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Popular education

Popular education is a concept grounded in notions of class, political struggle, and social transformation. The term is a translation from the Spanish educación popular or the Portuguese educação popular and rather than the English usage as when describing a 'popular television programme', popular here means 'of the people'. More specifically 'popular' refers to the 'popular classes', which include peasants, the unemployed, the working class and sometimes the lower middle class. The designation of 'popular' is meant most of all to exclude the upper class and upper middle class.

Popular education is used to classify a wide array of educational endeavours and has been a strong tradition in Latin America since the end of the first half of the 20th century. These endeavors are either composed of or carried out in the interests of the popular classes. The diversity of projects and endeavors claiming or receiving the label of popular education makes the term difficult to precisely define. Generally, one can say that popular education is class-based in nature and rejects the notion of education as transmission or 'banking education'. It stresses a dialectic or dialogical model between educator and educand. This model is explored in great detail in the works of one of the foremost popular educators Paulo Freire.

Though sharing many similarities with other forms of alternative education, popular education is a distinct form in its own right. In the words of Liam Kane: "What distinguishes popular education from 'adult', 'non-formal', 'distance', or 'permanent education', for example, is that in the context of social injustice, education can never be politically neutral: if it does not side with the poorest and marginalised sectors- the 'oppressed' – in an attempt to transform society, then it necessarily sides with the 'oppressors' in maintaining the existing structures of oppression, even if by default."[1]

Europe

Popular education began at the crossroads between politics and pedagogy, and strongly relies on the democratic ideal of the Enlightenment, which considered public education as a main tool of individual and collective emancipation, and thus the necessary conditions of autonomy, in accordance to Immanuel Kant's Was Ist Aufklärung? (What is Enlightenment?), published five years before the 1789 French Revolution, during which the Condorcet report established public instruction in France.

Jean-Jacques Rousseau's L'Emile: Or, On Education (1762) was another obvious theoretical influence, as well as the works of N. F. S. Grundtvig (1783–1872), at the origins of the Nordic movement of folk high schools. During the 19th century, popular education movements were involved, in particular in France, in the Republican and Socialist movement. A main component of the workers' movement, popular education was also strongly influenced by positivist, materialist and laïcité, if not anti-clerical, ideas.

Popular education may be defined as an educational technique designed to raise the consciousness of its participants and allow them to become more aware of how an individual's personal experiences are connected to larger societal problems. Participants are empowered to act to effect change on the problems that affect them.

19th century

One of the roots of popular education was the Condorcet report during the 1789 French Revolution. These ideas became an important component of the Republican and Socialist movement. Following the split of the First International at the 1872 Hague Congress between the "anti-authoritarian socialists" (anarchists) and the Marxists, popular education remained an important part of the workers' movement, in particular in the anarcho-syndicalist movement, strong in France, Spain and Italy. It was one of the important theme treated during the 1907 International Anarchist Congress of Amsterdam.

France

During the Second Empire, Jean Macé founded the Ligue de l'enseignement (Teaching League) in 1866; during the Lille Congress in 1885, Macé reaffirmed the masonic inspiration of this league devoted to popular instruction. Following the 1872 Hague Congress and the split between Marxists and anarchists, Fernand Pelloutier set up in France various Bourses du travail centres, where workers gathered and discussed politics and sciences.

The Jules Ferry laws in the 1880s, establishing free, laic (non-religious), mandatory and public education, were one of the founding stones of the Third Republic (1871–1940), set up in the aftermaths of the 1870 Franco-Prussian War and the Paris Commune.

Furthermore, most of the teachers, who were throughout one of the main support of the Third Republic, so much that it has been called the République des instituteurs ("Republic of Teachers"), while the teachers themselves were called, because of their Republican anti-clericalism, the hussards noirs de la République, supported Alfred Dreyfus against the conservatives during the Dreyfus Affair. One of its consequences was for them to set up free educational lectures of humanist topics for adults in order to struggle against the spread of anti-semitism, which was not limited to the far-right but also affected the workers' movement.

