Pedagogie et utopie: l’alliance de l’esperance
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.7346/sird-012022-p10Keywords:
education, politics, utopia, pedagogy of hopeAbstract
This article deals with the difficult relationship between politics and pedagogy. When we look at the results of educational policies, we risk losing all hope. The lack of a vision entails the risk of accepting that the discourse on education is reduced to specialized, aseptic and disengaged arguments, based on rational criteria that do not take into account social projects. And yet, decisions are still made on the basis of indi-cators of evaluation, performance, competence, effectiveness, quality, all at the expense of a reflection cantered on the social and political dimensions of the educational act and its political importance. There are, however, models capable of re-establishing the relationship between pedagogy and politics, and of interpreting education in terms of social commitment. All the theoretical and practical work of Paulo Freire warns us against the depoliticization of educational thought and pedagogical reflection. Education must be understood as a project of liberation because pedagogy must lead to the realization of civil and demo-cratic values. It is necessary to renew and re-elaborate an educational concept capable of combining the utopian dimension of education and reawakening the utopian dimension of political commitment starting from that Pedagogy of hope that invoked by Paulo Freire. The utopia can be created by actual educational actions, specific actions that force us to accept compromises on the ethical, social and political level and that make us rethink the means that guide our practical action and our scientific reflection.
References
.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2022 Jean Houssaye
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
The authors who publish in this magazine accept the following conditions:
- The authors retain the rights to their work and give the magazine the right to first publish the work, simultaneously licensed under a Creative Commons License - Attribution which allows others to share the work indicating the intellectual authorship and the first publication in this magazine.
- Authors may adhere to other non-exclusive license agreements for the distribution of the version of the published work (eg deposit it in an institutional archive or publish it in a monograph), provided that the first publication took place in this magazine.
- Authors can disseminate their work online (eg in institutional repositories or on their website) before and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges and increase citations of the published work.