Henry Giroux: “All education is a struggle over what kind of future you want for young people"

00:10:00
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LCMXKt5vRQk

Summary

TLDRThe video critiques traditional education systems, arguing that they often limit students' imagination and critical thinking abilities by focusing too heavily on standardized testing and accountability rather than student experiences or critical social issues. It asserts education should be about producing agency and critical consciousness. The notion of neutrality in education is criticized as a political tactic to obscure power operations. The relationship between capitalism and democracy is examined, highlighting their fundamental differences. New technologies, while potentially empowering, can also be tools of surveillance. The video stresses the essential role of education in democracy, asserting the failure of the political left to emphasize educational reform. Young people are recognized as a force capable of driving societal change through their engagement and resistance.

Takeaways

  • 🎓 Education should empower, not repress imagination.
  • 🤔 Critical pedagogy fosters awareness and agency.
  • 📚 Neutral education hides ideological influences.
  • 🔄 Democracy requires continuous evolution.
  • 💻 Technology offers both empowerment and control.
  • 🔍 Scrutinize the link between capitalism and democracy.
  • 💪 Young people's resistance shapes change.
  • 🗣️ Education is central to a functional democracy.
  • ❌ Avoid overemphasis on educational neutrality.
  • 🌍 Education should align with social justice values.

Timeline

  • 00:00:00 - 00:10:00

    Education has dual roles; it empowers but also limits imagination by making individuals conform to existing conditions. This is evident in pedagogies focused on standardized testing and accountability, which ignore students' experiences and critical social issues. Such methods stifle critical thinking and awareness of cultural strengths, leading to what can be termed "pedagogies of repression." Present debates on educational methods overlook these fundamental issues, focusing instead on methods without addressing deeper questions of identity, agency, and the purpose of education. Education should nurture agency, shaping narratives that broaden students' understanding of the world and their connection to it. Focusing excessively on methods silences these essential discourses, ignoring how education reflects and reproduces cultural, ideological, and power dynamics. Education cannot be neutral; a claim of neutrality masks the political nature of education and the power structures it supports, often leading to an unaccountable system. Education should expose these dynamics, fostering critical consciousness rather than reinforcing covert agendas of power.

Mind Map

Video Q&A

  • What is the main critique of traditional education in the video?

    The main critique is that traditional education often suppresses imagination and critical thinking by focusing on standardization and teaching to the test.

  • What does the video say about neutrality in education?

    The video argues that the idea of neutrality in education is a political issue that conceals the ideological operations behind education.

  • How does capitalism relate to democracy according to the video?

    The video states that capitalism and democracy are not the same; capitalism focuses on profits, whereas democracy should focus on shared justice and power.

  • What role do new technologies play in education and society according to the video?

    New technologies offer opportunities for cultural production and critique, but they can also be tools for surveillance and control.

  • What is the concept of democracy as described in the video?

    Democracy is described as an ideal that is never fully achieved, it requires constant struggle and adaptation.

  • Why is education essential for democracy?

    Education is essential because it informs citizens, enabling them to effectively participate and engage in democratic processes.

  • What criticism does the video have for the political left?

    The criticism is that the political left has failed to prioritize education and understand its role in shaping beliefs and consciousness.

  • How does the video view the power of young people?

    Young people are seen as a powerful force capable of societal change through direct action and raising awareness.

