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Critical demagogues: what happens when ideology and teaching mix.


To the egoistic e·go·ist  
n.
1. One devoted to one's own interests and advancement; an egocentric person.

2. An egotist.

3. An adherent of egoism.
 and asocial a·so·cial
adj.
1. Avoiding or averse to the society of others; not sociable.

2. Unable or unwilling to conform to normal standards of social behavior; antisocial.
 being that has just been born, [society] must, as rapidly as possible, add another, capable of leading a moral and social life. Such is the work of education.

--Emile Durkheim, 1911

"Critical pedagogy Critical pedagogy is a teaching approach which attempts to help students question and challenge domination, and the beliefs and practices that dominate. In other words, it is a theory and practice of helping students achieve critical consciousness. " a body of education theory represented by the writings of Henry Giroux Henry Giroux, born September 18 1943 in Providence, is a US cultural critic. He is one of the founding theorists of critical pedagogy in the United States, and is best known for his pioneering work in public pedagogy, cultural studies, youth studies, higher education, media , Peter McLaren Peter McLaren (b. August 2, 1948) is internationally recognized as one of the leading architects of critical pedagogy worldwide. He has developed a reputation for his uncompromising political analysis influenced by a Marxist humanist philosophy and a unique literary style of , Michael Apple, and other leftist-leaning thinkers, takes its cue from the Durkheim quotation above, but it carries the notion of schools as agents of moral instruction and socialization socialization /so·cial·iza·tion/ (so?shal-i-za´shun) the process by which society integrates the individual and the individual learns to behave in socially acceptable ways.

so·cial·i·za·tion
n.
 far beyond what Durkheim envisioned and what the public expects. Critical pedagogy extends critical theory--the neo-Marxist examination of the relationship between power and culture, aimed at addressing issues of class, race, gender, and social justice through the remaking of societal institutions--to the realm of schools. The core concern of critical pedagogy is to illuminate the role of schools in perpetuating the established order and to convert them, instead, into instruments for social reform.

Despite its radical bent--bordering on the kind of liberation theology liberation theology, belief that the Christian Gospel demands "a preferential option for the poor," and that the church should be involved in the struggle for economic and political justice in the contemporary world—particularly in the Third World.  associated with Latin American revolutionary clergy--the critical pedagogy school has managed to carve out to make or get by cutting, or as if by cutting; to cut out.
- Shak.

See also: Carve
 a respectable niche in America's schools of education, enough to get its views aired in journals such as the Harvard Educational Review The Harvard Educational Review is an interdisciplinary scholarly journal of opinion and research dealing with education, published by the Harvard Education Publishing Group. The journal was founded in 1930 with circulation to policymakers, researchers, administrators, and teachers.  (see Giroux's essay in the Winter 2002 issue) and to have its patron saint patron saint

Saint to whose protection and intercession a person, society, church, place, profession, or activity is dedicated. The choice is usually made on the basis of some real or presumed relationship (e.g., St.
, Paulo Freire Paulo Freire (Recife, Brazil September 19, 1921 - São Paulo, Brazil May 2, 1997) was a Brazilian educator and is a highly influential theorist of education. Biography , the Brazilian Marxist, recognized by the New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Times as one of 13 "provocative leaders" in education" on whose shoulders the future is being built" Marilyn Cochran-Smith, the newly elected president of the influential American Educational Research Association The American Educational Research Association, or AERA, was founded in 1916 as a professional organization representing educational researchers in the United States and around the world.  (AERA AERA American Educational Research Association
AERA Automotive Engine Rebuilders Association
AERA Air Emissions Risk Analysis
AERA Accelerating Economic Recovery in Asia
AERA American European Racquetball Association
), is at least sympathetic to the critical pedagogy movement and is the director of a curriculum and instruction doctoral program at Boston College that lists critical pedagogy as one of only four areas of specialization. At its 2002 annual meeting, the AERA program featured more than 40 panels on critical theory and pedagogy.

