Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Social Change through Education



Raquel Alicia Coy
Professor Barbara Gleason
ENGL C0856: Adult Learners of L&L
May 6, 2014
Social Change through Education
Achieving the ‘American Dream’ is a historic driver of citizen behavior in the U.S. It has been a deeply-held article of faith among native-born Americans, and it has been a significant motivator for many generations of immigrants. The ideal of the “American Dream” is composed of many elements, but is centered on the notion of “opportunity” in both social and economic terms. These opportunities are closely tied to individual educational attainment.
Adult Learning in Focus 2008

Education is central to the ideal American Dream. White picket fences, owning property, and civil liberties might be prominent features called to mind when pondering the American Dream, but education is often the implied vehicle of the promise of social mobility. As such, education is seen as a means to an end. Once social mobility is obtained and all the benefits reaped, the education process is over. This renders education a lifeless object, one that is used for barter, and traditional models of education foster this concept of hollow education. However, models of transformative education present an alternative view of education. Transformative education treats education as a holistic approach to enlightenment wherein education intrinsically transforms the learner. According to Cheryl Torok Fleming and J. Bradely Garner, authors of Brief Guide for Teaching Adult Learners, transformative learning[1] has three basic components: “(1) the nature of life experience that is central to adult learning; (2) critical reflection processes; (3) the connection between adult development and the transformative process” (24). There are many perspectives of transformative learning, including but not limited to psychocritical, psychoanalytic, psychodevelopmental, and social emancipatory. The social emancipatory perspective is based on Paulo Freire’s theory of literacy education. In Freire’s theory, social justice is emphasized. Freire’s theory exemplifies the three core concepts of transformative learning by acknowledging the role of life experience in adult learning, by using critical reflection processes, and by sparking a transformative change within the student.
The first essential element in a transformative education model is acknowledging the life experience of the adult learner. Adult learners differ from children in that they have accumulated more life experience. This life experience colors their beliefs, behavior, and identities. When adults enter a classroom, they come with their own sets of assumptions and goals. These assumptions adult learners carry with them inform their learning experience. The transformative educator must take into account these life experiences, for the learner often contextualizes education through her own personal frames of references, or the “structures of assumptions and expectations that frame an individual’s tacit points of view and influence their thinking, beliefs, and actions” (Taylor 5). Frames of references are pivotal to the transformative process not only because they are the initial starting point from which learners interact with new concepts, they are also the object of the transformative process. According to Fleming and Garner, transformative learning initiates “as a result of a situation experienced by the learner, in which he or she confronts a dilemma that is incongruent with his or her life experiences” (24). In other words, in the first stage of the transformative process, learners’ frames of references are targeted because they have been found to be lacking or entirely false. As the learner confronts and critically evaluates flaws in a previously held belief, the frames of references are altered so that they can fit into new, modified frames of references that are more discerning and complete.
As in any other transformative education model, Freire’s theory of literacy education begins with the acknowledgment of the learner’s life experience. In the Pedagogy of the Oppressed, Freire outlines his theory of education. In Freire’s model of transformative learning, the life experience acknowledged is actually a shared life experience. His theory states that the learners’ life experience is shaped by the oppression in an unjust society. As adults who have been raised in an oppressive order, learners’ life experiences have been framed by the myths of the oppressive order. These myths are the equivalent to frames of references, in that they define and shape the beliefs and behaviors of learners. Freire gives a list of the commons myths an oppressive order espouses to promote an artificial “free society.” These myths are that the order respects human rights, there is a universal right to education, all men are equal, private property is fundamental to being a well-rounded citizen, and that meritocracy and industriousness are the sole elements that will determine whether a person is in a position of superiority or inferiority (Freire 130).  The myths are used to keep oppressed populations passive by creating a static reality that the oppressed must adhere to because there is no alternative. If the oppressed fail to conform to these myths, their lack of prospects in life is their own fault. However, these myths propagated by the oppressive order are not merely individually held constructs; they are shared. In much the same way frames of references are targeted as constructs to undergo changes, the myths of the oppressive order are challenged. By realizing the myths for what they are and their place in past life experiences, learners of the Freirian method are accomplishing the first stage of transformative learning.
            Pivotal to the transformative process is critical reflection. Critical reflection occurs when a learner is presented with a concept that conflicts with a held belief, and the student studies the concept methodically and globally. According to Taylor, “critical scrutiny, or more specifically critical reflection, is seen as conscious and explicit reassessment of the consequence and origin of our meaning structures” (6). In the second stage of the transformative process, learners use critical reflection to examine their previously held frames of references. This critical reflection is essential to the transformative process because it encourages students to engage with concepts on a deep level. Because learning begins with a concept that is self-generated, the learner’s interaction with the education process is fundamentally deeper than the interaction learners are more likely to have with traditional forms of education. Rather than memorize theories by rote, students are prompted to question and internalize concepts. This reflection is a catalyst for a shift in frames of references and shifts of perspectives.
            Similarly, Freire also calls for critical reflection in his theory of adult literacy education. In order to provoke meaningful analysis from students, Freire uses the problem-posing education model. This learning model subverts traditional models of education by dismantling unjust power imbalances in the teacher-student relationship found in the banking education model. According to Freire, the banking concept of education espouses the belief that “knowledge is a gift bestowed by those who consider themselves knowledgeable upon those whom they consider to know nothing” (72). Students are merely passive repositories that teachers fill up with knowledge and are then required to regurgitate said knowledge on command. In this model, all discourse in one way: from teacher to student with no chance of true communication. On the other hand, in the problem-posing model, the teacher poses a problem, and the student reflects critically on it and expresses her view on the problem or theme. The teacher uses these themes as a way to generate words that help the students illuminate theme. Through these generative themes, knowledge is drawn out from the student and her past experiences rather than introduced from an external, faux-omniscient source. These themes prompt the students to think critically about the world around them and to investigate the systems of the oppressive order. Problem-posing education is performed through a series of dialogue that must be couched in cognition. In addition, the process of demythologizing the falsehoods of the oppressive order requires critical reflection. In order for liberating, transformative education to occur, these myths need to be confronted, analyzed, and rejected.
