Pedagogy of the Oppressor
Another reason why U.S. ed schools are so awful: the ongoing influence of
Brazilian Marxist Paulo Freire

Like the more famous Teach for America, the New York Teaching Fellows
program provides an alternate route to state certification for about 1,700
new teachers annually. When I met with a group of the fellows taking a
required class at a school of education last summer, we began by discussing
education reform, but the conversation soon took a turn, with many
recounting one horror story after another from their rocky first year:
chaotic classrooms, indifferent administrators, veteran teachers who rarely
offered a helping hand. You might expect the required readings for these
struggling rookies to contain good practical tips on classroom management,
say, or sensible advice on teaching reading to disadvantaged students.
Instead, the one book that the fellows had to read in full was *Pedagogy of
the Oppressed*, by the Brazilian educator Paulo Freire.

For anyone familiar with American schools of education, the choice wasn’t
surprising. Since the publication of the English edition in 1970, *Pedagogy
of the Oppressed* has achieved near-iconic status in America’s
teacher-training programs. In 2003, David Steiner and Susan Rozen published
a study examining the curricula of 16 schools of education—14 of them among
the top-ranked institutions in the country, according to *U.S. News and
World Report*—and found that *Pedagogy of the Oppressed* was one of the most
frequently assigned texts in their philosophy of education courses. These
course assignments are undoubtedly part of the reason that, according to the
publisher, almost 1 million copies have sold, a remarkable number for a book
in the education field.

The odd thing is that Freire’s magnum opus isn’t, in the end,
*about*education—certainly not the education of children.
*Pedagogy of the Oppressed* mentions none of the issues that troubled
education reformers throughout the twentieth century: testing, standards,
curriculum, the role of parents, how to organize schools, what subjects
should be taught in various grades, how best to train teachers, the most
effective way of teaching disadvantaged students. This ed-school bestseller
is, instead, a utopian political tract calling for the overthrow of
capitalist hegemony and the creation of classless societies. Teachers who
adopt its pernicious ideas risk harming their students—and ironically, their
most disadvantaged students will suffer the most.

To get an idea of the book’s priorities, take a look at its footnotes.
Freire isn’t interested in the Western tradition’s leading education
thinkers—not Rousseau, not Piaget, not John Dewey, not Horace Mann, not
Maria Montessori. He cites a rather different set of figures: Marx, Lenin,
Mao, Che Guevara, and Fidel Castro, as well as the radical intellectuals
Frantz Fanon, Régis Debray, Herbert Marcuse, Jean-Paul Sartre, Louis
Althusser, and Georg Lukács. And no wonder, since Freire’s main idea is that
the central contradiction of every society is between the “oppressors” and
the “oppressed” and that revolution should resolve their conflict. The
“oppressed” are, moreover, destined to develop a “pedagogy” that leads them
to their own liberation. Here, in a key passage, is how Freire explains this
emancipatory project:

The pedagogy of the oppressed [is] a pedagogy which must be forged with, not
for, the oppressed (whether individuals or peoples) in the incessant
struggle to regain their humanity. This pedagogy makes oppression and its
causes objects of reflection by the oppressed, and from that reflection will
come their necessary engagement in the struggle for their liberation. And in
the struggle this pedagogy will be made and remade.

As the passage makes clear, Freire never intends “pedagogy” to refer to any
method of classroom instruction based on analysis and research, or to any
means of producing higher academic achievement for students. He has bigger
fish to fry. His idiosyncratic theory of schooling refers only to the
growing self-awareness of exploited workers and peasants who are “unveiling
the world of oppression.” Once they reach enlightenment, *mirabile dictu*,
“this pedagogy ceases to belong to the oppressed and becomes a pedagogy of
all people in the process of permanent liberation.”

Seldom does Freire ground his description of the clash between oppressors
and oppressed in any particular society or historical period, so it’s hard
for the reader to judge whether what he is saying makes any sense. We don’t
know if the oppressors he condemns are North American bankers, Latin
American land barons, or, for that matter, run-of-the-mill, authoritarian
education bureaucrats. His language is so metaphysical and vague that he
might just as well be describing a board game with two contesting sides, the
oppressors and the oppressed. When thinking big thoughts about the general
struggle between these two sides, he relies on Marx’s standard formulation
that “the class struggle necessarily leads to the dictatorship of the
proletariat [and] this dictatorship only constitutes the transition to the
abolition of all classes and to a classless society.”