Admittedly, the critical pedagogues have squarely confronted two of the most enduring issues surrounding the work of education: 1) To what extent should the mission of public schools be focused on character development, societal, reform, and other such affective goals, as opposed to cognitive development and academic preparation? 2) To the extent that values should be taught in school, whose values should take precedence? A related issue, first raised by Durkheim and now at the center of critical pedagogy, is: How much emphasis should schools place on promoting individual achievement vis-avis collective well-being? Proponents of critical pedagogy view "egoism egoism (ē`gōĭzəm), in ethics, the doctrine that the ends and motives of human conduct are, or should be, the good of the individual agent. It is opposed to altruism, which holds the criterion of morality to be the welfare of others. " as incompatible with societal progress and complain that schools have become too wedded to Social Darwinist competition. By contrast, traditionalists worry that schools have taken the "it takes a village" slogan to such lengths that they risk producing an increasing number of village idiots.

Historical Context

There has always been the temptation to use schools for proselytizing or other ends normally associated with religious and other institutions. Both conservative and progressive forces at various moments in American history have been behind the move to turn schools into sites not only for informing minds but also for transforming lives. In Who Controls Our Schools? Michael Kirst notes that the widely read McGuffey readers, first published in 1836, openly preached the Protestant ethic, while Catharine Beecher "urged that the school teach the importance of fresh air, loose clothing, simple diet, and exercise." By the early 20th century, schools were increasingly relied on to assimilate newly arrived immigrant children into the American mainstream and to instill in·still
v.
To pour in drop by drop.



instil·lation n.
 a sense of patriotism.

From John Dewey's democratic schooling crusade and George Counts's anti-capitalism pedagogy at Columbia's Teachers College in the 1930s, and the life adjustment movement of the 1940s and 1950s, to the character education movement of the 1980s and 1990s, the academic mission of schools has continued to compete for attention with other mandates. The character education movement itself was a conservative reaction to what some viewed as an excessive liberal fixation on the psychosocial needs of schoolchildren schoolchildren school nplécoliers mpl;
(at secondary school) → collégiens mpl; lycéens mpl

schoolchildren school
 and the relaxation of standards of conduct in the name of diversity, inclusion, and other politically correct politically correct Politically sensitive adjective Referring to language reflecting awareness and sensitivity to another person's physical, mental, cultural, or other disadvantages or deviations from a norm; a person is not mentally retarded, but  shibboleths.

The building of "self-esteem" and "community" has been part of the same progressive project, coalescing coalescing (kōles´ing),
n a joining or fusing of parts.
 in today's dominant K-12 paradigm--constructivism--which combines the child-centered, non judgmental judg·men·tal  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or dependent on judgment: a judgmental error.

2. Inclined to make judgments, especially moral or personal ones:
, nonhierarchical, teacher-as-facilitator classroom (rooted in the romantic tradition of Rousseau) with a cooperative learning cooperative learning Education theory A student-centered teaching strategy in which heterogeneous groups of students work to achieve a common academic goal–eg, completing a case study or a evaluating a QC problem. See Problem-based learning, Socratic method.  regimen (rooted in Counts's vision of a New Social Man). The conjoining of seemingly paradoxical elements of independent and collaborative learning reflects the odd .juxtaposition of radical libertarianism and radical egalitarianism that defined the Woodstock generation now running America's schools.

Some attention to "moral" education in schooling is almost inevitable (in other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke"
put differently
, it is nearly impossible to completely separate normative values from empirical analysis) and desirable (surely we do not want schools to be wholly amoral a·mor·al  
adj.
1. Not admitting of moral distinctions or judgments; neither moral nor immoral.

2. Lacking moral sensibility; not caring about right and wrong.
). The same goes for "political" education, if by that we mean citizenship education. But the question remains, What exactly should be the extent and nature of such training-how much time should be spent shaping the heart and soul relative to the mind? Critical pedagogy answers this question in a highly provocative manner that leaves it open to much criticism. Moreover, nowhere do the inherent tensions of progressivism, between the twin impulses of self-expression and self-abnegation, surface more clearly than in the case of critical pedagogy, which can be viewed as an offshoot of constructivism constructivism, Russian art movement founded c.1913 by Vladimir Tatlin, related to the movement known as suprematism. After 1916 the brothers Naum Gabo and Antoine Pevsner gave new impetus to Tatlin's art of purely abstract (although politically intended) , which in turn is an offshoot of postmodernism. To see this, we need only examine the words of the critical pedagogues themselves, deconstructing their own texts.