Paul Robin's work at the Prévost orphanage of Cempuis was the model for Francisco Ferrer's Escuela Moderna in Spain. Robin taught atheism and internationalism, and broke new ground with co-ed schooling, and teaching orphans with the same respect given to other children. He taught that the individual should develop in harmony with the world, on the physical, moral, and intellectual planes.

Scandinavia

In Denmark, the concept of folk high school was pioneered in 1844 by N. F. S. Grundtvig. By 1870, Denmark had 50 of these institutions. The first in Sweden, Folkhögskolan Hvilan, was established in 1868 outside of Lund.

In 1882, liberal and socialist students at Uppsala University in Sweden founded the association Verdandi for popular education. Between 1888 and 1954 it published 531 educational booklets on various topics (Verdandis småskrifter).

Some Swedish proponents of folkbildning have adopted an anglicisation of folkbuilding[2]

A Swedish bibliography on popular education with 25,000 references to books and articles between 1850 and 1950 is integrated in the Libris catalog of the Royal Library.[3]

20th century

Popular education continued to be an important field of socialist politics, reemerging in particular during the Popular Front in 1936–38, while autogestion (self-management), a main tenet of the anarcho-syndicalist movement, became a popular slogan following the May '68 revolt.

Austria

During the Red Vienna period (1919–34) the Viennese Volkshochschule played an important role in providing popular education attracting significant levels of participation from both factory and office workers. They also attracted significant participation from prominent people associated with the Vienna Circle: Otto Neurath, Edgar Zilsel, Friedrich Waismann and Viktor Kraft.[4]

The Escuela Moderna (1901–1907)

The Escuela Moderna (Modern School) was founded in 1901 in Barcelona by free-thinker Francesc Ferrer i Guàrdia, and became a leading inspiration of many various movements.[5] Opposed to the "dogmas of conventional education Ferrer set a system based on reason, science, and observation.[6]" The school's stated goal was to "educate the working class in a rational, secular and non-coercive setting". In practice, high tuition fees restricted attendance at the school to wealthier middle class students. It was privately hoped that when the time was ripe for revolutionary action, these students would be motivated to lead the working classes. It closed in 1906. The Escuela Moderna, and Ferrer's ideas generally, formed the inspiration for a series of Modern Schools in the United States,[5] Cuba, South America and London. The first of these was started in New York City in 1911. It also inspired the Italian newspaper Università popolare, founded in 1901.

France

 
List of lectures, Université populaire – town of Villeurbanne – 1936.

Following the 1981 presidential election that brought to power the Socialist Party (PS)'s candidate, François Mitterrand, his Minister of Education, Alain Savary, supported Jean Lévi's initiative to create a public high school, delivering the baccalauréat, but organized on the principles of autogestion (or self-management): this high school took the name of Lycée autogéré de Paris (LAP).[7] The LAP explicitly modelled itself after the Oslo Experimental High School, opened in 1967 in Norway, as well as the Saint-Nazaire Experimental High School, opened six months before the LAP, and the secondary school Vitruve (opened in 1962 in the 20th arrondissement of Paris, still active).[citation needed] Theoretical references include Célestin Freinet and his comrades from the I.C.E.M., as well as Raymond Fonvieille, Fernand Oury, and others theoreticians of "institutional pedagogy", as well as those coming from the institutional analysis movement, in particular René Lourau, as well as members of the institutional psychotherapeutic movement, which were a main component in the 1970s of the anti-psychiatric movement (of which Félix Guattari was an important member). Since 2005, the LAP has maintained contact with self-managed firms, in the REPAS network (Réseau d'échanges de pratiques alternatives et solidaires, Network of Exchange of Solidarity and Alternative Practices")[8]

A second generation for such folk high school meant to educate the people and the masses spread in the society (mainly for workers) just before the French Front populaire experience, as a reaction among teachers and intellectuals following the February 6, 1934 riots organized by far-right leagues. Issues devoted to free-thinking such as workers' self-management were thought and taught during that time, since the majority of attendants were proletarians interested in politics. Hence, some received the name of Université prolétarienne (Proletarian University) instead of Université populaire (Popular University)[9] in some cities around the country. The reactionary Vichy regime put an end to such projects during World War II. The second generation continued in the post-war period, yet topical lectures turned to be more practical and focused on daily life matters. Nowadays, the largest remnant is located in the Bas-Rhin and Haut-Rhin départements.[10]