In one footnote, however, Freire does mention a society that has actually
realized the “permanent liberation” he seeks: it “appears to be the
fundamental aspect of Mao’s Cultural Revolution.” The millions of Chinese of
all classes who suffered and died under the revolution’s brutal oppression
might have disagreed. Freire also offers professorial advice to
revolutionary leaders, who “must perceive the revolution, because of its
creative and liberating nature, as an act of love.” Freire’s exemplar of
this revolutionary love in action is none other than that poster child of
1960s armed rebellion, Che Guevara, who recognized that “the true
revolutionary is guided by strong feelings of love.” Freire neglects to
mention that Che was one of the most brutal enforcers of the Cuban
Revolution, responsible for the execution of hundreds of political
opponents.

After all this, murkiness may be the least of the book’s problems, but it is
nevertheless worth quoting the book’s opening rumination:

While the problem of humanization has always, from an axiological point of
view, been humankind’s central problem, it now takes on the character of an
inescapable concern. Concern for humanization leads at once to the
recognition of dehumanization, not only as an ontological possibility but as
an historical reality. And as an individual perceives the extent of
dehumanization, he or she may ask if humanization is a viable possibility.
Within history, in concrete, objective contexts, both humanization and
dehumanization are possibilities for a person as an uncompleted being
conscious of their incompletion.

Roughly translated: “humanization” is good and “dehumanization” is bad. Oh,
for the days when revolutionary tracts got right to the point, as in: “A
specter is haunting Europe.”
[image: Illustration by Arnold Roth.]

How did this derivative, unscholarly book about oppression, class struggle,
the depredations of capitalism, and the need for revolution ever get
confused with a treatise on education that might help solve the problems of
twenty-first-century American inner-city schools? The answer to that
question begins in Pernambuco, a poverty-stricken province in northeastern
Brazil. In the 1950s and sixties, Freire was a university professor and
radical activist in the province’s capital city, Recife, where he organized
adult-literacy campaigns for disenfranchised peasants. Giving them crash
courses in literacy and civics was the most efficient means of mobilizing
them to elect radical candidates, Freire realized. His “pedagogy,” then,
began as a get-out-the-vote campaign to gain political power.

In 1964, a military coup struck Brazil. Freire spent some time in jail and
was then exiled to Chile, where—inspired by his work with the Brazilian
peasants—he worked on *Pedagogy of the Oppressed*. Hence the book’s
insistence that schooling is never a neutral process and that it always has
a dynamic political purpose. And hence, too, one of the few truly
pedagogical points in the book: its opposition to taxing students with any
actual academic content, which Freire derides as “official knowledge” that
serves to rationalize inequality within capitalist society. One of Freire’s
most widely quoted metaphors dismisses teacher-directed instruction as a
misguided “banking concept,” in which “the scope of action allowed to the
students extends only as far as receiving, filing and storing the deposits.”
Freire proposes instead that teachers partner with their coequals, the
students, in a “dialogic” and “problem-solving” process until the roles of
teacher and student merge into “teacher-students” and “student-teachers.”

After the 1970 publication of the book’s English edition, Freire received an
invitation to be a guest lecturer at the Harvard Graduate School of
Education, and over the next decade he found enthusiastic audiences in
American universities. *Pedagogy of the Oppressed* resonated with
progressive educators, already committed to a “child-centered” rather than a
“teacher-directed” approach to classroom instruction. Freire’s rejection of
teaching content knowledge seemed to buttress what was already the ed
schools’ most popular theory of learning, which argued that students should
work collaboratively in constructing their own knowledge and that the
teacher should be a “guide on the side,” not a “sage on the stage.”

In *Pedagogy of the Oppressed*, Freire had listed ten key characteristics of
the “banking” method of education that purported to show how it opposed
disadvantaged students’ interests. For instance, “the teacher talks and the
students listen—meekly”; “the teacher chooses and enforces his choice, and
the students comply”; “the teacher disciplines and the students are
disciplined”; and “the teacher chooses the program content, and the students
(who were not consulted) adapt to it.” Freire’s strictures reinforced
another cherished myth of American progressive ed—that traditional
teacher-directed lessons left students passive and disengaged, leading to
higher drop-out rates for minorities and the poor. That description was more
than a caricature; it was a complete fabrication. Over the last two decades,
E. D. Hirsch’s Core Knowledge schools have proved over and over again not
only that content-rich teaching raises the academic achievement of poor
children on standardized tests but that those students remain curious,
intellectually stimulated, and engaged—though the education schools continue
to ignore these documented successes.

Of course, the popularity of *Pedagogy of the Oppressed* wasn’t due to its
educational theory alone. During the seventies, veterans of the
student-protest and antiwar movements put down their placards and began
their “long march through the institutions,” earning Ph.D.s and joining
humanities departments. Once in the academy, the leftists couldn’t resist
incorporating their radical politics (whether Marxist, feminist, or
racialist) into their teaching. Celebrating Freire as a major thinker gave
them a powerful way to do so. His declaration in *Pedagogy of the
Oppressed*that there was “no such thing as a neutral education” became
a mantra for
leftist professors, who could use it to justify proselytizing for
America-hating causes in the college classroom.

Here and there, some leftist professors recognized the dangers to academic
discourse in this obliteration of the ideal of neutrality. In *Radical
Teacher*, the noted literary critic Gerald Graff—a former president of the
ultra–politically correct Modern Language Association—took on his fellow
profs, arguing that “however much Freire insists on ‘problem-posing’ rather
than ‘banking’ education, the goal of teaching for Freire is to move the
student toward what Freire calls ‘a critical perception of the world,’ and
there seems little question that for Freire only Marxism or some version of
Leftist radicalism counts as a genuine ‘critical perception.’ ” Elsewhere,
Graff went even further in rejecting the Freirian model of teaching:

What right do we have to be the self-appointed political conscience of our
students? Given the inequality in power and experience between students and
teachers (even teachers from disempowered groups) students are often
justifiably afraid to challenge our political views even if we beg them to
do so. . . . Making it the main object of teaching to open “students’ minds
to left, feminist, anti-racist, and queer ideas” and “stimulate” them (nice
euphemism that) “to work for egalitarian change” has been the fatal mistake
of the liberatory pedagogy movement from Freire in the 1960s to today.

But Graff’s cautionary advice fell on deaf ears in the academy. And not only
did indoctrination in the name of liberation infest American colleges, where
students could at least choose the courses they wanted to take; through a
cadre of radical ed-school professors, the Freirian agenda came to K–12
classrooms as well, in the form of an expanding movement for “teaching for
social justice.”

As a case in point, consider the career of Robert Peterson. Peterson started
out in the 1980s as a young elementary school teacher in inner-city
Milwaukee. He has described how he plumbed *Pedagogy of the Oppressed*,
looking for some way to apply the great radical educator’s lessons to his
own fourth- and fifth-grade bilingual classrooms. Peterson came to realize
that he had to break away from the “banking method” of education, in which
“the teacher and the curricular texts have the ‘right answers’ and which the
students are expected to regurgitate periodically.” Instead, he applied the
Freirian approach, which “relies on the experience of the student. . . . It
means challenging the students to reflect on the social nature of knowledge
and the curriculum.” Peterson would have you believe that his fourth- and
fifth-graders became critical theorists, interrogating the “nature of
knowledge” like junior scholars of the Frankfurt School.

What actually happened was that Peterson used the Freirian rationale to
become his students’ “self-appointed political conscience.” After one unit
on U.S. intervention in Latin America, Peterson decided to take the children
to a rally protesting U.S. aid to the Contras opposing the Marxist
Sandinistas in Nicaragua. The children stayed after school to make placards:

let them run their land!
help central america don’t kill them
give the nicaraguans their freedom

Peterson was particularly proud of a fourth-grader who described the rally
in the class magazine. “On a rainy Tuesday in April some of the students
from our class went to protest against the contras,” the student wrote. “The
people in Central America are poor and bombed on their heads. When we went
protesting it was raining and it seemed like the contras were bombing us.”

