75 Matching Annotations
  1. Dec 2016
    1. I remember that my mother used to say to me, after the death of my father, that my father always said to her, "This boy will become a subversive." He didn't say revolutionary. He used to say subversive. I liked it.
    2. being a pro­gressive on one hand does not mean to be naive, but to make some decisions and then to risk the preservation of the revolution. On the other hand, being a progres­sive means to deepen the connection with the masses of people, means to respect the beliefs of the people, means to consult the people, means to start from the letters and words with which the people are starting the process of education.
    3. Then, through this kind of very strong serious work, through a work that is at the same time tender and heavy and serious and rigorous, we need to shape, to reshape, to form permanently the teachers without manipulating them.
    4. But understanding formation not as some­thing that we do in some weekends or some semesters, but formation as a permanent process, and formation as being an exercise, a critical understanding of what we do.
    5. We must be free; we must be free to believe in freedom. Do you see this paradox? Without freedom it's difficult to understand freedom. On the other hand, we fight for freedom to the extent that we don't have freedom, but in fighting for freedom we discover how freedom is beautiful and difficult to be created, but we have to believe that it's possible.
    6. The people in Nicara­gua are helping us in Brazil, are helping us as Latin Americans, and are helping you to the extent that you are also helping them. This is kind of a struggle here; on the one hand, you gave support to Nicaragua. On the other hand, you made an impression in the space inside of the country, do you see, and this is history.
    7. We have more space outside the system, but we also can create the space in­side of the subsystem or the schooling system in order to occupy the space. That is, I think politically, every time we can occupy some position inside of the subsystem, we should do so.
    8. if you worked outside the system, you couldn't influence the system. The argument was that you could change the system. We concluded that reform within the sys­tem reinforced the system, or was co-opted by the system. Reformers didn't change the system, they made it more palatable and justified it, made it more humane, more intelligent
    9. You set the stage for doing something that they're uncomfortable with. You know they're uncomfortable with it, and you have to work through that business of getting them to be comfortable with trusting them­selves a little bit, trusting their peers a little bit
    10. The more people partici­pate in the process of their own education, the more the people participate in the process of defining what kind of production to produce, and for what and why, the more the people participate in the development of their selves.
    11. That was what they wanted. Now what we wanted in addition to that was to help them understand that they should work with a larger community. They should work with farmers, they should deal with integration, they should be part of the world. We had our own agenda.
    12. No matter where this kind of educator works, the great difficulty­or the great adventure!-is how to make education something which, in being serious, rigorous, methodi­cal, and having a process, also creates happiness and joy.
    13. What Myles did was to touch their memory about a subject and to remake the road. I think that it's really impossible to teach how to think more critically by just making a speech about criti­cal thought
    14. Highlander can't be described as an organization because it isn't departmen­talized and mechanistically conceived. It's more of an organism, therefore it's hard to describe. It's a mosaic or a piece of weaving.
    15. Authority is necessary to the educational process as well as necessary to the freedom of the stu­dents and my own. The teacher is absolutely necessary. What is bad, what is not necessary, is authoritarianism, but not authority.
    16. The teacher is of course an artist, but being an artist does not mean that he or she can make the profile, can shape the students. What the educator does in teaching is to make it possible for the students to be­come themselves.
    17. I'm just saying that we understand that the people who claim to be neutral, and call us propagandists because we are not neutral, are not neutral either. They're just ignorant. They don't know that they're supporters of the status quo. They don't know that that's their job. They don't know that the institution is dedicated to per­petuating a system and they're serving an institution. They have influence nevertheless.
    18. MYLES: Well I think you have to divide that into principles. When I say what I believe, I'm talking about prin­ciples such as love and democracy, where people control their Jives. THIRD PARTY: Your vision. MYLES: My vision. Now the strategy for my vision, the ap­proaches and processes, I've learned from other people.
    1. It's hard to even see much of that spark anymore, that so many beliefs have been crushed, negated, that our society is mired with an unbearable weight of cynicism.

      I am reading Dave Gray's Liminal thinking. Two quotes that bear on this:

      1."The obvious is not obvious.It is constructed....We band together in "obvious clubs" that defend competing versions of reality." (Gray 8-13)

      1. "Your experience of reality is limited by the range of your experience...so your experiences are limited by the things you notice, or pay attention to, within those experiences..." (Gray 14-15) In other words we pay attention to what we are most primed to pay attention to.

      He compares that attention to this:

      when maybe it should be more like this:

    2. its going beyond pulling the quotes from the book and postulating about education

      I am not sure what "beyond" means here. Feels like a judgment, a noting of a failing. I based a lot of my formative teaching years doing exactly that. I would try to find ways to make the quotes work in meatspace. Maybe that's not what you mean by this, but I find any attempt to connect across contexts (known or unknown) to be a winner.