Following World War II, popular teaching attempts were initiated mainly by the anarchist movement. Already in 1943, Joffre Dumazedier, Benigno Cacérès, Paul Lengrand, Joseph Rovan and others founded the Peuple et Culture (People and Culture) network, aimed at democratization of culture. Joffre Dumazedier conceptualized, at the Liberation, the concept of "cultural development" to oppose the concept of "economic development", thus foreshadowing the current Human Development Index. Historian Jean Maitron, for example, was director of the Apremont school in Vendée from 1950 to 1955.

Such popular educations were also a major feature of May '68 and of the following decenie, leading in particular to the establishment of the University of Paris VIII: Vincennes—Saint-Denis in Paris, in 1969. The Vincennes University (now located in Saint-Denis) was first a "Experimental University Center," with an interest in reshaping relations between students and teachers (so-called "mandarins", in reference to the bureaucrats of Imperial China, for their authority and classic, Third Republic pedagogy) as well as between the university itself and society. Thus, Vincennes was largely opened to those who did not have their baccalauréat diploma, as well as to foreigners. Its courses were focused on Freudo-Marxism, psychoanalysis, Marxist theory, cinema, theater, urbanism or artificial intelligence. Famous intellectuals such as Gilles Deleuze, Michel Foucault, Jacques Lacan and others held seminars there, in full classrooms where no seats could be found. The assistance was very heterogeneous. For instance, musicians such as Richard Pinhas assisted at Deleuze's courses, and after having written Anti-Oedipus (1972) with Félix Guattari, Deleuze used to say that non-specialists had best understood their work. Furthermore, Vincennes had no amphitheatres, representatives of the mandarin teacher facing and dominating several hundred students silently taking notes. It also enforced a strict equality between professors and teaching assistants. The student revolt continued throughout the 1970s in both Vincennes and the University of Paris X: Nanterre, created in 1964. In 1980, the Minister of Education Alice Saunier-Seité imposed the transfer of Vincennes' University to Saint-Denis. Although education was normalized in the 1980s, during the Mitterrand era, in both Saint-Denis and Vincennes, these universities have retained a less traditional outlook than the classic Sorbonne, where courses tend to be more conservative and sociological composition more middle-upper class.

Another attempt in popular education, specifically targeted towards the question of philosophy (France being one of the rare country where this discipline is taught in terminale, the last year of high school which culminate in the baccalauréat degree) was the creation, in 1983, of the open university named Collège international de philosophie (International Philosophy College, or Ciph), by Jacques Derrida, François Châtelet, Jean-Pierre Faye and Dominique Lecourt, in an attempt to re-think the teaching of philosophy in France, and to liberate it from any institutional authority (most of all from the university). As the ancient Collège de France, created by Francis I, it is free and open to everyone. The Ciph was first directed by Derrida, then by Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe, and has had as teaching members Giorgio Agamben, Alain Badiou, Sidi Mohamed Barkat, Geoffrey Bennington, François Châtelet, José Gil, Olivier LeCour Grandmaison, Antonio Negri, and others. The Ciph is still active.

In 2002 philosopher Michel Onfray initiated Université populaire de Caen[11] in his hometown and starting a long seminar dealing with hedonistic philosophy from ancient times to May'68 events in French society, for at least ten years.[12] His very topical subject in this seminar keeps going with a free-thinking spirit, since people are invited on the whole to rethink the history of ideas to eliminate any Christian influence. Despite the same name of Université populaire, it is not linked to the European federation of associations inherited from the second generation. In 2004, Onfray expanded the experience[13] to other cities such as Arras, Lyon, Narbonne, Avignon, and Mons (in Belgium) ; each with various lectures and teachers joining his idea. The Universités populaires in Argentan is meant to deliver a culture of culinary tastes to nonworking people, through lectures and practises of famous chefs.[14]

Latin America

Popular education is most commonly understood as an approach to education that emerged in Latin America during the 1930s. Closely linked with Marxism and particularly liberation theology. Best known amongst popular educators is the Brazilian Paulo Freire. Freire, and consequently the popular education movement in Latin America, draws heavily upon the work of John Dewey and Antonio Gramsci. One of the features of popular education in Latin America has been participatory action research (PAR).