What Is Critical Pedagogy?

If, as D. C. Phillips has put it, constructivism is not so much a scientific theory as a "secular religion," then critical pedagogy is an especially militant sect. Indeed, the apostles of critical pedagogy have fallen out with their progressive brethren because of the progressives' pretensions toward science and, hence, failure to adopt a more evangelical posture toward schooling. Critical pedagogy shares with constructivism the following: 1) Critical pedagogy is very PC in that it pays homage to multiculturalism and situational learning (tied to the student's group identity and personal experiences) as antidotes to what is portrayed as the traditional, Eurocentric education system; 2) critical pedagogy is wrapped in the rhetoric of "emancipation" and "collaboration," promoting creativity as long as that does not create advantages for some students over others; 3) critical pedagogy stresses "higher order thinking" while disparaging dis·par·age  
tr.v. dis·par·aged, dis·par·ag·ing, dis·par·ag·es
1. To speak of in a slighting or disrespectful way; belittle. See Synonyms at decry.

2. To reduce in esteem or rank.
 the teaching of basic skills (rules of grammar, punctuation, computation) and basic information (factual knowledge) as producing mere "rote memorization"; and 4) critical pedagogy opposes what it calls the "corporatization Corporatization is a more precise term for what often is called privatization, for it almost always refers to a process by which formerly public assets or functions are sold or given to corporate entities. " of education, represented by the testing and standards movement.

Critical pedagogy departs somewhat from constructivism, first in its emphasis on the affective-normative domain at the expense of the cognitive-empirical domain--it is more interested in engaging students in understanding the world as it ought to be than in how it is--and, second, in its acceptance of the hierarchical, judgmental classroom, where the teacher's role is not to facilitate value-free inquiry but instead to use the bully pulpit to preach doctrinaire doc·tri·naire  
n.
A person inflexibly attached to a practice or theory without regard to its practicality.

adj.
Of, relating to, or characteristic of a person inflexibly attached to a practice or theory. See Synonyms at dictatorial.
 gospel, with schools performing the function not of political socialization but of counter-socialization. The school is to be, if not a ministry, at least a political party.

The high priest (or, as McLaren puts it, "inaugural protagonist") of critical pedagogy is the late Paulo Freire, whose view of conventional schooling (a teacher instructing students in the canon of established academic curricula) was captured in the title of his seminal 1970 book, The Pedagogy of the Oppressed Pedagogy of the Oppressed is the most widely known of educator Paulo Freire's works. It was first published in Portuguese in 1968 as Pedagogia do oprimido and the first English translation was published in 1970. . In his tribute to Freire following the latter's death in 1997, McLaren stated that Freire supported "a radical politics of historical struggle" and "acquired a mythic stature among progressive educators, social workers, and theologians" for "fomenting dedication to the ways that education can serve as a vehicle for ... 'a politics of liberation.'"

Although Freire boasts numerous disciples (Michael Apple, Stanley Aronowitz, and Donald Macedo, among others), McLaren and Giroux are arguably the leading exemplars of critical pedagogy today. In the 1980s both, ironically, were housed in McGuffey Hall (named after the inaugural protagonist of character education) at Miami University of Ohio, where Giroux was director and McLaren associate director of the Center for Education and Culture Studies. Their paths continued to cross, even after the former migrated to Penn State and the latter to UCLA UCLA University of California at Los Angeles
UCLA University Center for Learning Assistance (Illinois State University)
UCLA University of Carrollton, TX and Lower Addison, TX
. In fact, their writings have crossed so much--the authors often mirroring one another, even at times sharing the same volume as coauthors and coeditors--that it is hard to distinguish between the two. Reviewing a few selected, representative pieces, I will trace the evolution of their thinking since the 1980s, although there is relatively little observable change, given not only the constant polemical tone that has remained at the core of their work but also the similar language that appears throughout the corpus of that work; they unabashedly un·a·bashed  
adj.
1. Not disconcerted or embarrassed; poised.