            The last stage of the transformative education is a change in perspective for the student. The frames of references that are critically examined in an earlier stage of the transformative process begin to shift and reform. According to Mezirow, the result is a “new or revised interpretation of the meaning of an experience in the world” (as cited in Taylor 5). In essence, a new outlook informed by the learning process substitutes the old frames of reference. The process does not end there, though. Mezirow maintains that action upon is also critical to the transformative process. In Mezirow’s pscychocritical learning theory, the transformation is limited to the individual student. Once transformation has occurred, the student must “live” the new perspective (Baumgartner 17). This action sets transformative learning theory apart from traditional models of education. In a traditional education model, the knowledge a student may receive does not necessarily translate into their lives and actions. However, the internalization of the transformation lends itself to holistic, global changes in thinking and behavior for the learners of transformative learning theory.
            In Freire’s theory, the final stage of transformation is open-ended as well. The student reaches a point in her critical reflection where the critical thinking transforms into deliberate action. Freire describes this conflagration of transformation and action upon that transformation praxis (51). Unlike Mezirow, the action Freire encourages is much less vague and the subsequent action the student will take will, ideally, affect society. Once transformation occurs, a student should then use her education to engage in social justice activism to in order to liberate her peers. Learners who undergo Freire’s method are “constantly reflecting and acting on the transformation of their world so it can become a more equitable place for all to live (Taylor 12). It is that liberation that is the goal of Freire’s theory of education.
            Although Fleming and Garner do not explicitly list the educator in the three core concepts of transformative learning, the role an educator plays in the transformative process is a unique one that bears exploring. According to Fleming and Garner, the teacher in the transformative classroom is simply a coordinator of the transformative process, and the teacher may not enforce her own values and beliefs onto her learners (25). While in a traditional education model the teacher is the sole authority figure in the classroom, the teacher in the transformative classroom must go to great lengths to create an environment wherein students feel that they can express their views and opinions and that they have control over their own education. Baumgartner emphasizes two ways that can help promote instructors to relax their authoritarian grip in the classroom: being alert to the learning style of the students and engaging with students on a first name basis (20). An unbalanced power dynamic can adversely affect the transformative process. Baumgartner writes, “Students who see the professor as an authority figure may be unable or unwilling to question their teacher’s values” (21). The danger that lies with this unwillingness to question the authority of the professor is that the student is unlikely to switch into a critical reflection mindset because the overbearing specter of an authority figure may revert them back into prescriptive school of thought.
In Freire’s learning model, the teacher also must not be dictatorial. In his theory, the authoritarian teacher is the steward of the oppressive order, the teller in the banking concept of education. In the problem-posing method, the teacher’s function is to promote conscious-raising dialogue that will lead to critical reflection in much the same way that Fleming and Garner and Baumgartner state that the teacher facilitates transformative learning. However, the teacher in the Freirian concept also takes on a slightly more active role. Freire writes about “the teacher-student with student-teachers” wherein  “the teacher is no longer merely the one who teaches, but one who is himself taught in dialogue with students, who in turn while being taught also teach” (80). In this sense, the teacher is not simply a detached third party who coaches from the outside. Instead, the teacher becomes part of the transformative learning process by switching shared roles with the learners.
The article “English and Creole: The Dialectics of Choice in a College Writing Program” illustrates one of the ways a course can be transformative in a social emancipatory manner as well as the complications that accompany this form of education. Elsasser and Irvine describe a writing program which experimented with the inclusion of both Standard English and Creole. Mirroring the Freirian method, students were prompted to confront a particular myth of the oppressive order: the myth that their Creole language was of low prestige and therefore unsuited for critical study or usage. By confronting this myth, the students were required to use their past experience with language use. Next, the students engaged in critical reflection about the use and relegation of their Creole language. The article displays the form their critical reflection manifested: journal writing. One student wrote:
I have lived in the VI for eight and a half years and yet few people ever here me speak in the dialect, and I can speak it fluently.…For a long time I used to put people in categories based on their speech.…I no longer picture people based on their language but I feel the urge to mentally correct them…While I love the Creole,…there are times when I rather not speak it or have it spoken to me…I feel like such a hypocrite when these times come. (Elsasser and Irvine 409)
This quote shows the student carefully and deliberately parsing previously held bias and acknowledging the conflict that the awareness brings her. Although she can see that judging people on their language use is wrong, she still has a need to correct a dialect she deems incorrect. This is a perfect example of the critical reflection the students experienced. Finally, many students seemed to have successfully reached the third stage, action. During the program, honors students wrote and “published original works in Creole and conducted research on attitudes toward Creole and the use of Creole in literature, and documented sociolinguistic norms governing code-switching (Elsasser and Irvine 409). Within the Freirian method, the action of writing about the language use would be the praxis of this learning situation. This liberating action—the calling attention to a social problem through writing and publishing—is the very essence of Freirian social emancipatory education. 
            Freire’s theory of education mirrors the essential characteristics of transformative education. It acknowledges the life experience of adult learners through the lens of social activism. It requires critical reflection in the form of the problem-posing education model, and results in the transformed perspective of the learner who then takes action with that transformation in mind. Therefore, Freire’s theory is indeed an example of transformative education, and is well suited to adult education because it can encourage passion in adult students, passion that students can take with them outside of the walls of the classroom.