1940s–1960s

1970s–1980s

1990s–present

Africa

Portuguese colonies

Anglophone colonies

Anne Hope and Sally Timmel were Christian development workers and educators who used popular education in their work in East Africa. They documented their work between 1973 and 1984 in four handbooks designed to aid practitioners titled "Training for Transformation."


North America

In the United States and Canada popular education influenced social justice education and critical pedagogy, though there are differences. At the same time, however, there are examples of popular education in the U.S. and Canada that grew up alongside and independently of popular education in Latin America.

United States

Scholar and community-worker Myles Horton and his Highlander Folk School (now Highlander Research and Education Center) and his work in Tennessee can be classified as popular education. Horton's studies at Union Theological Seminary in New York under Reinhold Niebuhr in the 1920s parallels the emergence of liberation theology in Latin America and both are heavily influenced by socialism and a focus on the practical relationships between Christianity and everyday life. Niebuhr, however, was a staunch anti-communist while liberation theology has a much closer relationship to the work of Karl Marx. Additionally, popular education has been linked to populism and land-grant universities with their cooperative extension programs.

McCarthyism and the red scare were used to challenge and in some cases close labor schools and other institutions during the early part of the Cold War, as anticommunists attacked such schools for including communists. Nevertheless, Highlander Folk School, for example, played a significant role in the civil rights movement providing a space for leaders to consult and plan. And the methods of popular education continue to live on in radical education and community organizing circles, even though U.S. labor unions have largely abandoned the kind of labor education that more directly tied workplace organizing and collective bargaining to class struggle.

Canada

See also

References

  1. ^ Kane, Liam (2001). Popular Education and Social Change in Latin America. Nottingham, UK: Russell Press. p. 9. ISBN 1-899365-52-4.
  2. ^ Hektor, S (2005) "A 'Folkbildning' Approach in Media Training" March 23, 2012, at the Wayback Machine in Journal of the International Communication Training Institute.
  3. ^ SFbB, Svensk folkbildningsbibliografi (1850–1950).
  4. ^ Dvorak, Johann (1991). "Otto Neurath and Adult Education: Unity of Science, Materialism and Comprehensive Enlightenment". In Uebel, Thomas (ed.). Rediscovering the Forgotten Vienna Circle: Austrian Studies on Otto Neurath and the Vienna Circle. Dordrecht: Kulwer Academic Publishers. pp. 265–274.
  5. ^ a b Geoffrey C. Fidler, The Escuela Moderna Movement of Francisco Ferrer: "Por la Verdad y la Justicia" in History of Education Quarterly, vol.25, issue 1/2, Spring-Summer 1985, pages 103–132 (in English)
  6. ^ Avrich, Paul (2006). The Modern School Movement: Anarchism and Education in the United States. Edinburgh, UK: AK Press. p. 19. ISBN 1-904859-09-7.
  7. ^ . www.l-a-p.org. Archived from the original on March 25, 2018. Retrieved March 23, 2018.
  8. ^ repas (January 30, 2013). "Présentation du Réseau REPAS". www.reseaurepas.free.fr. Retrieved March 23, 2018.
  9. ^ Fr: Education populaire
  10. ^ Von Treitschke, H. (1915). Germany, France, Russia, & Islam. London, Jarrold.
  11. ^ French WP article: Université populaire de Caen
  12. ^ A recorded compilation of his lectures on CD became a hit in France, about 200 000 copies sold: Contre-histoire de la philosophie. Synopsis
  13. ^ He also published [a book][citation needed] as a manifesto to describe his hopes about it: La communauté philosophique.
  14. ^ The first lecture at Argentan was delivered by the main chef of Crillon motel; Onfray commented on radio he liked to enable such extravagant encounters.[citation needed]

Hope, Anne and Sally Timmel. "Training for Transformation", vol. 1-4. Intermediate Technology Publications, 1999.

