Title: Rodolfo Hach
1Rodolfo Hachén Centre of Ethnolinguistics
National University of Rosario, Â
- Learning from Popular Education
- in Latin America
- What Role Can Universities Play?
- 26th April 2012
- Glasgow
2Rodolfo Hachénrhachen_at_hotmail.comwww.rodolfohach
en.com.ar
- UNR (Argentina) Researcher for
- CONICET y UNESCO Activist for Human Rights,
especially the right to education, Historical
Memory and people's linguistic self-determination - (LaS LenguaS).
3- I firmly believe in Popular Education and the
dream of Freire to have a society reinventing
itself from the bottom up, where everyone has a
right to an opinion and not only the duty to
listen to others.
4UtopÃa y globalización
- The concept of globalization often seems
linked tothat of homogenization and with policies
which deny differences and endanger not only the
cultural patrimony of humanity but life itself.
5Chomsky, 2003
- Its no exaggeration to say that the future
of the human species depends on whether or not
the rebellion against neoliberalism can become
sufficiently strong, mobilised and organised to
counter the wave going in the other direction.''
6Landner, E.
- The difficulties in formulating
theoretical and political alternatives to the
total primacy of the market are due to the fact
that neoliberalism is presented as an economic
theory when it should really be understood as a
hegemonic discourse of a model of civilization
7Models of Civilization and Genocide
- Humanity has suffered many "models of
civilization" that tended to destroy
otherness. In the form of invasions,
empires, nation states, school systems and / or
transnational economic projects, the
techniques of domination have not substantially
changed.
8Education in the Service of Domination
- Schools dont educate shepherds for sheep
but sheep for shepherds. - (L. Tolstoi)
9Schools or education can no longer  be
understood simply as vehicles for the
transmission of the basic skills required
to earn a living or to maintain a
countrys economic competitiveness. For
this economic-technological dimension of our
civilization to be viable it must be embedded in
a human cultural context that sustains it.
(Bruner, 199710)
10Educación Popular Freire
-
- An education that enables people
to  discuss their problems bravely, which warns
of the dangers of the time so that, with
awareness, people gain the strength and courage
to fight instead of having to submit to the will
of others and have their subjectivity destroyed.
Education which places people in constant
dialogue with each other, which predisposes them
to constant revision and critical  analysis of
their 'discoveries', to a certain defiance, in
the most human sense of the expression in short,
an education that identifies people with
scientific methods and processes.(196985)
11Another(better)world is possible
- The first time I read this phrase was in a
book treasured by my grandfather  about the ideas
of the Republicans during the Spanish Civil
War. Later I understood that "Education is risky
because it reinforces the sense of possibility
(Bruner, 199762)
121963
- The same year I was born (1963), Paulo Freire  im
plemented his first large group educational
experience, within the National
Literacy Campaign, bringing literacy to 300 rural
workers in a month and a half and laying the
foundations for popular education which, by
overcoming the banking approach of schools
in Latin America (and worldwide), rescued the
active role of education for the radical
democratization of knowledge generation. His
ideas and above all his liberating praxis transfor
med my conception of studying and learning.
13to change the ugly face of school
- Freire distanced himself from the
authoriatarian idea of education. He made
education relevant to everyone , based on the
understanding of other peoples language and on
the social construction of knowledge, within a
well developed understanding of the identity of
the popular classes.
14To change the face of school is, basically, to
change the organization of the curriculum, to
alter the understanding of teaching
methodology, what it means to'teach' and what it
means to 'learn'. And this is not done by
decree. But you cannot democratise school in an
authoritarian manner because it would be a
contradiction.When you realise that, you find
there are other ways to achieve that goal. The
main one is to be able to convince teachers,
the continuous scientific training/education of
the teaching body. ". (Paulo Freire)
15Challenge
- To ensure the establishment of Popular Education
within the framework of an educational
system which, as in most of Latin America and the
rest of the world, seeks domestication more than
liberation.