2. Not concealed or disguised; obvious: unabashed disgust.
 acknowledge their frequent borrowing, almost verbatim, from previously published essays. If one wished to be unkind, one might say that the "three R's" in their case stand for redundant, recycled rants--well-rehearsed arguments exhibiting a recitative recitative (rĕs'ĭtətēv`), musical declamation for solo voice, used in opera and oratorio for dialogue and for narration. Its development at the close of the 16th cent. made possible the rise of opera. , drill-like quality of the very sort that critical pedagogy abhors. Nevertheless, if nothing else, these authors do challenge us to reexamine re·ex·am·ine also re-ex·am·ine  
tr.v. re·ex·am·ined, re·ex·am·in·ing, re·ex·am·ines
1. To examine again or anew; review.

2. Law To question (a witness) again after cross-examination.
 our basic assumptions about the American school.

In Their Own Words

In Teachers as Intellectuals (1988), a collection of his early articles, Giroux criticizes the "hidden curriculum," the excessively "technocratic" character of literacy training, and insufficiently "radicalized" teacher education programs, among other targets. He opens with the observation:
   In the worldview of traditionalists,
   schools are merely instructional sites.
   That schools are also cultural and political
   sites is ignored.... Rather than
   viewing school knowledge as objective,
   as something to be merely transmitted
   to students, radical [critical pedagogy]
   theorists argue that school knowledge ...
   [represents the] dominant culture ...
   [with its] privileged language forms,
   modes of reasoning, social relations,
   and lived experiences.


We begin to see here the connection between critical pedagogy, postmodernism, and the legitimation of Ebonics (in Oakland and elsewhere), inventive spelling (in the national standards published by the National Council of Teachers of English Mission
As stated on their official website, the NCTE ( National Council of Teachers of English) is a professional organization dedicated to "improving the teaching and learning of English and the language arts at all levels of education.
 in 1996, which devalued de·val·ue   also de·val·u·ate
v. de·val·ued also de·valu·at·ed, de·val·u·ing also de·val·u·at·ing, de·val·ues also de·val·u·ates

v.tr.
1. To lessen or cancel the value of.
 standard English conventions), fuzzy math (in the national standards published by the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics The National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM) was founded in 1920. It has grown to be the world's largest organization concerned with mathematics education, having close to 100,000 members across the USA and Canada, and internationally.  in 1989, which devalued right and wrong answers), and a relativist rel·a·tiv·ist  
n.
1. Philosophy A proponent of relativism.

2. A physicist who specializes in the theories of relativity.
, multicultural social studies (in the 1994 national history standards project, whose director, Gary Nash of UCLA, said, "We want to liberate students from the prison of facts").

While questioning the very existence of any objective, core knowledge and competencies to teach students, Giroux at the same time says, "Schools are public places where students learn the knowledge and skills" that constitute an educated person. He resolves the apparent contradiction by explaining what "knowledge and skills" he has in mind. Teachers and administrators, Giroux argues, should play the role of "transformative intellectuals who develop counterhegemonic pedagogies" and educate students"for transformative action" One of the problems with critical pedagogy is that authors express ideas in such airy, abstract terms that it is hard to get a handle on exactly what practical classroom applications might follow. It is clear, however, that instruction in the core subjects of math, science, English, and history is secondary to other goals.

We should not be "organizing schools around the goals of raising reading and math scores," writes Giroux, "but our primary concern is to [get students] to learn how to affirm their own experiences, and to understand the need to struggle individually and collectively for a more just society" Discovery learning and individual empowerment go only so far. Giroux rejects absolutism absolutism

Political doctrine and practice of unlimited, centralized authority and absolute sovereignty, especially as vested in a monarch. Its essence is that the ruling power is not subject to regular challenge or check by any judicial, legislative, religious, economic, or
 when it comes to empirical knowledge, but he is more dogmatic with regard to the values teachers as transformative intellectuals are supposed to cultivate. While historical facts, multiplication tables, and proper grammar may be in the eyes of the beholder, what constitutes a "just society" is an objective exercise, to be defined by Giroux and his associates, not by parents, taxpayers, school boards, or other stakeholders.

