The famous Brazilian educator Paulo Freire has influenced educators, teachers and students in a broad tapestry of contexts and countries, as he challenged conventional thinking on how teachers ought to teach and learners ought to learn. By making his ideas accessible and relevant, this insightful and thought-provoking text draws out the relevance and topicality of Freires work and applies this to a wide range of educational settings, from adult education, through schools, to early years settings.
Themes covered include:
- the lasting impact of illiteracy;
- the benefits and potential in becoming literate;
- literacy, language and power;
- the differences between banking and dialogic education;
- the social and political nature of learning.
- what kind of teaching and learning do we want?
Using a variety of practical examples and case studies, Introducing Freireis an essential guide to the work of one of the most significant figures in education in the last century. Fascinating and accessible, this book is for anyone interested in teaching and learning, poverty and affluence, power and powerlessness, and society and change.
1. The life and times of Paulo Freire 2. Literacy and Beyond 3. Dialogue, illiteracy and more 4. Naming, reading and writing the world 5. The definition, philosophy and politics of literacy 6. Part 1:What kind of teaching and learning do we want? 7. Part 2: What kind of teaching and learning do we want? Links to informal education 8. A Pedagogy for Liberation 9. Theater of the Oppressed: an elaboration of the work of Paulo Freire 10. No more silence: learning in informal settings
Looking at the work of one of the most influential educators in thl“±