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A Educação Na Cidade

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O livro que ora entrego à curiosidade de possíveis leitoras e leitores e que aparecerá quase simultaneamente aqui na França é um livro despretensioso mas me agrada.Se não fosse assim,não publicaria.Está composto de entrevistas realizadas entre os primeiros meses de haver assumido a Secretaria Municipal de São Paulo e os começos do segundo ano de nossa administração."...Paulo Freire




This book is primarily comprised of interviews that took place between the first months of Paulo Freire's assuming leadership of the bureau of education in Sao Paulo, and the beginnings of his second year - including his farewell to the bureau upon his retirement. The highly provocative observations herein confirm a central imperative, namely, that public education must play a decisive role in the continuing reformation of a democratic society. Though written from the viewpoint of an authority in another culture, the implications of Paulo Freire's dialogues reach all the way to our own inner-city schools. Pedagogy of the City offers a plan of action for the transformation of schooling: the creation of schools that truly represent and respect the student; the creation of schools where students and their life experiences are a curriculum in interaction with teachers who can truly help them; and more. Twenty years after the landmark U.S. publication of Pedagogy of the Oppressed, this new Pedagogy of the City will help to stimulate anew the thinking of teachers and all concerned citizens.

144 pages, Paperback

First published December 1, 1991

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About the author

Paulo Freire

163 books1,420 followers
The Brazilian educator Paulo Freire is among most the influential educational thinkers of the late 20th century. Born in Recife, Brazil, on September 19, 1921, Freire died of heart failure in Sao Paulo, Brazil on May 2, 1997. After a brief career as a lawyer, he taught Portuguese in secondary schools from 1941-1947. He subsequently became active in adult education and workers' training, and became the first Director of the Department of Cultural Extension of the University of Recife (1961-1964).

Freire quickly gained international recognition for his experiences in literacy training in Northeastern Brazil. Following the military coup d'etat of 1964, he was jailed by the new government and eventually forced into a political exile that lasted fifteen-years.

In 1969 he was a visiting scholar at Harvard University and then moved to Geneva, Switzerland where he assumed the role of special educational adviser to the World Congress of Churches. He returned to Brazil in 1979.

Freire's most well known work is Pedagogy of the Oppressed (1970). Throughout this and subsequent books, he argues for system of education that emphasizes learning as an act of culture and freedom. He is most well known for concepts such as "Banking" Education, in which passive learners have pre-selected knowledge deposited in their minds; "Conscientization", a process by which the learner advances towards critical consciousness; the "Culture of Silence", in which dominated individuals lose the means by which to critically respond to the culture that is forced on them by a dominant culture. Other important concepts developed by Freire include: "Dialectic", "Empowerment", "Generative Themes/Words", "Humanization", "Liberatory Education", "Mystification", "Praxis", " Problematization", and "Transformation of the World".

http://www.education.miami.edu/ep/con...

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Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews
Profile Image for sutibah.
73 reviews1 follower
January 31, 2025
(…) el acento de una de mis luchas permanentes - la de no dejarme seducir por la tentación de las dicotomías en que nos perdemos y ya no podemos comprender el mundo (124).

(…) practicando usted puede volverse capaz de desvelar el componente teórico de la práctica… Y teorizando en torno a la práctica usted puede volverse capaz de tener mejor práctica (126).

En verdad, no hay práctica que no tenga incrustada una cierta teoría (160).

3 reviews1 follower
February 7, 2008
This is the absolutely essential Freire. It's all about how he put his ideals to practice as education minister in Brazil. I found it so inspiring and awakening as far as what the real challenges are in building any kind of structures based on how we want it to look. It was really interesting to read how he overcame some of the doubts that the society of Brazil at the time had about his progressive thinking about education-it is an essential guide for any progressive putting real tangible work into laying out another way to live.
118 reviews2 followers
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March 16, 2021
Through a transcription of a series of interviews with Freire, this books give some detail to how Freire implemented his theories when he became lead administrator of the Department of Education in Sao Paolo.

As his pedagogy applies to the city of Sao Paulo, I'd say the practical application comes down to increasing teacher salaries, democratizing the top-down framework of administration and making schools more autonomous, enrolling more students in school, repairing physical school buildings, maximizing the use of existing space to expand access to school for more students, purchasing new equipment for the schools, and confronting the fact that there is a huge budget shortfall that is wholly inadequate. He instituted local school councils made up of a comprehensive school community of parents, teachers, and non-teaching school staff. He tried to de-emphasize testing especially in regards to teacher retention. He tried to address school drop-out rates by looking at what factors push kids out of school. He tried to steer away from failing students as a means of control in the classroom. He fostered the change of bylaws and a constitution for the school system that was created through a participatory rather than top-down process. He developed teacher training programs that focused on reflection on practice as opposed to imposition of teacher-instruction methods, and worked on the development of an integrated, interdisciplinary curriculum model that utilized dialogcal practice and promoted political consciousness. He tried to promote an ethos that respected students' life experiences as relevant to their schooling. He tried to promote an ethos of joyfulness in teaching and in learning. He attended to adult literacy. He worked with the department of health to address the needs of students with AIDS (and HIV I assume) and to address disease prevention strategies.