Works Cited
Baumgartner, Lisa M. "An Update on Transformational Learning." The New Update on
Adult Learning Theory. Ed. Sharan B. Merriam. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley and Sons, 2001. 15-24. Print. New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education #89.
Elsasser, Nan, and Patricia Irvine. "English and Creole: The Dialectics of Choice in a
College Writing Program." Harvard Educational Review 55.4 (1985): 399-415. Print
Ewell, Peter, Patrick Kelly, and Rebecca Klein-Collins. Adult Learning in Focus: National and
State-by-State Data. Council for Adult and Experiential Learning (CAEL) in partnership with  National Center for Higher Education Management Systems (NCHEMS), 2008. Web. 8 April 2014.
Fleming, Cheryl Torok, and Garner, J. Bradley. Brief Guide for Teaching Adult Learners.
Marion, Indiana: Triangle, 2009. Print.
Freire, Paulo. Pedagogy of the Oppressed, 30th Anniversary Edition. Trans. Myra Bergman
Ramos. New York: The Continuum International Publishing Group, 2003. Print.
 Taylor, Edward. "Transformative Learning." Third Update on Adult Learning Theory. Ed.
Merriam, Sharan B. Hoboken NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2008, 5-15. Print. New Directions
for Adult and Continuing Education #119.


[1] For the purposes of this paper, the writer will be using Jack Mezirow’s theory of adult learning as the generic, broad outline of transformative learning theory as he is the most cited among the sources.

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