16Educación Popular Freire
-
- An education that enables people
to  discuss their problems bravely, which warns
of the dangers of the time so that, with
awareness, people gain the strength and courage
to fight instead of having to submit to the will
of others and have their subjectivity destroyed.
Education which places people in constant
dialogue with each other, which predisposes them
to constant revision and critical  analysis of
their 'discoveries', to a certain defiance, in
the most human sense of the expression in short,
an education that identifies people with
scientific methods and processes.(196985)
17Educación Popular and diversity
-
- Diversity is a characteristic inherent in
humanity. Each group of people speaks the world
(Charaudeau, 1988) in its own peculiar way and
herein lies the richness of interculturality.
18False opposition equality/diversity
- EQUALITY
- is opposed to
- INEQUALITY
- DIVERSITY
- Is opposed to
- HOMOGENEITY
- .
19Tolerance versus Respect
-
- Proper Popular Education should promote respect
for diversity within a framework of equal
rights. We talk about RESPECT and not
TOLERANCEÂ because "tolerance permits cultural
differences, which I think is very positive but
it doesnt give them any right, it puts them in a
situation of structural inferiority, constantly re
minding them that there are limits which,
if exceeded, can lead to prohibitions. It is
better to be tolerated than outlawed, thats
true. But to be tolerated does not mean to have
the same rights and freedoms as those of
the dominant group members - . (Wieviorka en Cisneros, 2004 22)
20Integration versus Articulation
- Integration is often a form of forced
"assimilation". The idea of articulation is a
better approach because it lets us think of a
complex structure "... in which things are
related as much by their differences as their
similarities. This makes it necessary
to highlight the mechanisms that
connect dissimilar features, since there is
no 'necessary correspondence' nor can
the hegemony of expression be taken for
granted "(Stuart Hall to Jameson - Žižek,199399)
In this complex structure of the social, cultural
operators do not mix, losing their identities
instead they bring their differences together for
the benefit of the whole mechanism, a
mechanism in which there shouldnt and cant be
any hegemony of power..
21Inequality
-
- Racism, class privilege and prejudice, all
amplified by the forms of poverty they create,
have powerful effects on how much and how we
educate" (Bruner, 199745)
22Original Peoples of America
- Historically decimated, marginalized, robbed and
kept away from areas of institutional power, they
await recognition and enactment of their rights
in relation to land, identity and education. The
social inequality which minority languages ??and
cultures must suffer can be seen clearly when key
variables such as number of speakers, poverty
levels and possibilities of access to education
are cross-referenced. - .
23Argentina
-
- The highest rates of illiteracy are seen in
the northern provinces Chaco with 12,33,
Corrientes with 10 Santiago del estero with
9,54, Formosa with 9,24, Misiones with 9,11,
Jujuy with 7,85 y Salta with 7,57.
24 Also in these provinces we find the highest
rates of people 25 and over with little or
no education (no more than 3 years of primary
education). While the national average is 12.3,
we see much higher figures in these provinces
Chaco, 27.1,Santiago del Estero, 21.9, Formosa,
21.5, Corrientes, 21.3, 20.7 Misiones,Jujuy,
18.9 and Salta and Entre Rios, 17.6 (Pognante,
2003). The areas most affected by
illiteracy correspond to the historically poorestÂ
provinces, those where you find the highest
concentration of indigenous populations
of Toba, MocovÃ, WichÃ, Guarani, Quechua, Pilagá,Â
Mbyá, Chiriguano, Chane, Tapiete, Nivacle and Chor
ote. The Chiriguano language is spoken in this
region by 15,000 people (Chiriguanos Tapités Chané
, in the provinces of Salta and Jujuy), Mbya by
2,500-3,000Â speakers (Mission), Toba, by 35,000
to 60,000Â speakers (Chaco, Formosa,
Salta), Nivacle by 200 to 1,200 speakers (Salta),
Chorote by 1,200 to 2,100 speakers
(Salta), Quichua Santiago from 60,000 to 100,000
speakers (Santiago del Estero), and Guarani
Correntino (Goyano) and Paraguayan Guarani,
1,000,000Â speakers (Censabella, 1999)
25some day we might be able to talk about ethnic
genocide as a thing of the past but cultural
genocide is still active each time we try to
impose better ways of life and congratulate
ourselves when people who are proud and
independent gradually succumb, in the best of
cases, to the the good intentions of making them
as much as possible like us and, in the worst of
cases, leaving them just as they are so as to
exploit them better. (Romano, 2007 190)
26Nuestra tarea
-
- So its the job of universities to address
diversity not saying of but with. We
shouldnt adopt a paternalistic approach but
instead create a true climate for dialogue since,
as indicated by the Nobel Peace Prize winner
Rigoberta Menchú What we need isnt that you
give us a hand but that you take away the one you
already have around our necks...(Rigoberta
Menchú)
27Educación Popular and traditional conceptions of
education
-
- Education, however it is organised, in
whichever culture, always has consequences on the
subsequent lives of those who receive it. ()
education is never neutral, it never fails to
have social and economic consequences. Try as
anyone might to argue against it, education is
always political in this wider sense (Bruner,
199743 y 44)
28Prescriptive institutions church, school and
literary criticism(Chartier - Hebrard, 1994)
-
- With regard to prescription, various
groupings concentrated attention the discourses
of school, the churches and literary criticism,
and each one of them had an institution of
production and control, a legitimacy, a system of
exclusion. (Chartier - Hebrard, 1994 18)
29Liberty as a threat
- Free access to reading, for example, and
especially its free interpretation, becomes a
danger which threatens the stability of the most
powerful institutions which, throuhout history,
have based their power in their exclusive
knowledge. The establishement of a unique set of
knowledge alien to the social group has always
been linked with power.
30In the crossroads of education
-
- Trapped in the well-known crossroads
between subverting or consolidating the
established order, schools dont always fail in
their objective, but this objective answers to
shemes and suppositions of which they are no
longer even aware. - We believe that An education sytem should help
those who grow in a culture to find an identity
within that culture (Bruner, 199762) Education
should promote the sense of AGENCY, REFLECTION
and COLLABORATION always in conjunction with the
socio-cultural dynamic.
31What do we mean when we talk about Educación
Popular?
-
- In the history of (Latin) America, the
expression popular education has often been
used to refer to a variety of political and
ideological questions. From religious beginnings
in colonial times it slowly changed in the 17th
and 19th centuries under the influence of the
Enlightenment and the beginning of rationalism.
32Siglo XIX
-
- The consolodation of Nation States associated
education with the builiding of a strong
nationalist image. In the second half of the 19th
century, in opposition to the dominant ideas,
there is an upsurge in anarchist and socialist
groups and popular nationalist governments who
propose some alternative pedagogical practices
33Siglo XX
- At the beginning of the 20th century the
university extension model was introduced to
Latin America and was synonymous with popular
education. This was promoted by the work of the
Movement for University reform. Examples would be
Popular Universities and Indigenist Projects. In
the 50s education is seen as decisive in the
development of human resources and so the
different education systems are modernised
34Decada del 60
-
- In the 60s education is seen as a
resource for individuals to overcome
marginalisation. In this period there is an
upsurge in projects with a more political and
social focus, directed towards changing the
degree of participation of the popular classes.
Inspired by the triumph of the Cuban revolution
and the new position of the Church (Vatican II,
The Latin American Bishops Conference and the
Puebla Meeting), as well as by groups of
intellectuals and the student sector, Popular
Education becomes stronger and more resonant
(..). From the 90s onwards it reconsiders its
political position society is seen as
agglomaration of of spaces of confrontation of
which the school is one. The struggle for a
public popular education is the central approach
in this decade
35The university plays a decisive role, pushed by
workers organisations in Guatemala, El Salvador
and Peru.
-
- University Extension is particularly popular
in Mexico, Paraguay, Uruguay, Nicaragua and
Argentina and indigenist education programmes
begin to appear in Ecuador and Bolivia.
36 A second stage of popular-democratic projects
are represented by the literacy work begun by
Freire in Brazil (1961) during the government of
Joao Goulart the Reform carried out by the
United Popular government of Salvador Allende in
Chile (1970) the National Revolutionary Movement
(MNR) in Bolivia (1952-1964) the Arbenz
government in Guatemala (1954) the Cuban
Educational Reform (1958) the Educational Reform
in Peru (1968) and Panama (1969), with the
establishment of schools of production during
the government of ??????. The Reform in Bolivia
took place underJuan José Torres (1970-1971) and
in Nicaragua under the Sandinista government
(1979-1991)
37Popular Education as an alternative to
institutionalised models
- The exclusion of poor people from educational
institutions, the lack of provision and quality,
as well as the conception of people and society
presented by state education, led groups of
intellectuals declaring themselves to be on the
side of the majority classes and committed to
their causes to develop political-educational
projects directed towards the transformation of
social structures..
38Paulo Freire
- He analyses the institutional conceptions
of education applied in the dependent American
countries, refering to the rootedness of what he
calls the culture of silence as a cause of
subordination and control in the countries which
had been conquered. His fundamental critique of
banking education leads him to develop a method
for teaching literacy to adults which he himself
puts into practice. Freire recognised the
political intentionality of education. To say
your word is the right of all human beings and
it is in dialogue, in communication with other
people, that we can reflect on the world which
surrounds us in order to intervene in it
critically. Freire abandons the hierarchical
relationship between educator and learner for a
dialogical relationship in which knowledge is
nourished through exchange.
39We can therefore conceptualize Popular
Education "as a collective process through
which the popular sectors manage to become the
subject of history, director and protagonist of a
project of liberation that takes account
of its own class interests, it should see itself
as part of and support to a collective process
through which the popular sectors, starting from
their own social practice, build and consolidate
their own political and ideological hegemony, ie
developing the subjective conditions political
consciousness and popular organization which
will make the building of their own historical
project possible for them." (Peresson, T.
Mariño, Germán Cendales, Lola. Educación Popular
y alfabetización en América Latina. Dimensión
educativa. Colombia 1983. P. 116.)
40Dictaduras de los 70 y 80 y proyectos
neoliberales de los 90
- Augusto Boal
- Brazilian playwrite, theatre director, known for
developing the Theatre of the Oppressed, a
theoretical concept and method for a peoples
democratic theatre. He was jailed and tortured
during the dictatorship, labelled as a cultural
activist.
41Theatre of the Oppressed
- Looking at the world, beyond appearances,
we see oppressors and oppressed in all societies
ethnic groups, genders, classes and castes we
see the world as cruel and unjust. We are obliged
to invent another world because we know another
world is possible. But its our job to build it
with our hands and act, both on stage and in
life. Theatre cant just be an event, its a form
of life! Were all actors a citizen isnt
someone who lives in society, its someone who
transforms it! - (Boal, 2009)
42Role of Universities to participate in the
redefinition and promotion of popular education
- We need to redefine Popular Education and
this time based on the link between different
specific determinations such as an expression of
the articulation of different national strategies
or the product created by different concrete
groups. It should be designed to promote the
greatest capacity for transformation in a
popular-democratic direction, towards the utopia
of a just society. (Adriana Puiggrós,. Historia
y perspectiva de la Educación Popular
latinoamericana. En Mocair Gadotti e Carlos
Alberto Tórres.).
43(No Transcript)
44(No Transcript)
45However we conceptualise authentic educational
practice, its process implies hope. Educators
without hope contradict their practice...educators
should always analyse the ideas coming from
social reality. Comings and goings which enable a
greater understanding of hope. Paulo Freire