All of this sounds like a lot, and very impressive, but since the book was based on a series of interviews taken in the second year of his time in leadership, most of this is presented in the form of goals or sort of as a resume of accomplishments documented in the Epilogue. It took me three readings to really tease out what these practical applications of theory were. The main emphasis of the book seems to be that democratization of schools must be done through democratic processes, not by authoritative implementation of a ready-made curriculum. So in some ways, Freire seems resistant to lay out a formula to be duplicated. The book also reads as though verbatim Q and A, and so even if he did have a formula to share, the medium of Q and A is not conducive to presenting one. So, for someone trying to understand the relationship between theory and practice in a pedagogy of liberation, I found this to be a frustrating read.
Profile Image for Patrick Hanlon.
772 reviews7 followers
July 19, 2022
This is late in Freire's career and partially while he was working as in city government in Sao Paolo. Consisting of interviews, the book is very much at the mercy of the interviewers rather than drive by PF. There is less of the intellectual heft that he is known for and there are several references to the day-to-day challenges administering the school system in Sao Paolo. With the last interview, Freire seems set free and the passion comes through with plenty of his insight and authority as an educational leader and intellectual.
Profile Image for Rolf.
4,102 reviews17 followers
November 5, 2024
This book is a collection of interviews that took place around the time Freire served as secretary of education for the city of São Paulo. While there are some interesting nuggets regarding his thought, much of this feels like a repeat of what he has said elsewhere. Also, where I would have loved to see more wonkish detail about his tenure in São Paulo, this book feels very light on detail of what his tenure looked like.

Overall, it’s an interesting part of Freire’s corpus, but definitely not one of the highlights.
Profile Image for Adam.
365 reviews5 followers
March 19, 2021
I liked this just as much as its better-known sibling, Pedagogy of the Oppressed. Though I don't recall knowing anyone else who read it at the time. I remember finding the writing more accessible and the insights tangible, as Freire was writing from a position of formal power. It was a great read alongside bell hook's Teaching to Transgress.
Profile Image for Jake.
113 reviews15 followers
August 4, 2025
Excellent collection of interviews done during Freire’s tenure as Secretary of Education for São Paulo. The interviews highlight the challenges and successes of putting theory into practice, and while sometimes American readers of Freire ignore the political aspect of his theory, the discussions in this book leave no room for that.
Profile Image for marsel magenda.
7 reviews11 followers
December 28, 2009
Freire adalah tokoh yang luar biasa... menakjubkan... dan berani melawan tirani dengan pola pendidikan yang diusungnya. Melalui Freire saya mengenal istilah pendidikan sebagai arena pembebasan manusia. Pendidikan sebagai sesuatu yang membebaskan kita, bukan malah menjebak dan mengurung kita. Freire pula yang mengubah pandangan dalam diri saya bahwa manusia seharusnya berintegrasi... bukan beradaptasi... Adaptasi adalah kelakuan binatang... Manusia bukanlah binatang. Bedanya berintegrasi dengan beradaptasi??? Dalam berintegrasi ada kata saling di dalamnya... Sederhana, tapi memang itu yang harus dilakukan manusia.

Masuk ke bahasan buku... Buku ini lebih mudah dipahami daripada buku-buku Freire lainnya, karena dikemas dengan dialog-dialog Freire atas segala pertanyaan yang ditujukan padanya. Bahasa yang digunakan pun sangat sederhana... Saya pikir disengaja, karena Freire begitu mengagung-agungkan pendidikan yang dialogis... :)

Akhir kata, seperti kata Freire... Kita, sebagai anak didik bukanlah kolektor pengetahuan. Saring dan cerna lah apa yang kita anggap baik dari buku ini dan semua buku yang lain.
Profile Image for Ellen.
124 reviews5 followers
July 19, 2009
Paulo Freire speeches, writing, and interview on his position as Secretary of Education for the city of San Paulo. His theory and terminology is much easier to understand here, because they are explained in everyday language.
Profile Image for Megan.
493 reviews74 followers
March 21, 2013
I have a strong feeling that the translation does not do this book justice. There are a lot of odd turns of phrase and labyrinthine sentence structures. That said, interesting to hear how Freire applied his theory to reforming Sao Paolo schools.
Profile Image for Panji Laksono.
36 reviews3 followers
February 5, 2010
pemikiran dan isinya udah agak-agak lupa, yang jelas saat baca ini ya saat gemar-gemarnya saya pada pemikiran sosialisme n marxisme (bukan NARXISme loh ya!!!)
485 reviews5 followers
February 19, 2015
Read this in an English Education class and loved it.
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews

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