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The imperative of critical pedagogy in times of cultural austerity: a case study of the capacity to reimagine education as a tool for emancipation

Version 2 2024-06-04, 09:51
Version 1 2018-11-30, 09:20
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 09:51 authored by CP Rodd, Kellie Sanders
Schools must be more than merely sites of sociocultural reproduction, skilling students to assume roles as economic functionaries, positions which serve to engrain social class inequality. Freire (1970) posits that the role of education is humanisation and liberation, imbuing in students a capacity to read the world and their own place in it critically and consciously. Schools, however, are too often are complicit in the re-creation of the hierarchical status quo. As Freire (1970, p.49) points out, “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.” In this article, we draw on Freire’s concept of critical pedagogy to contextualise and analyse empirical data gained through a study concerned with school principals’ roles in engendering social capital in an outer-suburban, socio-economically disadvantaged community in one Australian city. We also borrow from Giroux (2013, 2014, 2015, 2017), who positions radical critical pedagogy as of necessity in the contemporary western world, arguing that schools must play a central role in instilling a critical consciousness during times of neoliberal socio-economic inequality, cultural austerity and political authoritarianism.

History

Journal

New Zealand sociology

Volume

33

Pagination

33-55

Location

[Unknown]

ISSN

0112-921X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

3

Publisher

Sociological Association of Aotearoa New Zealand