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Challenging and Changing AntiOppressive Practice

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Homophobia is a material and discrete entity. Homophobia only affects specific ... It is more urgent to examine homophobia (as a systems of oppression) than ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Challenging and Changing AntiOppressive Practice


1
Challenging and Changing Anti-Oppressive Practice
  • Dharman Jeyasingham Julie Morton
  • University of Salford
  • JSWEC 2005

2
Structure of Presentation
  • Difficulties of existing approaches.
  • What influenced our approach.
  • What we have done.
  • Continuing dilemmas.

3
Origins
  • Our own experience of anti-oppressive practice as
    students, practitioners and teachers.
  • Challenging oppression seen as a process to go
    through on social work programmes-
    self-discovery, initiation rite.
  • Seen as a subject, something fixed, can be
    understood and learnt about and then put into
    practice.

4
Action Learning
  • Adoption of action learning for the MA programme.
  • Consideration of innovative methods rather than
    solely pedagogical.
  • Compatible with our approach to the module.
  • Action learning has potential to assist students
    with critical reflection and an active engagement
    with learning.

5
Module Structure
6
Hierarchies of oppression
  • Opposite ideas about the validity or not of
    hierarchies of oppression rely on some of the
    same assumptions
  • Social structures are real, rather than
    constructions that enable us to conceptualise
    disparate social relations.
  • Oppression can be fully understood through
    attention to race, gender, class, disability,
    sexuality and age.
  • Oppression is accumulative according to the
    number of social structures in which you are
    oppressed.

7
Rational approach
  • Traditional teaching on AOP has the status of
    objective knowledge.
  • Tool-kit approach with straightforward
    application in practice.
  • Competency based approaches.
  • Discrete module-taught, assessed and completed.
  • Climate of certainty.

8
Assumptions Identity-based approaches to
teaching Sexuality and homophobia
  • Homophobia is a material and discrete entity.
  • Homophobia only affects specific social/sexual
    minorities.
  • It is more urgent to examine homophobia (as a
    systems of oppression) than heterosexuality (a a
    system of privilege).
  • Teaching about homophobia should only be done by
    people who have experienced homophobia. These
    people are lesbians and gay men.

9
Practice/Theory
  • Did not aim to provide knowledge and skills for
    practice.
  • Theory cannot provide a map for practice.
  • Deliberate decision not to focus on practice as
    real.
  • Attempt to unsettle this particular dichotomy.
  • Did want to begin process of scrutinising
    knowledge available in practice.

10
Analogising
  • The assumption that by experiencing
    marginalisation or oppression one can understand
    and empathise with how it might be for others.
  • Teaching uses analogising in a non-critical way
    and leaves out the limitations of this approach.
  • Assumption of equivalence for different forms of
    oppressive structures and experience of them.
  • Example Comparison of racism and sexism
    -essentialist, renders experience of black women
    invisible.

11
Influences cultural studies
  • Interdisciplinary subject, which enables us to
    question how psychological and sociological
    understandings can be sustained by the same
    paradigms.
  • Deconstruction of representation.
  • Critical attention to identity.

12
Deconstructing Representation
13
Deconstructing Representation
14
Identification
  • Little attention to identification, except within
    narrow psychological terms.
  • Importance of examining how identities are
    represented, constructed, negotiated
  • Privilege Masculinity, Whiteness.

15
Postmodernist influence
  • Offers possibilities for AOP teaching in that it
    enables thinking about how discourses manufacture
    knowledge.
  • Social work as a discourse which creates
    knowledge and imposes limits.
  • Exposes dichotomous thinking and the problems
    with defining people as other than the
    mainstream.

16
Method
  • Write a three-line description of yourself
    including aspects of yourself which are most
    significant to you personally and in terms of
    your social experience.
  • How has your original description changed and
    what informed the adaptation?
  • Consider whether any shift has created anxieties
    or opened up possibilities for you.
  • Have theories of identity and power assisted you
    to think critically about your experiences?

17
Concluding comments
  • Students expectations of AOP how do we do it?
  • Authentic experience and victimhood.
  • Prevalence of dogma.
  • Emphasis on competence.
  • Limitations of approach-can be misinterpreted as
    uncritical relativism.
  • No value in naming oppression.
  • Modular delivery how to integrate critical
    thinking/critical reflection/reflexivity into
    other areas of the curriculum.
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