between the students and the teacher.
The more that students work at storing the deposits, the less they develop
critical consciousness - this would create an intervention in the world, where they
act as transformers of their world.
The more completely they accept the passive role imposed on them, the more they
tend simply to adapt to the world (as it is), and to the fragmented view of
reality deposited in them.
Banking education minimizes the students creative and critical power; this in turn
serves the interests of the oppressors, who do not wish to have the world
revealed as it really is, nor do they want to see it transformed.
These marginals need to be integrated, incorporated into the healthy society that
they have forsaken.
The truth is, however, that the oppressed are not marginals, they are not people
living outside society. They have always been inside inside the same system
that shaped them into beings for others.
The solution therefore is not to integrate them into the structure of oppression,
but to transform that structure so that they can become beings for themselves.
The banking approach to adult education can never propose to students that they
critically consider reality. The illusory humanism of the banking approach masks
its purpose to turn women and men into automatons.
Those who use the banking approach, knowingly or unknowingly (for there are
innumerable well-intentioned bank-clerk teachers who do not realize that they are
serving only to dehumanize), fail to perceive that the deposits themselves
contain contradictions about reality.
Sooner or later, these contradictions may lead formerly passive students to turn
against their domestication and the attempt to change their conditions.
But the revolutionary educator cannot wait for this possibility to materialize.
From the outset, their efforts must coincide with those of the students - to
engage in critical thinking, and the quest for mutual humanization.
Banking education cannot create such a partnership, as the person is not seen as
a conscious being; he or she is rather the possessor of a consciousness: an empty
mind passively open to the reception of deposits.
And since people receive the world as passive entities, education should make them
more passive still, and adapt them to the world.
This is well suited to the purposes of the oppressors, whose tranquillity rests on
how well people fit the world (that the oppressors have created), and how little
they question it.
The more completely the majority adapt to the purposes which the dominant
minority prescribe for them, the more easily the minority can continue to
prescribe.
The theory and practice of banking education serve this end quite efficiently.
Mundane lessons, reading requirements, the methods for evaluating knowledge,
the distance between the teacher and the taught, serves to quash free thinking.
generates the banking concept, and often do not perceive its true significance or its
dehumanizing power.
But one does not liberate people by alienating them. Authentic liberationthe
process of humanizationis not another deposit to be made in men. Liberation is a
praxis: the action and reflection of men and women upon their world in order to
transform it.
Those truly committed to the cause of liberation can accept neither the mechanistic
concept of consciousness as an empty vessel to be filled, nor the use of banking
methods of domination (propaganda, slogansdeposits) in the name of liberation.
Those truly committed to liberation must reject the banking concept in its entirety,
adopting instead a concept of women and men as conscious beings, and consciousness
as consciousness intent upon changing the world.
They must abandon the educational goal of deposit-making and replace it with the
posing of the problems of human beings in their relations with the world.
Accordingly, the practice of problem-posing education entails at the outset that the
teacher-student contradiction to be resolved.
They become jointly responsible for a process in which all grow. In this process,
arguments based on authority are no longer valid; in order to function, authority
must be on the side of freedom, not against it.
Here, no one teaches another, nor is anyone self-taught. People teach each other,
mediated by the world, (which in banking education is owned by the teacher).
Seminar Question: