apoyanos

A Critical Reflection on Our Struggle for a More Just & Loving World

Dr. Antonia Darder

July 24, 2023

Keynote

Resources

Summary

Dr. Antonia Darder presents a critical pedagogy framework centered on Paulo Freire's work as a revolutionary force for educational and social transformation. Drawing extensively from Freire's work and her own scholarship, Darder argues that love must be understood as a political force essential to justice, not merely as sentiment or comfort. She critiques what she terms "globalized economic apartheid" - the extreme wealth inequality where eight individuals control more wealth than 3.6 billion people - and connects this to dehumanizing educational practices that treat students as objects rather than subjects of their own learning.

Highlights

"The individual and the community are inseparable. This collective principle is essential to embodying our work for liberation in that neither dialogue nor consciousness can be generated in the absence of others."

"Educational equality or social justice will never be ours within a political economic system that requires the impoverishment and political subjugation of the majority of the world's population."

"We cannot liberate others. People cannot liberate themselves alone because people liberate themselves in communion mediated by the reality which they must transform." - Paulo Freire

Discussion Questions

  • The presentation strongly emphasizes that consciousness and liberation are inherently communal processes, critiquing Western individualism. However, many educational systems and teacher evaluation models focus on individual student achievement and teacher effectiveness. How might educators balance attention to individual student needs with collective consciousness-building?
  • Darder validates anger as "a logical response to repeated trauma of oppression" and critiques expectations that educators remain dispassionate. Yet professional norms often require teachers to manage their emotions and maintain classroom control. How should educators navigate the tension between expressing authentic responses to injustice and maintaining productive learning environments?
  • Darder argues that "educational equality or social justice will never be ours" within current economic systems and calls for revolutionary transformation. However, many educators work within existing institutions and seek incremental improvements. How should educators balance working within current systems while maintaining revolutionary vision? When does reform become complicity versus when does it serve as stepping stones toward broader transformation?