 Volume 3 ISBN 1 85339 353 3 Volume 4 ISBN 1 85339 353 461 0 


External links

  • The Popular Education News
  • Catalyst Centre

popular, education, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, march, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Popular education news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2007 Learn how and when to remove this template message Popular education is a concept grounded in notions of class political struggle and social transformation The term is a translation from the Spanish educacion popular or the Portuguese educacao popular and rather than the English usage as when describing a popular television programme popular here means of the people More specifically popular refers to the popular classes which include peasants the unemployed the working class and sometimes the lower middle class The designation of popular is meant most of all to exclude the upper class and upper middle class Popular education is used to classify a wide array of educational endeavours and has been a strong tradition in Latin America since the end of the first half of the 20th century These endeavors are either composed of or carried out in the interests of the popular classes The diversity of projects and endeavors claiming or receiving the label of popular education makes the term difficult to precisely define Generally one can say that popular education is class based in nature and rejects the notion of education as transmission or banking education It stresses a dialectic or dialogical model between educator and educand This model is explored in great detail in the works of one of the foremost popular educators Paulo Freire Though sharing many similarities with other forms of alternative education popular education is a distinct form in its own right In the words of Liam Kane What distinguishes popular education from adult non formal distance or permanent education for example is that in the context of social injustice education can never be politically neutral if it does not side with the poorest and marginalised sectors the oppressed in an attempt to transform society then it necessarily sides with the oppressors in maintaining the existing structures of oppression even if by default 1 Contents 1 Europe 1 1 19th century 1 1 1 France 1 1 2 Scandinavia 1 2 20th century 1 2 1 Austria 1 2 2 The Escuela Moderna 1901 1907 1 2 3 France 2 Latin America 2 1 1940s 1960s 2 2 1970s 1980s 2 3 1990s present 3 Africa 3 1 Portuguese colonies 3 2 Anglophone colonies 4 North America 4 1 United States 4 2 Canada 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksEurope EditPopular education began at the crossroads between politics and pedagogy and strongly relies on the democratic ideal of the Enlightenment which considered public education as a main tool of individual and collective emancipation and thus the necessary conditions of autonomy in accordance to Immanuel Kant s Was Ist Aufklarung What is Enlightenment published five years before the 1789 French Revolution during which the Condorcet report established public instruction in France Jean Jacques Rousseau s L Emile Or On Education 1762 was another obvious theoretical influence as well as the works of N F S Grundtvig 1783 1872 at the origins of the Nordic movement of folk high schools During the 19th century popular education movements were involved in particular in France in the Republican and Socialist movement A main component of the workers movement popular education was also strongly influenced by positivist materialist and laicite if not anti clerical ideas Popular education may be defined as an educational technique designed to raise the consciousness of its participants and allow them to become more aware of how an individual s personal experiences are connected to larger societal problems Participants are empowered to act to effect change on the problems that affect them 19th century Edit One of the roots of popular education was the Condorcet report during the 1789 French Revolution These ideas became an important component of the Republican and Socialist movement Following the split of the First International at the 1872 Hague Congress between the anti authoritarian socialists anarchists and the Marxists popular education remained an important part of the workers movement in particular in the anarcho syndicalist movement strong in France Spain and Italy It was one of the important theme treated during the 1907 International Anarchist Congress of Amsterdam France Edit During the Second Empire Jean Mace founded the Ligue de l enseignement Teaching League in 1866 during the Lille Congress in 1885 Mace reaffirmed the masonic inspiration of this league devoted to popular instruction Following the 1872 Hague Congress and the split between Marxists and anarchists Fernand Pelloutier set up in France various Bourses du travail centres where workers gathered and discussed politics and sciences The Jules Ferry laws in the 1880s establishing free laic non religious mandatory and public education were one of the founding stones of the Third Republic 1871 1940 set up in the aftermaths of the 