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Book ChapterDOI

Critical Thinking and Critical Pedagogy: Relations, Differences, and Limits

Thomas S. Popkewitz, +1 more
- pp 61-82
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TLDR
Two literatures have shaped much of the writing in the educational foundations over the past two decades: Critical Thinking and Critical Pedagogy as mentioned in this paper. And each has sought to reach and influence particular groups of educators through workshops, lectures, and pedagogical texts.
Abstract
Two literatures have shaped much of the writing in the educational foundations over the past two decades: Critical Thinking and Critical Pedagogy. Each has its textual reference points, its favored authors, and its desired audiences. Each invokes the term "critical" as a valued educational goal: urging teachers to help students become more skeptical toward commonly accepted truisms. Each says, in its own way, "Do not let yourself be deceived." And each has sought to reach and influence particular groups of educators, at all levels of schooling, through workshops, lectures, and pedagogical texts. They share a passion and sense of urgency about the need for more critically oriented classrooms. Yet with very few exceptions these literatures do not discuss one another. Is this because they propose conflicting visions of what "critical" thought entails? Are their approaches to pedagogy incompatible? Might there be moments of insight that each can offer the other? Do they perhaps share common limitations, which through comparison become more apparent? Are there other ways to think about becoming "critical" that stand outside these traditions, but which hold educational significance? These are the questions motivating this essay.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Voices of "Disabled" Post Secondary Students: Examining Higher Education "Disability" Policy Using an Ableism Lens

TL;DR: This paper explored the ways in which "disabled" postsecondary students make meaning of their experiences in postsecondary education by exploring five themes (hegemonic voice, voice of the body, voice-of-silence, voice voice of assertion, and voice of change) within a body-social-self framework.
Journal ArticleDOI

The best of both worlds: a critical pedagogy of place∗

TL;DR: In this paper, a critical pedagogy of place is proposed, which seeks the twin objectives of decolonization and re-habitation through synthesizing critical and place-based approaches.
Dissertation

A critical genre based approach to teaching academic writing in a tertiary EFL context in Indonesia.

Emi Emilia
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report on the effectiveness of using a critical genre-based approach (GBA) in teaching academic English writing to student teachers who were learning English as a foreign language in a state university, West Java, Indonesia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Critiquing Child-Centred Pedagogy to Bring Children and Early Childhood Educators into the Centre of a Democratic Pedagogy:

TL;DR: In this article, the author weaves together major critiques of child-centred pedagogy that draw on the concept of "child-centered education" in Western-based teacher preparation.
Journal ArticleDOI

From ‘therapeutic’ to political education: the centrality of affective sensibility in critical pedagogy

TL;DR: In this paper, critical theories of subject transformation together with new work on pedagogies of discomfort are brought together to create new ways of opening up possibilities for critical education that respond to neoliberal subjectivities without corresponding to or affirming them.
References
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Book

Education for critical consciousness

Paulo Freire
TL;DR: The Pedagogy of the Oppressed as mentioned in this paper is the main statement of Freire's revolutionary method of education, which takes the life situation of the learner as its starting point and the raising of consciousness and the overcoming of obstacles as its goals.
Book

Caring: A Feminine Approach to Ethics and Moral Education

Nel Noddings
TL;DR: Noddings as mentioned in this paper argues that the ethical behaviour that grows out of natural caring has at its core as care-filled receptivity to those involved in any moral situation, and leaves behind the rigidity of rule and principle to focus on what is particular and unique in human relations.
Book ChapterDOI

Falsification and the Methodology of Scientific Research Programmes

Imre Lakatos
TL;DR: For centuries knowledge meant proven knowledge, proven either by the power of the intellect or by the evidence of the senses as discussed by the authors. But the notion of proven knowledge was questioned by the sceptics more than two thousand years ago; but they were browbeaten into confusion by the glory of Newtonian physics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Why Doesn't This Feel Empowering? Working Through the Repressive Myths of Critical Pedagogy

TL;DR: The critical pedagogy, as represented in this article, has developed along a highly abstract and Utopian line which does not necessarily sustain the daily life of students, and this line has been criticised by Ellsworth.