He is critical of "how schools socialize so·cial·ize  
v. so·cial·ized, so·cial·iz·ing, so·cial·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To place under government or group ownership or control.

2. To make fit for companionship with others; make sociable.
 students to accept unquestionably un·ques·tion·a·ble  
adj.
Beyond question or doubt. See Synonyms at authentic.



un·question·a·bil
 [sic] a set of beliefs" and how"all social interaction between teachers and students [is] mediated by hierarchically organized structures," yet he praises Freire for"fashioning a theory of education that takes seriously the relationship between radical critical theory and the imperatives of radical commitment and struggle" [emphasis added]. Given his revolutionary zeal--he does not disguise his fondness for the "important focus" and "value" of "the neo-Marxist position"--one has to wonder whether, in Giroux's classroom, students are exposed to a full range of ideas and opinions, lively debate, and the best scholarship based on evidence and argument, or whether only "counterhegemonic" thoughts are permitted. Giroux believes that "central to a realizable critical pedagogy is the need to view schools as democratic public spheres," but his vision invites the charges of elitism e·lit·ism or é·lit·ism  
n.
1. The belief that certain persons or members of certain classes or groups deserve favored treatment by virtue of their perceived superiority, as in intellect, social status, or financial resources.
 that have always dogged proletarian vanguards.

Giroux caricatures the traditional classroom as one where "students sit in rows staring at the back of each others' heads and at the teacher who faces them in symbolic, authoritarian fashion"; "events are governed by a rigid time schedule imposed by a system of bells and reinforced by cues from teachers"; we "glorify the teacher as the expert [and] dispenser of knowledge"; "social relationships ... are based upon power relations inextricably in·ex·tri·ca·ble  
adj.
1.
a. So intricate or entangled as to make escape impossible: an inextricable maze; an inextricable web of deceit.

b.
 linked to the teacher's allotment of grades"; and tracking "alienates students from schooling." Thanks to Giroux and others, the contemporary classroom--even if it falls short of the critical pedagogues' ideal--increasingly is a block-scheduled site presided over by a teacher who, at least concerning academics, is the guide on the side, eschews grades in favor of portfolios, minimizes ability-grouping, and, rather than being a content provider, is a manager of peer editing, team

building, and other processes. (Curiously, the standards movement has been gaining momentum despite, or perhaps because of, these trends.) If the logic of the hegemonic classroom, according to Giroux, was "more ideological than rational," at least as much could be said for the counterhegemonic classroom. While Giroux is critical of neoconservative ne·o·con·ser·va·tism also ne·o-con·ser·va·tism  
n.
An intellectual and political movement in favor of political, economic, and social conservatism that arose in opposition to the perceived liberalism of the 1960s:
 "moral regulation" represented by the recent character education movement, he has few misgivings about his own neoradical version of character ed.

More Contradictions

Similar themes are struck by Giroux in Schooling and the Struggle for Public Life (1988). He recommends that teachers "concern themselves with the business of moral and political education" and not "work to become curriculum experts" While praising John Dewey for making "a valuable pedagogical ped·a·gog·ic   also ped·a·gog·i·cal
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or characteristic of pedagogy.

2. Characterized by pedantic formality: a haughty, pedagogic manner.
 contribution ... that linked a theory of ethics to the issue of moral character," he condemns "various right-wing spokespersons, in and out of the government, [who] have become quite aggressive in pushing a program for schools to teach a particular set of moral values and virtues." He scoffs at teachers' being asked "to promote character development in students, to teach them a clear sense of right and wrong, to promote skills of individual achievement." He accuses not only conservatives but even liberals and postmodernists of "a flight from ethics," given their "silence regarding forms of race, class, and gender discrimination"

Giroux struggles with the inconsistency of ridiculing the moral clarity of others while defending his own and of teachers' mapping what is supposed to be a student's journey of self-discovery: "The issue here is how can educators make their own political commitments clear while developing forms of pedagogy consistent with the democratic imperative that students learn to make choices ... and act on their own beliefs." He applauds the efforts by Counts and others in"usurping pedagogical opportunities in schools ... in order to transform existing political and economic inequalities." In social studies, while rightly criticizing the tendency of earlier American citizenship educators to produce America-Firsters by teaching a sanitized san·i·tize  
tr.v. san·i·tized, san·i·tiz·ing, san·i·tiz·es
1. To make sanitary, as by cleaning or disinfecting.

