Universität Wien

240064 VO Education for social justice in a global context (2024W)

A critical assessment of emancipatory and revolutionary educational concepts and their implementation in the Global South

BDG

Registration/Deregistration

Note: The time of your registration within the registration period has no effect on the allocation of places (no first come, first served).

Details

Language: German

Examination dates

Lecturers

Classes (iCal) - next class is marked with N

  • Monday 07.10. 15:00 - 16:30 Hörsaal B UniCampus Hof 2 2C-EG-02
  • Monday 14.10. 15:00 - 16:30 Hörsaal B UniCampus Hof 2 2C-EG-02
  • Monday 21.10. 15:00 - 16:30 Hörsaal B UniCampus Hof 2 2C-EG-02
  • Monday 28.10. 15:00 - 16:30 Hörsaal B UniCampus Hof 2 2C-EG-02
  • Monday 04.11. 15:00 - 16:30 Hörsaal B UniCampus Hof 2 2C-EG-02
  • Monday 11.11. 15:00 - 16:30 Hörsaal B UniCampus Hof 2 2C-EG-02
  • Monday 18.11. 15:00 - 16:30 Hörsaal B UniCampus Hof 2 2C-EG-02
  • Monday 02.12. 15:00 - 16:30 Hörsaal B UniCampus Hof 2 2C-EG-02
  • Monday 09.12. 15:00 - 16:30 Hörsaal B UniCampus Hof 2 2C-EG-02
  • Monday 16.12. 15:00 - 16:30 Hörsaal B UniCampus Hof 2 2C-EG-02
  • Monday 13.01. 15:00 - 16:30 Hörsaal B UniCampus Hof 2 2C-EG-02
  • Monday 20.01. 15:00 - 16:30 Hörsaal B UniCampus Hof 2 2C-EG-02

Information

Aims, contents and method of the course

Aims:
Building on the theoretical approaches of Paulo Freire and others, the course aims to provide an insight into the critical education debate and discuss historical case studies in which critical educational practice has been developed. This should strengthen the ability to classify and help shape educational debates in a critical, reflective and yet constructive way.
Course content:
In the context of the liberation movements of the 1950s and 1960s in the Global South, education was seen as an effective instrument for liberation from domination and the establishment of independent and socially just societies. It was intended to enable people to self-determine and shape their own lives autonomously. The narrative of emancipatory education may sound like a fairy tale - and perhaps this concept was just a fairy tale that was very quickly overtaken by political and historical developments, wherever it tried to unfold.
This lecture series addresses the question of what has become of the idea of emancipatory education. It is all too obvious that it no longer enjoys much appeal today. Educational policy discussions, whether at national, regional or global level, are based on completely different normative guidelines and are dominated by the model of competitiveness. Emancipatory education was also highly normative, but its norm was the liberation narrative, drawing on Kant, Hegel, Marx and, in the South, pre-colonial approaches to education. From the 1960s to the 1980s, this approach was considered the starting point for any debate on education in development policy discussions, in many places also in the countries of the South itself - and some specific educational policies also attempted to build on this.
After an introduction to the theoretical foundations of education for social justice and liberation, the lecture series will therefore present and critically discuss a whole series of case studies from the history of the (emancipatory) Third World and the Global South. Of particular interest here are those initiatives in which attempts were made in peripheral countries to pursue an independent path of educational policy.
The examples discussed include the “Education for Self-Reliance” concept for auto-centered development in Tanzania as well as socialist attempts in Asia (China, Vietnam, etc.) and Europe (Yugoslavia). For Latin America, the Cuban literacy campaign of 1961 is considered a beacon, as is that in Sandinista Nicaragua in the 1980s. This was followed up in 2000, when literacy campaigns were again launched in several Latin American countries under the motto “Yo sí puedo!” (“Yes, I can”). As part of the Latin American regional alliance ALBA-TCP, interregional educational cooperation also received widespread attention: with the support of Cuba and Venezuela, the “Yo sí puedo!” campaign was able to eliminate illiteracy in Bolivia, according to the government.
Points of reference for this critical debate on education in the Global South are Paulo Freire, Julius Nyerere and bell hooks as well as European theorists such as Antonio Gramsci and Pierre Bourdieu.

Methods: Lectures by the course leaders and individual guest lecturers, supplemented by references to original texts and videos with contributions from the theorists discussed.

Assessment and permitted materials

Proof of performance is provided in the form of a written examination at the end of the semester or on the other examination dates. The basis for this are the lectures on the one hand, and the original texts of the theorists discussed on the other, which are specified as compulsory reading.

The examination consists of two parts:

1. essay question on the contents of the lecture (open book)
2. reading diary of one of the works of the theorists discussed (of at least 120 pages), 5,000 to 6,000 characters including spaces.

Please observe the usual university formatting (name and matr.no., 1.5 lines of text in 12 point font).

Part 2 will be handed in together with the test on the examination dates.

Minimum requirements and assessment criteria

Examination topics

As mentioned above: Proof of performance is provided in the form of a written examination at the end of the semester or on the other examination dates. The basis for this are, on the one hand, the lectures and, on the other hand, the original texts of the theorists discussed, which are specified as compulsory reading.

Here is the schedule of the lectures:

Oct:

Oct. 7: Gerald Faschingeder, Margarita Langthaler (International Development, University of Vienna): Introduction: Emancipatory education in a global educational uniformity? Or: Paulo Freire, the Cuban educational revolution and its political-pedagogical heirs.

Oct. 14: Margarita Langthaler (University of Vienna, ÖFSE): Liberating educational concepts and their (revolutionary) implementation in Latin America. From Simón Rodríguez' educación republicana to the education campaigns in Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela.