1870 Franco Prussian War and the Paris Commune Furthermore most of the teachers who were throughout one of the main support of the Third Republic so much that it has been called the Republique des instituteurs Republic of Teachers while the teachers themselves were called because of their Republican anti clericalism the hussards noirs de la Republique supported Alfred Dreyfus against the conservatives during the Dreyfus Affair One of its consequences was for them to set up free educational lectures of humanist topics for adults in order to struggle against the spread of anti semitism which was not limited to the far right but also affected the workers movement Paul Robin s work at the Prevost orphanage of Cempuis was the model for Francisco Ferrer s Escuela Moderna in Spain Robin taught atheism and internationalism and broke new ground with co ed schooling and teaching orphans with the same respect given to other children He taught that the individual should develop in harmony with the world on the physical moral and intellectual planes Scandinavia Edit In Denmark the concept of folk high school was pioneered in 1844 by N F S Grundtvig By 1870 Denmark had 50 of these institutions The first in Sweden Folkhogskolan Hvilan was established in 1868 outside of Lund In 1882 liberal and socialist students at Uppsala University in Sweden founded the association Verdandi for popular education Between 1888 and 1954 it published 531 educational booklets on various topics Verdandis smaskrifter Some Swedish proponents of folkbildning have adopted an anglicisation of folkbuilding 2 A Swedish bibliography on popular education with 25 000 references to books and articles between 1850 and 1950 is integrated in the Libris catalog of the Royal Library 3 20th century Edit Popular education continued to be an important field of socialist politics reemerging in particular during the Popular Front in 1936 38 while autogestion self management a main tenet of the anarcho syndicalist movement became a popular slogan following the May 68 revolt Austria Edit During the Red Vienna period 1919 34 the Viennese Volkshochschule played an important role in providing popular education attracting significant levels of participation from both factory and office workers They also attracted significant participation from prominent people associated with the Vienna Circle Otto Neurath Edgar Zilsel Friedrich Waismann and Viktor Kraft 4 The Escuela Moderna 1901 1907 Edit The Escuela Moderna Modern School was founded in 1901 in Barcelona by free thinker Francesc Ferrer i Guardia and became a leading inspiration of many various movements 5 Opposed to the dogmas of conventional education Ferrer set a system based on reason science and observation 6 The school s stated goal was to educate the working class in a rational secular and non coercive setting In practice high tuition fees restricted attendance at the school to wealthier middle class students It was privately hoped that when the time was ripe for revolutionary action these students would be motivated to lead the working classes It closed in 1906 The Escuela Moderna and Ferrer s ideas generally formed the inspiration for a series of Modern Schools in the United States 5 Cuba South America and London The first of these was started in New York City in 1911 It also inspired the Italian newspaper Universita popolare founded in 1901 France Edit List of lectures Universite populaire town of Villeurbanne 1936 Following the 1981 presidential election that brought to power the Socialist Party PS s candidate Francois Mitterrand his Minister of Education Alain Savary supported Jean Levi s initiative to create a public high school delivering the baccalaureat but organized on the principles of autogestion or self management this high school took the name of Lycee autogere de Paris LAP 7 The LAP explicitly modelled itself after the Oslo Experimental High School opened in 1967 in Norway as well as the Saint Nazaire Experimental High School opened six months before the LAP and the secondary school Vitruve opened in 1962 in the 20th arrondissement of Paris still active citation needed Theoretical references include Celestin Freinet and his comrades from the I C E M as well as Raymond Fonvieille Fernand Oury and others theoreticians of institutional pedagogy as well as those coming from the institutional analysis movement in particular Rene Lourau as well as members of the institutional psychotherapeutic movement which were a main component in the 1970s of the anti psychiatric movement of which Felix Guattari was an important member Since 2005 the LAP has maintained contact with self managed firms in the REPAS network Reseau d echanges de pratiques alternatives et solidaires Network of Exchange of Solidarity and Alternative Practices 8 A second generation for such folk high school meant to educate the people and the masses spread in the society mainly for workers just before the French Front populaire experience as a reaction among teachers and intellectuals following the February 6 1934 riots organized by far right leagues Issues devoted to free thinking such as workers self