2.
, celebratory U.S. history, Giroux overcorrects in promoting a curriculum calculated to produce America-Worsters, focused on the country's warts, as schools serve as "sites of struggle that address the suffering ... of the oppressed op·press  
tr.v. op·pressed, op·press·ing, op·press·es
1. To keep down by severe and unjust use of force or authority: a people who were oppressed by tyranny.

2.
." His is not a recipe for a serious, sophisticated, accurate, intersubjective history, but one where "knowledge and power come together" in support of "the good society."

Literacy is "associated with the transmission and mastery of a unitary Western tradition based on the virtues of hard work, industry, [and] respect for family." Children in urban schools, we are told, are especially at risk of becoming bored or disruptive if teachers ignore their "voice" and "cultural capital," which Giroux equates with teachers' behaving like "white collar" functionaries, dispensing insights from Great Books and tips on diagramming sentence structure. Instead of following in the Marxist tradition of Antonio Gramsci, who argued that the working class needed to master the knowledge and skills of the establishment in order to succeed, Giroux prefers Freire's "emancipatory e·man·ci·pate  
tr.v. e·man·ci·pat·ed, e·man·ci·pat·ing, e·man·ci·pates
1. To free from bondage, oppression, or restraint; liberate.

2.
 literacy," designed to "throw off the colonial voice" and "the terror and brutality of despotic regimes." This is more than a call for respecting diversity; it is an attack on the teaching of fundamentals, as Giroux opposes schools of education training teachers in "the implementation of mandated basics," which he contends only results in masses of students participating in their own oppression.

In Education Still under Siege (with Stanley Aronowitz; 1993), Giroux states that central to "transformative intellectuals is the task of making the pedagogical more political and the political more pedagogical." Again, "knowledge and power are inextricably linked." In place of "the authoritarian classroom armed with the three R's curriculum," we must draw on "the legacy of a critical Marxism" but "move beyond Marx," mounting a "challenge to the racist, patriarchal, sexist principles embedded in American society and schooling." He says all this while berating the conservatives' "hubris Hubris

An arrogance due to excessive pride and an insolence toward others. A classic character flaw of a trader or investor.
 that declares they know what truth and the good life really are" and confessing bewilderment over "the paradox of how groups that so blatantly favor the rich, the upper classes, and the logic of unbridled individualism can so effectively mobilize ... oppressed groups"

Here, as in other writings, Giroux laments the "proletarianization of teacher work," their demotion de·mote  
tr.v. de·mot·ed, de·mot·ing, de·motes
To reduce in grade, rank, or status.



[de- + (pro)mote.
 to "high-level clerks," and their "deskilling Deskilling is the process by which skilled labor within an industry or economy is eliminated by the introduction of technologies operated by semiskilled or unskilled workers. " and "demoralization de·mor·al·ize  
tr.v. de·mor·al·ized, de·mor·al·iz·ing, de·mor·al·iz·es
1. To undermine the confidence or morale of; dishearten: an inconsistent policy that demoralized the staff.
," all of which he blames on a conservative-driven "emphasis on accountability schemes, teaching to the tests, and ... the growing corporatization of the schools." Might it be, instead, the progressive-driven collapse of classroom discipline, the proliferation of bureaucratic paperwork for special education and the concomitant flail inclusion of behavior-disordered and learning-disabled students, the devaluing of subject-matter expertise, the mind-numbing coursework often required for certification and advancement, and the refusal to reward professionals based on their merit?

