Glossary
Note: The following glossary is quoted in full
thanks to Tom Heaney.
Alienation:
The term is derived from Marx and refers to the
domination of people by power elites, material constraints, political structures,
and thought itself. Ultimately, alienation is the separation of humankind
from its labor. It interferes with the production of authentic culture
(see Culture ). It is affected by any process which
limits a person's power to know the world, and thus dehumanizes the world
itself (see Humanization ).
"Banking" Education:
In the "banking" method of education passive
learners receive deposits of pre-selected, ready-made knowledge. The learner's
mind is seen as an empty vault into which the riches of approved knowledge
are placed. This approach is also referred to as "digestive" and as "narrational"
education.
Codification:
A codification is a representation of the learner's
day-to-day situations. It can be a photograph, a drawing, or even a word.
As a representation, the photograph or word is an abstraction which permits
dialogue leading to an analysis of the concrete reality represented. Codifications
mediate between reality and its theoretical context, as well as between
educators and learners who together seek to unveil the meanings of their
existence.
Conscientization:
Conscientization is an ongoing process by which
a learner moves toward critical consciousness).
This process is the heart of liberatory
education. It differs from "consciousness raising" in that the latter
frequently involves "banking" education--the
transmission of pre-selected knowledge. Conscientization means breaking
through prevailing mythologies to reach new levels of awareness--in particular,
awareness of oppression, being an "object" in a world where only "subjects"
have power. The process of conscientization involves identifying contradictions
in experience through dialogue and becoming a "subject" with other oppressed
subjects--that is, becoming part of the process of changing the world.
Collegiality:
Collegiality is a form of social organization based on
shared and equal participation of all its members. It contrasts with a
hierarchical, pyramidal structure, and is represented by a series of concentric
circles. Authority resides in the center-most circle, not over the others,
but equidistant from each, so that authority can listen and reflect the
consensus of the whole (see Consensual
Governance). A collegial model has been frequently associated with
liberatory education programs .
Consensual Governance:
Decision-making by consensus requires the discussion
of issues until all are in agreement-- this in contrast to decision-making
by voting in which rule by the majority is imposed on those who dissent.
Decision-making by consensus is time consuming and difficult. At times,
consensus represents the willingness of a minority "not to oppose" a decision,
but the ultimate benefit of this model is that no one is excluded by a
decision. This model is characteristic of participatory democracies as
occasionally exemplified in U.S. history by the town hall meeting.
Critical Consciousness:
This is a level of consciousness characterized
by depth in the interpretation of problems, through testing one's own findings
with openness to revision, attempting to avoid distortion when perceiving
problems and preconceived notions when analyzing them, receptivity to the
new without rejecting the old because it is old. In striving toward critical
consciousness, the individual rejects passivity, practicing dialogue rather
than polemics, and using permeable, interrogative, restless, and dialogical
forms of life. Critical consciousness is brought about not through an individual
or intellectual effort, but through collective struggle and praxis.
Culture:
Culture is used in its broadest, anthropological
sense as including all that is humanly fabricated, endowed, designed, articulated,
conceived, or directed. Culture includes products which are humanly produced,
both material (buildings, artifacts, factories, slum housing) and immaterial
(ideology, value systems, mores), as well as materially derived products
such as social class and the socio/political order. The key aim of liberatory
education is to regain dominion over the creation and use of culture.
Culture Circle (Circulo
de Cultura):
The circulo de cultura is a discussion group
in which educators and learners use codifications (see Codification)
to engage in dialogue about the reasons for their existential situation.
The peer group provides the theoretical context for reflection and for
transforming interpretations of reality from mere opinion to a more critical
knowledge.
"Culture of Silence":
The "culture of silence" is a characteristic
which Freire attributes to oppressed people in colonized countries, with
significant parallels in highly developed countries. Alienated and oppressed
people are not heard by the dominant members of their society. The dominant
members prescribe the words to be spoken by the oppressed through control
of the schools and other institutions, thereby effectively silencing the
people. This imposed silence does not signify an absence of response, but
rather a response which lacks a critical quality. Oppressed people internalize
negative images of themselves (images created and imposed by the oppressor)
and feel incapable of self-governance. Dialogue and self-government are
impossible under such conditions.
Decodification:
(see Codification)
Decodification dissolves a codification into its constituent elements and
is the operation by which learners begin to perceive relationships between
elements of the codification and other experiences in their day-to-day
life and among the elements themselves. Thus, decodification is analysis
which takes place through dialogue, revealing the previously unperceived
meanings of the reality represented by that codification. Decodification
is the principal work of a circulo de cultura (see Culture
Circle).