management were thought and taught during that time since the majority of attendants were proletarians interested in politics Hence some received the name of Universite proletarienne Proletarian University instead of Universite populaire Popular University 9 in some cities around the country The reactionary Vichy regime put an end to such projects during World War II The second generation continued in the post war period yet topical lectures turned to be more practical and focused on daily life matters Nowadays the largest remnant is located in the Bas Rhin and Haut Rhin departements 10 Following World War II popular teaching attempts were initiated mainly by the anarchist movement Already in 1943 Joffre Dumazedier Benigno Caceres Paul Lengrand Joseph Rovan and others founded the Peuple et Culture People and Culture network aimed at democratization of culture Joffre Dumazedier conceptualized at the Liberation the concept of cultural development to oppose the concept of economic development thus foreshadowing the current Human Development Index Historian Jean Maitron for example was director of the Apremont school in Vendee from 1950 to 1955 Such popular educations were also a major feature of May 68 and of the following decenie leading in particular to the establishment of the University of Paris VIII Vincennes Saint Denis in Paris in 1969 The Vincennes University now located in Saint Denis was first a Experimental University Center with an interest in reshaping relations between students and teachers so called mandarins in reference to the bureaucrats of Imperial China for their authority and classic Third Republic pedagogy as well as between the university itself and society Thus Vincennes was largely opened to those who did not have their baccalaureat diploma as well as to foreigners Its courses were focused on Freudo Marxism psychoanalysis Marxist theory cinema theater urbanism or artificial intelligence Famous intellectuals such as Gilles Deleuze Michel Foucault Jacques Lacan and others held seminars there in full classrooms where no seats could be found The assistance was very heterogeneous For instance musicians such as Richard Pinhas assisted at Deleuze s courses and after having written Anti Oedipus 1972 with Felix Guattari Deleuze used to say that non specialists had best understood their work Furthermore Vincennes had no amphitheatres representatives of the mandarin teacher facing and dominating several hundred students silently taking notes It also enforced a strict equality between professors and teaching assistants The student revolt continued throughout the 1970s in both Vincennes and the University of Paris X Nanterre created in 1964 In 1980 the Minister of Education Alice Saunier Seite imposed the transfer of Vincennes University to Saint Denis Although education was normalized in the 1980s during the Mitterrand era in both Saint Denis and Vincennes these universities have retained a less traditional outlook than the classic Sorbonne where courses tend to be more conservative and sociological composition more middle upper class Another attempt in popular education specifically targeted towards the question of philosophy France being one of the rare country where this discipline is taught in terminale the last year of high school which culminate in the baccalaureat degree was the creation in 1983 of the open university named College international de philosophie International Philosophy College or Ciph by Jacques Derrida Francois Chatelet Jean Pierre Faye and Dominique Lecourt in an attempt to re think the teaching of philosophy in France and to liberate it from any institutional authority most of all from the university As the ancient College de France created by Francis I it is free and open to everyone The Ciph was first directed by Derrida then by Philippe Lacoue Labarthe and has had as teaching members Giorgio Agamben Alain Badiou Sidi Mohamed Barkat Geoffrey Bennington Francois Chatelet Jose Gil Olivier LeCour Grandmaison Antonio Negri and others The Ciph is still active In 2002 philosopher Michel Onfray initiated Universite populaire de Caen 11 in his hometown and starting a long seminar dealing with hedonistic philosophy from ancient times to May 68 events in French society for at least ten years 12 His very topical subject in this seminar keeps going with a free thinking spirit since people are invited on the whole to rethink the history of ideas to eliminate any Christian influence Despite the same name of Universite populaire it is not linked to the European federation of associations inherited from the second generation In 2004 Onfray expanded the experience 13 to other cities such as Arras Lyon Narbonne Avignon and Mons in Belgium each with various lectures and teachers joining his idea The Universites populaires in Argentan is meant to deliver a culture of culinary tastes to nonworking people through lectures and practises of famous chefs 14 Latin America EditPopular education is most commonly understood as an approach to education that emerged in Latin America during the 1930s Closely linked with Marxism and particularly liberation theology Best