[Ron]
Has anyone here read Paulo Freire? Has anyone linked his ideas of critical 
pedagogy with RMPs Work?

[Arlo]
I've mentioned Freire several times over the years. The perennial and, now, 
generational "educational crisis" in America, I believe, results from a 
societal inability to answer the fundamental question "why educate?" We talk 
about testing and assessment and standards but few can articulate a 'purpose' 
behind the structure, and those that can (and do) are those that have come to 
see education as a servant to capitalism; the goal of education is to meet 
labor demands.

This is evident in every budget cut that guts arts and the humanities in favor 
of math and science. It is evident every time someone comments on a class, 
course or degree by asking "what is the cost-benefit of taking this?" It is 
evident every time someone responds to "I have a degree in philosophy (or 
theatre, or poetry, or history)" with something amounting to "that degree was a 
waste of money/is useless". It is evident when the U.S. government moves to tie 
awarding student loans to the "income potential" of a degree. 

Many Universities actually market themselves as no-frills (i.e., no time wasted 
on irrelevant things like the arts and literature) vocational schools. Indeed, 
in the very act of "marketing themselves", many universities have become 
themselves more and more like corporations. 

Into all this, I think the two most important voices on education are Freire 
and Dewey. Obviously, Granger's work has already established a link between 
Dewey and Pirsig. As for Freire, here is the abstract for Graham Patterson's "A 
Pedagogy for Teachers and Other Educational Decision Makers": Paulo Freire 
advocates a problem posing approach based on dialogue which is quite different 
to a problem solving approach that assumes the decision maker has all the 
necessary knowledge and wisdom. There is rather interesting and unexpected 
support for Freire's problem posing approach in Pirsig's didactic novel, Zen 
and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance. These two writers, Freire and Pirsig, 
have a similar message for teachers and administrators even though their styles 
and contexts are “worlds” apart.


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