Oct. 21: Gerald Faschingeder (University of Vienna, Paulo Freire Center): Pre-colonial education systems and what became of them.

28 Oct: Katrin Aiterwegmair (Graduate International Development, University of Vienna; doctorate in Chiapas/Mexico): “Cultivating Consciousness”: Emancipatory Education in Peasant Self-Organization in Chiapas, Mexico

Nov:

Nov. 4: Ana Pešikan (University of Belgrade): Equity in Education in different sociocultural contexts: The Case of Yugoslavia.

Nov. 11: Cristina Alarcón López (Institute for Educational Science, Department of School and Educational Research in International Comparison): Pupil and student protests in Chile

Nov. 18: Gerald Faschingeder (University of Vienna, Paulo Freire Center): What does social justice actually mean for education in a global context? Axes of educational inequality and how to overcome them.

Nov. 25: Veronika Wöhrer (Institute for Educational Science, Department of Educational Inequality): Participatory action research - self-determined learning and research?

Dec:

Dec. 2: Gerald Faschingeder (University of Vienna, Paulo Freire Center): bell hooks and Audre Lorde. Feminist claims to liberating education.

Dec. 9: Maximilian M.J. Chuhila (PhD, University of Dar es Salaam) [lecture via Zoom in English]: Education for Self-Reliance in Tanzania during Ujamaa, including aspects of adult education.

Dec. 16: Walter Kohan (State Univ. of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) [lecture via Zoom in English): Thinking with Paulo Freire: On Learning, Dialogue and Questioning as Beginning. [Date still unconfirmed]

January:

January 13: Gregor Kneussel (sinologist, Vienna): China's education policy between liberating aspiration and reality. A historical outline of the communist government's education policy.

January 20: Gerald Faschingeder (University of Vienna, Paulo Freire Center): The myth of liberating education: Why education never delivers what it promises. On the conjunctures of the concept of education and its new sisters competence and lifelong learning. An attempt at synthesis in memoriam Erich Ribolits.

January 27: 1st examination date

Reading list

Bourdieu, Pierre (1971): Die Illusion der Chancengleichheit. Untersuchungen zur Soziologie des Bildungswesens am Beispiel Frankreichs. Stuttgart: Klett
Carnoy, Martin (2007): Cuba’s Academic Advantage. Why Students in Cuba do better in School. Stanford: Stanford University Press
Carnoy, Martin / Samoff, Joel (1990): Education and Social Transition in the Third World. Princeton University Press
Faschingeder, Gerald / Kolland, Franz (Hg.): Bildung und ungleiche Entwicklung. Globale Konvergenzen & Divergenzen in der Bildungswelt. Wien: nap 2015.
Freire, Paulo (1971): Pädagogik der Unterdrückten. Bildung als Praxis der Freiheit. Vom Verfasser autorisierte deutsche Übertragung von Werner Simpfendörfer. Stuttgart: Kreuz-Verlag [später: Reinbeck/Hamburg: Rowohlt, 1973].
Freire, Paulo (2008): Pädagogik der Autonomie. Notwendiges Wissen für die Bildungspraxis. Übersetzt von Ivo Tamm in Koop. mit Dirk Oesselmann u. Peter Schreiner. Münster: Waxmann.
hooks, bell (1994): Teaching to Transgress: education as the practice of freedom. London: Routledge.
hooks, bell (2003): Teaching Community. A pedagogy of hope. New York: Routledge.
hooks, bell (2010): Teaching Critical Thinking. Practical Wisdom. Routledge: New York, London.
Kohan, Walter Omar (2021): Paulo Freire. A Philosophical Biography. London et al.: Bloomsbury. [als ebook hier: https://www.bloomsburycollections.com/book/paulo-freire-a-philosophical-biography/ch1-life]
Kohan, Walter Omar (2015): The Inventive Schoolmaster. Simón Rodríguez. Sense Publishers, Rotterdam. [online hier: https://www.academia.edu/14650287/The_Inventive_Schoolmaster_Sim%C3%B3n_Rodr%C3%ADguez]
Langthaler, Margarita (2019): Education Policies and Counter-Hegemony in Bolivarian Venezuela. Wien: Praesens
Langthaler, Margarita (2020): Bildung und Gegenhegemonie in peripheren Transformationsprozessen: Das Beispiel der bolivarianischen Bildungspolitik in Venezuela. In: JEP XXXVI, 55-81.
Nyerere, Julius (1967): Education for Self-Reliance. Dar-es-Salaam
Samoff, J. (1990): “Modernizing” a Socialist Vision: Education in Tanzania. In: Carnoy, Martin / Samoff, Joel (Hg.): Education and Social Transition in the Third World. Princeton University Press. 209-268
Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty (2007): Can the Subaltern Speak? Postkolonialität und subalterne Artikulation. Übersetzt von Alexander Joskowicz, Stefan Nowotny, Einleitung von Hito Steyerl. Wien: Turia + Kant.
Torres, Carlos Alberto (2014): First Freire: Early Writings in Social Justice Education. New York, NY: Teachers CollegePress.
Castro Varela, María do Mar / Khakpour, Natascha / Niggemann, Jan (Hg., 2023): Hegemonie bilden. Pädagogische Anschlüsse an Antonio Gramsci. Weinheim: Beltz. https://www.beltz.de/fachmedien/sozialpaedagogik_soziale_arbeit/produkte/details/42821-hegemonie-bilden.html, 5.4.2024
Woolf, Virginia (2004 [1929]): A Room of one’s own. London: Penguin Books.

Association in the course directory

IE: VM1 bis VM8, Schwerpunkt Bildung

Last modified: Mo 11.11.2024 13:46