known amongst popular educators is the Brazilian Paulo Freire Freire and consequently the popular education movement in Latin America draws heavily upon the work of John Dewey and Antonio Gramsci One of the features of popular education in Latin America has been participatory action research PAR 1940s 1960s Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2017 1970s 1980s Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2017 1990s present Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2017 Africa EditPortuguese colonies Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2017 Anglophone colonies Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2017 Anne Hope and Sally Timmel were Christian development workers and educators who used popular education in their work in East Africa They documented their work between 1973 and 1984 in four handbooks designed to aid practitioners titled Training for Transformation North America EditIn the United States and Canada popular education influenced social justice education and critical pedagogy though there are differences At the same time however there are examples of popular education in the U S and Canada that grew up alongside and independently of popular education in Latin America United States Edit Scholar and community worker Myles Horton and his Highlander Folk School now Highlander Research and Education Center and his work in Tennessee can be classified as popular education Horton s studies at Union Theological Seminary in New York under Reinhold Niebuhr in the 1920s parallels the emergence of liberation theology in Latin America and both are heavily influenced by socialism and a focus on the practical relationships between Christianity and everyday life Niebuhr however was a staunch anti communist while liberation theology has a much closer relationship to the work of Karl Marx Additionally popular education has been linked to populism and land grant universities with their cooperative extension programs McCarthyism and the red scare were used to challenge and in some cases close labor schools and other institutions during the early part of the Cold War as anticommunists attacked such schools for including communists Nevertheless Highlander Folk School for example played a significant role in the civil rights movement providing a space for leaders to consult and plan And the methods of popular education continue to live on in radical education and community organizing circles even though U S labor unions have largely abandoned the kind of labor education that more directly tied workplace organizing and collective bargaining to class struggle Canada Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2017 See also Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Popular education Adult literacy Community education Experiential education Place based education Rouge Forum Special education and inclusive classroomsReferences Edit Kane Liam 2001 Popular Education and Social Change in Latin America Nottingham UK Russell Press p 9 ISBN 1 899365 52 4 Hektor S 2005 A Folkbildning Approach in Media Training Archived March 23 2012 at the Wayback Machine in Journal of the International Communication Training Institute SFbB Svensk folkbildningsbibliografi 1850 1950 Dvorak Johann 1991 Otto Neurath and Adult Education Unity of Science Materialism and Comprehensive Enlightenment In Uebel Thomas ed Rediscovering the Forgotten Vienna Circle Austrian Studies on Otto Neurath and the Vienna Circle Dordrecht Kulwer Academic Publishers pp 265 274 a b Geoffrey C Fidler The Escuela Moderna Movement of Francisco Ferrer Por la Verdad y la Justicia in History of Education Quarterly vol 25 issue 1 2 Spring Summer 1985 pages 103 132 in English Avrich Paul 2006 The Modern School Movement Anarchism and Education in the United States Edinburgh UK AK Press p 19 ISBN 1 904859 09 7 Lycee Autogere de Paris L autogestion comme solution www l a p org Archived from the original on March 25 2018 Retrieved March 23 2018 repas January 30 2013 Presentation du Reseau REPAS www reseaurepas free fr Retrieved March 23 2018 Fr Education populaire Von Treitschke H 1915 Germany France Russia amp Islam London Jarrold French WP article Universite populaire de Caen A recorded compilation of his lectures on CD became a hit in France about 200 000 copies sold Contre histoire de la philosophie Synopsis He also published a book citation needed as a manifesto to describe his hopes about it La communaute philosophique The first lecture at Argentan was delivered by the main chef of Crillon motel Onfray commented on radio he liked to enable such extravagant encounters citation needed Hope Anne and Sally Timmel Training for Transformation vol 1 4 Intermediate Technology Publications 1999 Volume 3 ISBN 1 85339 353 3 Volume 4 ISBN 1 85339 353 461 0External links EditThe Popular Education News Trapese popular education collective Catalyst Centre Swedish Council of Adult Education Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Popular education amp oldid 1092040542, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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