Dialectic:
Dialectic is a term referring to a dynamic tension
within any given system and the process by which change occurs on the basis
of that tension and resulting conflict. Based on the writings of Hegel,
every concept implies its negation; that is, in conceiving anything (thesis),
we must be able to imagine its opposite (antithesis). Change occurs as
this tension leads to a new conception of reality (synthesis). It should
be noted that Marx, is contrast to some liberatory educators, postulated
that such tensions and contradictions were embedded in concrete culture
(thus, dialectic materialism) and not merely found in contradictions between
the existential world and our thoughts about the world.
Dialogical Method:
The dialogical approach to learning is characterized
by co-operation and acceptance of interchangeability and mutuality in the
roles of teacher and learner, demanding an atmosphere of mutual acceptance
and trust. In this method, all teach and all learn. This contrasts with
an anti-dialogical approach which emphasizes the teacher's side of the
learning relationship and frequently results in one-way communiques perpetuating
domination and oppression. Without dialogue, there is no communication,
and without communication, there can be no liberatory
education.
Empowerment:
Empowerment is a consequence of liberatory learning.
Power is not given, but created within the emerging praxis
in which co-learners are engaged. The theoretical basis for this discovery
is provided by critical consciousness;
its expression is collective action on behalf of mutually agreed upon goals.
Empowerment is distinct from building skills and competencies, these being
commonly associated with conventional schooling. Education for empowerment
further differs from schooling both in its emphasis on groups (rather than
individuals) and in its focus on cultural transformation
(rather than social adaptation).
Generative Themes/Words:
Generative themes are codifications
of complex experiences which are charged with political significance and
are likely to generate considerable discussion and analysis. They are derived
from a study of the specific history and circumstances of the learners.
In a literacy program, generative themes can be codified into generative
words--that is, tri-syllabic words that can be broken down into syllabic
parts and used to "generate" other words. Generative words have been most
useful in relation to languages which are phonetically based (e.g. Spanish,
Portuguese).
Humanization:
The central task in any movement toward liberation
is to become more fully human through the creation of humanly-enhancing
culture--in a word, "humanization." This historical
task is countered by the negative forces of dehumanization which, through
oppressive manipulation and control, compromise human values for personal
gain and power. The task of the oppressed is to liberate themselves and,
in the process, liberate their oppressors. Revolutions are humanized to
the extent that the new regime confronts its tendency to replicate the
oppression of the old (see Transformation
of the World).
Liberatory Education:
Education which is liberatory encourages learners
to challenge and change the world, not merely uncritically adapt themselves
to it. The content and purpose of liberatory education is the collective
responsibility of learners, teachers, and the community alike who, through
dialogue, seek political, as well as economic and personal empowerment.
Programs of liberatory education support and compliment larger social struggles
for liberation.
Mystification:
Mystification is the process by which the alienating
and oppressive features of culture are disguised
and hidden. False, superficial, and naive interpretations of culture prevent
the emergence of critical consciousness.
Educational systems are key instruments in the dissemination of mystifications:
e.g. unemployment is "mystified" as personal failure rather than as a failure
of the economy, thus making it difficult for the unemployed to critically
understand their situation.
Participatory Research:
Participatory research is an approach to social
change--a process used by and for people who are exploited and oppressed.
The approach challenges the way knowledge is produced with conventional
social science methods and disseminated by dominant educational institutions.
Through alternate methods, it puts the production of knowledge back into
the hands of the people where it can infuse their struggles for social
equality, and for the elimination of dependency and its symptoms: poverty,
illiteracy, malnutrition, etc.
Praxis:
Praxis is a complex activity by which individuals
create culture and society, and become critically
conscious human beings. Praxis comprises a cycle of action-reflection-action
which is central to liberatory education.
Characteristics of praxis include self-determination (as opposed to coercion),
intentionality (as opposed to reaction), creativity (as opposed to homogeneity),
and rationality (as opposed to chance).
Problematization:
Problematization is the antithesis of "problem-solving."
In problem-solving, an expert takes distance from reality and reduces
it to dimensions which are amenable to treatment as though they were mere
difficulties to be solved. To "problematize" is to engage a group in the
task of codifying reality into symbols which can generate critical consciousness
and empower them to alter their relations with nature and oppressive social
forces. Problem-posing is a logically prior task which allows all previous
conceptualizations of a problem to be treated as questionable. problematization
recognizes that "solutions" are often difficult because the wrong problems
are being addressed.
Transformation of the World:
To transform the world is to humanize it (see
Humanization ). All transformations do not
result in liberation. Transforming action could dehumanize the world with
an oppressor's curious and inventive presence (e.g. the development of
the V-2 rocket in World War II). Only history reveals the problematic nature
of being human and the consequences of having chosen one path over the
other. The transformation of the world is humankind's entry into history.
As people act upon the world effectively, transforming it by work, consciousness
is in turn historically and culturally conditioned. Conscientization
is the result of action which transforms the world and leads to humanization.
This site was created with Netscape Composer
by Craig Pendleton