These days, Peterson is the editor of *Rethinking Schools*, the nation’s
leading publication for social-justice educators. He is also the editor of a
book called *Rethinking Mathematics: Teaching Social Justice by the Numbers*,
which provides math lessons for indoctrinating young children in the evils
of racist, imperialist America. Partly thanks to Peterson’s efforts, the
social-justice movement in math, as in other academic subjects, has fully
arrived (see “The Ed Schools’ Latest—and
Worst—Humbug<http://mail.google.com/html/16_3_ed_school.html>,”
Summer 2006). It has a foothold in just about every major ed school in the
country and enjoys the support of some of the biggest names in math
education, including several recent presidents of the 25,000-member American
Education Research Association, the umbrella organization of the education
professoriate. Its dozens of pseudo-scholarly books, journals, and
conferences extol the supposed benefits to disadvantaged kids of the kind of
teaching that Peterson once inflicted on his Milwaukee fourth-graders.

To counter the criticism that the movement’s objective is political
indoctrination, social-justice educators have developed a scholarly
apparatus designed to portray social-justice teaching as just another
reasonable education approach backed by “research.” Thus a recent issue of
Columbia University’s *Teachers College Record* (which bills itself as “the
voice of research in education”) carried a lead article by University of
Illinois math education professor Eric Guttstein reporting the results of “a
two-year qualitative, practitioner-research study of teaching and learning
for social justice.” The “practitioner research” consisted entirely of
Guttstein’s observing his own Freirian math instruction in a Chicago public
school for two years and then concluding that it was a great success. Part
of the evidence was a statement by one of his students: “I thought math was
just a subject they implanted on us just because they felt like it, but now
I realize that you could use math to defend your rights and realize the
injustices around you.” Guttstein concludes that “youth in K–12 classrooms
are more than just students—they are, in fact, actors in the struggle for
social justice.”
[image: Illustration by Arnold Roth.]

There’s no evidence that Freirian pedagogy has had much success anywhere in
the Third World. Nor have Freire’s favorite revolutionary regimes, like
China and Cuba, reformed their own “banking” approaches to education, in
which the brightest students are controlled, disciplined, and stuffed with
content knowledge for the sake of national goals—and the production of more
industrial managers, engineers, and scientists. How perverse is it, then,
that only in America’s inner cities have Freirian educators been empowered
to “liberate” poor children from an entirely imagined “oppression” and
recruit them for a revolution that will never come?

Freire’s ideas are harmful not just to students but to the teachers
entrusted with their education. A broad consensus is emerging among
education reformers that the best chance of lifting the academic achievement
of children in the nation’s inner-city schools is to raise dramatically the
effectiveness of the teachers assigned to those schools. Improving teacher
quality as a means of narrowing racial achievement gaps is a major focus of
President Obama’s education agenda. But if the quality of teachers is now
the name of the game, it defies rationality that *Pedagogy of the
Oppressed*still occupies an exalted place in training courses for
those teachers, who
will surely learn nothing about becoming better instructors from its
discredited Marxist platitudes.

In the age of Obama, finally, it seems all the more unacceptable to
encourage inner-city teachers to take the Freirian political agenda
seriously. If there is any political message that those teachers ought to be
bringing to their students, it’s one best articulated by our greatest
African-American writer, Ralph Ellison, who affirmed that he sought in his
writing “to see America with an awareness of its rich diversity and its
almost magical fluidity and freedom. . . . confronting the inequalities and
brutalities of our society forthrightly, yet thrusting forth its images of
hope, human fraternity, and individual self-realization.”

*Sol Stern is a contributing editor of *City Journal*, a senior fellow at
the Manhattan Institute, and the author of *Breaking Free: Public School
Lessons and the Imperative of School Choice.
 http://city-journal.org/2009/19_2_freirian-pedagogy.html

-- 
The rich will do anything for the poor but get off their
backs. - Karl Marx

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