Introducing a Framework for Student "Research as Praxis"
Kyle Feenstra
Coordinator - Learning & Instruction Support
University of Manitoba Libraries
“What is the role of the librarian in the Freirean vision of critical literacy? ... And what is the librarian’s role as an educator in this process?” (1)
A framework that serves as a starting point for a critical pedagogy of literacy education in academic library settings...
Humanization
Ontological Completion
Dialogue as Reciprocity
Voice as Autonomy
Critical Constructivism
Literacy & Praxis
Post-Formal Thinking
Paulo Freire
Joe Kincheloe
Patti Lather
Nick Couldry
"Ontological stammering...
"We have a chance to [unlearn] in the name of research as praxis...
"... a way to keep moving against tendencies to settle into the various dogmas and reductionisms that await us once we think we have arrived". (2)
"While the problem of humanization has always, from an axiological point of view, been humankind’s central problem, it now takes on the character of an inescapable concern. Concern for humanization leads at once to the recognition of dehumanization not only as an ontological possibility but an historical reality. And as an individual perceives the extent of dehumanization, he or she may ask if humanization is a viable possibility. Within history, in concrete, objective contexts, both humanization and dehumanization are possibilities for a person as an uncompleted being conscious of their incompletion". (3)
Freire's View of Humanization
As imperfect, unfinished beings we can never become fully human. We can only engage in our ontological and historical purpose of becoming more human.
What makes us human is our ability to "[reflect] and [act] upon the world in order to transform it". (4)
Freirean Ontology
to study of the way we exist in the world
Freirean Dialogue
"to speak a true word is to transform the world" (5)
Literacy
Reading
& Writing
"reading the word and the world" (6)
"... a person is literate to the extent that they are able to use language for social and political reconstruction" (7)
Critical Literacy
critical thinking is dialectical thinking
This is "critical consciousness". Mediated by a "language of possibility", we identify contradictions in the world in a process of reinventing culture and power. (8)
Constructivism [as epistemology]
Reality is the world of our experiences... a world of constancies from which we construct knowledge and meaning. (9)
"What determines the value of conceptual structures is their experiential adequacy, the goodness of their fit with experience, their viability as a means for the solving of problems..." (10)
Constructivism [epistemology informing pedagogy]
Kincheloe argues:
It is the role of the teacher to "introduce [their] students to social and physical world and help them build for themselves an epistemological infrastructure (a process of questioning) for interpreting the phenomena they confront" (11)
The teacher offers to students:
Space for Praxis
Praxis
“What different politics become possible when [research] projects are put at risk rather than positioned to claim a better vantage point that can ‘emancipate’ some others?" (13)
[theoretically informed reflection and action for social transformation]
Lather's article, Research as Praxis (1986, 2018) ...
Praxis [as reciprocity]
Students should be free to question whether theory & pedagogy:
For dialogic praxis to be mutually affirming research participants must be given the right to speak for themselves. All participants share the process of testing the usefulness of theory and constructing new meaning.
Praxis [as reciprocity & informing pedagogy]
Pedagogy that accepts:
Makes space for a methodology where:
Voice [as "giving an account of one's life"]
the process of articulating the world from a distinctive embodied position. (17)
IDENTITY
AGENCY
POWER
CAPACITY
ASPIRATION
REFLECTION
NARRATIVES
DIVERSITY
INCLUSION
AGENDA
IDEOLOGY
ACTION
We must never reduce our concept of voice to mere "speech acts"... Voice is... (16)
Voice (17)
Social
Reflexive
Embodied
Material
Creating Space for Voice
It cannot be assumed that because we do not ideologically oppose the presence of marginalized voices in the library that we have made space for voice.
Many "strategies such as student empowerment and dialogue give the illusions of equality while in fact leaving the authoritarian nature of the student/teacher relationship intact". (18)
We must attend to the ways that power is embedded in and gives shape to narrative spaces. This is especially true for academic libraries where student voices are not often incorporated into literacy processes.
Voice [what counts?]
"Responsibility for the legitimization of voice shifts to the listener" (19)
Listening is always an act of power.
How can the library make space for the voice of the learner, ensuring that it is visible and validated as a meaningful expression alongside the privileged voices of academics, and broader university discourses?
References
Kyle Feenstra
Coordinator, Learning & Instruction Support
University of Manitoba Libraries
Winnipeg, Canada
kyle.feenstra@umanitoba.ca
@ed_librarian
Notes
*All images from Wikimedia Commons or Unsplash unless otherwise noted.