Fellow Traveler

With Peter McLaren, we get more of the same. Life in Schools: An Introduction to Critical Pedagogy in the Foundations of Education (2002), the latest edition of his 1989 text, is dedicated to Giroux and Freire and candidly relies heavily on the former's "ideas" as well as "sections from our co-authored works." The book is mostly an account of his four years as an elementary teacher in a Toronto inner-city school, first narrated in his 1980 Cries from the Corridor, and it echoes the customary critical pedagogues conclusion that the school must be foremost a "social and moral agent."

He takes on the important task of shedding "a more critical light on the issue of why disadvantaged students generally don't succeed in school," but adds little to Giroux's explanation. Teaching has become "apolitical a·po·lit·i·cal  
adj.
1. Having no interest in or association with politics.

2. Having no political relevance or importance: claimed that the President's upcoming trip was purely apolitical.
 ... stripped of its ... ethical imperative to analyze and remediate existing societal and institutional practices" and of its mission to promote "self-empowerment and social transformation." There has been a "devaluing and deskilling of teachers," as they have been "reduced to ... 'clerks of the empire'" by "the present rush toward accountability schemes, corporate management pedagogies, and state-mandated curricula" Schools "favor the interests of the dominant culture," as "the dominant curriculum separates knowledge from the issue of power," and "the hidden curriculum" favors boys over girls and whites over people of color Noun 1. people of color - a race with skin pigmentation different from the white race (especially Blacks)
people of colour, colour, color

race - people who are believed to belong to the same genetic stock; "some biologists doubt that there are important
. Here, then, is what purports to be a definitive portrait of public schools, painted in broad strokes (spanning the United States and Canada, urban, suburban, and rural settings), based on anecdotal (action) research, by someone who does not believe in the possibility of objective knowledge--who says "any worthwhile theory of schooling must be partisan"--begging the question: Why should we take his study any more seriously than any other?

In Revolutionary Multiculturalisrn (1997), McLaren expounds on "a socialist-feminist multiculturalism that challenges ... historically sedimented processes through which race, class, and gender identities are produced within capitalist society." His analysis suffers from all the intellectual flabbiness flab·by  
adj. flab·bi·er, flab·bi·est
1. Lacking firmness; flaccid: getting flabby around the waist. See Synonyms at limp.

2.
 (for example, claiming that "the U.S. is fascist," or that "the greed and avarice av·a·rice  
n.
Immoderate desire for wealth; cupidity.



[Middle English, from Old French, from Latin av
 of the U.S. ruling class are seemingly unparalleled in history") and turgid turgid /tur·gid/ (ter´jid) swollen and congested.

tur·gid
adj.
Swollen or distended, as from a fluid; bloated; tumid.



turgid

swollen and congested.
 prose (like his reference to the "Dickensianizing of postmodern megalopolises," or his final chapter, entitled, "Unthinking Whiteness: Critical Citizenship in Gringolandia") that are commonly associated with the postmodern genre.

As always, schools, including universities, must serve as "moral agents." Possible role models include rap and hip-hop artists, whom he characterizes as "organic intellectuals," suggesting what he means when he says, "What is needed in school settings ... is radical shifts in what counts as knowledge and what counts as learning." He devotes an entire, mostly laudatory laud·a·to·ry  
adj.
Expressing or conferring praise: a laudatory review of the new play.


laudatory
Adjective

(of speech or writing) expressing praise

Adj.
 chapter to "the terrorist pedagogy" advocated by the French cultural critic Jean Baudrillard. Reading McLaren, one searches in vain for any discussion of the normal stuff of schooling, of alphabets or algorithms or lab experiments. School is treated almost like experimental theater, the theater of the absurd theater of the absurd: see drama, Western. . At one point, McLaren refers to ideas buried in the recesses of his mind as "gliding past me like some eerie opium-induced object," as if getting high on higher-order thinking. If his goal is to shock us out of accepting the conventional education paradigm, he fails badly, since it is simply impossible to translate any of this into best practices that a typical teacher, on the ground, might be able to implement. Critical pedagogy is critical of knowledge for knowledge's sake, but titillation for titillation's sake seems permissible.

