Paulo Freire’s Liberatory Pedagogy: Rethinking Issues of Technology Access and Use in Education

Paulo Freire’s Liberatory Pedagogy: Rethinking Issues of Technology Access and Use in Education

James C. McShay
ISBN13: 9781615207930|ISBN10: 1615207937|EISBN13: 9781615207947
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-61520-793-0.ch007
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MLA

McShay, James C. "Paulo Freire’s Liberatory Pedagogy: Rethinking Issues of Technology Access and Use in Education." International Exploration of Technology Equity and the Digital Divide: Critical, Historical and Social Perspectives, edited by Patricia Randolph Leigh, IGI Global, 2011, pp. 136-148. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-61520-793-0.ch007

APA

McShay, J. C. (2011). Paulo Freire’s Liberatory Pedagogy: Rethinking Issues of Technology Access and Use in Education. In P. Randolph Leigh (Ed.), International Exploration of Technology Equity and the Digital Divide: Critical, Historical and Social Perspectives (pp. 136-148). IGI Global. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-61520-793-0.ch007

Chicago

McShay, James C. "Paulo Freire’s Liberatory Pedagogy: Rethinking Issues of Technology Access and Use in Education." In International Exploration of Technology Equity and the Digital Divide: Critical, Historical and Social Perspectives, edited by Patricia Randolph Leigh, 136-148. Hershey, PA: IGI Global, 2011. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-61520-793-0.ch007

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Abstract

This chapter explores why there is a need for scholars to not only systematically couple discussions about technology use along with technology access, but ground their inquiries in a theory of critical multiculturalism as they seek to fully understand ways for minimizing the digital divide. In order to help explain why using this critical framework is important, this discussion is set against the historical backdrop of the country of Brazil whose past in many ways parallels the United States with regard to its history of oppression and servitude of people based upon their racial heritage. Moreover, this work provides a brief discussion of Paulo Freire’s work with African Brazilians and how he helped them to develop critical understandings about how hegemonic structures limited the extent to which they were able to experience their own humanity. This chapter draws from the historical experiences of African Brazilians as a way to deconstruct how issues of technology and educational inequalities are examined in the U.S. The author of this chapter claims that if U.S. educators are to help prepare students to become productive and reflective decision-makers, they must first acquire tools for understanding their own social realities and learn ways for re-creating them to reflect the ideals of democracy and social justice. Furthermore, the author made calls for educational scholars develop a new language that captures the spectrum of questions at the center of the digital divide debate concerning access and use, but also foregrounds issues of liberation, agency and social change.

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