Barbarians in the Temple

Like McLaren, Giroux extends his analysis to the collegiate level. In the aforementioned Winter 2002 Harvard Educational Review article, entitled "Neoliberalism ne·o·lib·er·al·ism  
n.
A political movement beginning in the 1960s that blends traditional liberal concerns for social justice with an emphasis on economic growth.



ne
, Corporate Culture, and the Promise of Higher Education: The University as a Democratic Public Sphere," Giroux discusses "the role the university should play as a site of critical thinking [and] democratic leadership" that "confronts the march of corporate power" He envisions a seamless K-16 system in which affective learning trumps cognitive learning throughout all grades. Meanwhile, equating the teaching of basics with job training of "compliant workers," he glosses over the fact that "many employers in the business community feel dissatisfied because," in the words of the Committee for Economic Development's 1994 report, Putting Learning First, "a large majority of their new hires lack adequate writing and problem-solving skills." Giroux would prefer that schools produce a cadre of social activists who can take to the streets even if they lack the marketable skills that can put a roof over their family and bread on the table.

The academy is lambasted as a place where, like the larger society, "anyone who does not believe that rapacious capitalism is the only road to freedom and the good life is dismissed as a crank," and "academic disciplines gain stature almost exclusively through their exchange value on the market." Never mind that recent surveys of university faculty have shown that an overwhelming percentage are liberal Democrats and that women's, black, and minority studies programs continue to proliferate on campuses. While Giroux raises legitimate concerns about bottom-line financial pressures' potentially undermining the university's intellectual mission, he fails to consider how critical pedagogy, in its emphasis on ideology over inquiry, fosters its own brand of anti-intellectualism.

Perhaps nowhere does one see this more vividly than in Che Guevara, Paulo Freire, and the Pedagogy of Revolution (2000), McLaren's paean Paean (pē`ən), Paean was an epithet for Apollo, the healer. The paean, a hymn of praise to Apollo and often to other gods, was sung as a prayer for safety or deliverance at battles and other important occasions.  to two figures with whom he shares "a feeling of kinship." McLaren explains why "Che and Freire have never been needed more than at this current historical moment," since their pedagogical ideas can be used "to contest and transform current global relations of exploitation and oppression.... [They have taught us that we need] to do battle in the streets, in the boardrooms, in the classrooms." McLaren says very little about education here, devoting much of the book to biography and to his critique of capitalism Capitalism has been critiqued from many angles in its history. Markets
The "free market"
Though many associate the free market concept with capitalism, there are some critics —notably mutualists and some other anarchists – who believe that a
. He laments that critical pedagogy "no longer enjoys its [earlier] status as a herald for democracy, as a clarion call for revolutionary praxis.... The conceptual net known as critical pedagogy has been cast so wide and at times so cavalierly that it has come to be associated with anything ... from classroom furniture organized in a 'dialogue friendly' circle to 'feel-good' curricula designed to increase students' self-image" He winds up faulting constructivists not for their ideas, with which he is generally sympathetic, but for their lack of radical fervor, as "their work is marked by a flirtation with but never full commitment to" the cause of revolution.

Perhaps it is just as well that critical pedagogy's clarion call has not been fully heeded. We would do better to reaffirm education as that which promotes, in the words of an 1830 Yale University report, "the discipline and furniture of the mind." Put more simply, to quote a recent newspaper editorial, we might "let schools be schools," encouraging a renewed commitment to what is uniquely their mission--fostering a solid foundation of knowledge and understanding, a love of learning, and the tools for pursuing that learning--as the first principle of schooling, not the last. There will always be debates over what truths and values to teach, as there should be, but at least let these be guided by a disposition toward objectivity, the spirit of free inquiry, and academic integrity rather than by chiliastic chil·i·asm  
n. Christianity
The doctrine stating that Jesus will reign on earth for 1,000 years.



[New Latin ch
 movements.

--J. Martin Rochester is a professor of political science at the University of Missouri-St. Louis.
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Title Annotation:check the facts
Author:Rochester, J. Martin
Publication:Education Next
Date:Sep 22, 2003
Words:4258
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