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Subtitles
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  • 00:00:00
    Education is not just about empowering people
  • 00:00:03
    or practicing freedom.
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    It's also, in some ways, about killing the imagination
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    and educating people to adjust to conditions in which
  • 00:00:11
    their own sense of agency is basically limited. For instance,
  • 00:00:14
    we often see pedagogies that "teach to the test",
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    we often see pedagogies that are simply about accountability,
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    objective standards,
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    pedagogies that in no way take into consideration
  • 00:00:26
    the experience of students, or speak to important social issues.
  • 00:00:31
    They are pedagogies that, in many ways, are designed
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    to undercut the possibility for students to be critical thinkers,
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    critically conscious, aware of their own cultural capital
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    and its strengths, and their place in the world.
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    And I think it's rightly so
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    to call them "pedagogies of repression".
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    The debate about education today, with its emphasis on methods,
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    represents a new kind of pedagogical stupidity.
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    It completely ignores the most fundamental question
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    of education, "what is education for?",
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    and the most fundamental struggle in education:
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    a struggle of our identities, a struggle of our agency.
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    Education, in the final analysis, is about the production of agency.
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    What kind of agency and narratives are we going to produce
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    that students can understand, that enlarge their perspective
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    on the world, on their relationship to others and themselves?
  • 00:01:28
    Methods? To begin with methods
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    is to completely ignore, probably, all the most fundamental questions
  • 00:01:34
    about education: ideology, culture,
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    power, authority... How are these things constituted?
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    What's the basis for knowledge? On whose authority?
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    Does it speak to a particular kind of future?
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    Because all education is an introduction to the future.
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    It's a struggle over the future you want for young people,
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    over the subjectivities that will make that future possible,
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    over notions of narrative
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    that students can relate to and understand,
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    so they can see education as fundamental to who they are.
  • 00:02:08
    "Methods" doesn't do that. Methods contain a kind of silence
  • 00:02:12
    on the side of the worst forms of repression,
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    because they deny the very notion that students are alive.
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    They can be alive to themselves, to particular forms of knowledge,
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    particular social experiences and particular values.
  • 00:02:27
    The notion of neutrality, and when it's raised in education,
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    is the worst form of politics.
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    In itself, it's a political issue, a political question,
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    because it's taking a value around education
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    in ways to hide what education is really about.
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    I've always viewed that position
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    as the basis for a kind of fascist politics,
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    because it hides its code, for not allowing people
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    to understand the role that education plays ideologically,
  • 00:02:58
    the role it plays in producing particular forms of knowledge,
  • 00:03:02
    forms of power, kinds of social values,
  • 00:03:05
    notions of agency, narratives about the world...
  • 00:03:08
    It's impossible for education to be neutral. There's no such thing.
  • 00:03:13
    Those who argue that education should be neutral
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    are really arguing for a version of education
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    in which nobody is accountable, in which the people who produce
  • 00:03:23
    that form of education disappear, because they're saying it's neutral.
  • 00:03:28
    And so you can't identify the ideological processes, politics,
  • 00:03:32
    motive, power... That's precisely what they want.
  • 00:03:36
    I mean, look: power, at its worst,
  • 00:03:39
    is invisible. It makes itself invisible.
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    And that the notion that education is neutral
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    is, to me, one way of people who have dominant power
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    making it invisible and making propaganda of itself
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    incapable of being seen.
  • 00:03:56
    It seems to me that at the heart of critical pedagogy
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    is that... it's not a skill. We're not talking about skills.
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    We're talking about critical consciousness.
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    You know, conscientization.
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    We're talking about creating tools with which people can be
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    not only critics, but also cultural producers.
  • 00:04:16
    What new technology offers, particularly for young people,
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    is the opportunity to operate outside the traditional spheres of the media,
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    particularly mainstream media,
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    like they've never had that opportunity before.
  • 00:04:30
    At the same time, we also see the way in which the new technologies
  • 00:04:35
    have become enormously weaponized to repress people:
  • 00:04:39
    Google, Facebook...
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    These are, increasingly, technologies of surveillance.
  • 00:04:44
    That's what they are.
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    But there are enormous possibilities for them to be used.
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    We've seen them used in progressive and radical ways.
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    My theory about those technologies
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    is that we have to judge them
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    within the societies that are using them
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    according to very specific values.
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    It's not that the technology alone produces very specific relationships.
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    They operate according to the values that align with certain powers
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    to put into play how those things would be used.
  • 00:05:16
    Selfies! Selfies are the mirror or neoliberalism, right?
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    But they don't have to be...
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    Disabled people can project modes of representation
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    that dignify who they are. It's a struggle. These technologies
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    are part of a larger struggle over cultural politics.
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    In the beginning, when these technologies emerged,
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    there was a kind of romanticization about them.
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    "This is the new democracy!".
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    They divorced those technologies from questions of power,
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    and the concentration of power, and how it can absorb anything
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    in a capitalist society, particularly in a neoliberal society.
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    I think that has to be challenged.
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    With what we're seeing now, you'd have to be pretty stupid
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    to believe that Google is, somehow, on the side of democracy,
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    or to believe that Microsoft really cares about social justice,
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    or to believe that, in some way, Twitter is a new form of literacy.
  • 00:06:14
    Look, capitalism and democracy are not the same thing.
  • 00:06:17
    Let's begin there.
  • 00:06:18
    You can't talk about democracy if you're talking about capitalism.
  • 00:06:22
    Capitalism is the antithesis of democracy.
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    Capitalism doesn't believe in shared justice, shared power,
  • 00:06:29
    shared responsibilities. It believes in accumulated profits.
  • 00:06:33
    That's very different, right?
  • 00:06:35
    It seems to me that a debate over democracy,
  • 00:06:38
    particularly in terms of linking three things, political rights,
  • 00:06:41
    personal liberties and economic rights...
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    There's no democracy that won't talk about economic rights.
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    It doesn't exist.
  • 00:06:50
    You can have a range of personal and political individual freedoms,
  • 00:06:54
    I'm delighted with freedom of the press,
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    and with the ability to go and choose any religion I want,
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    but not with the notion that anybody
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    can either sleep at the Ritz or sleep under a bridge.
  • 00:07:06
    Sorry, doesn't work that way.
  • 00:07:08
    No democracy is worthy of the name.
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    I don't think any of them are finally finished or completed.
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    What democracy is, and what I like about it,
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    is the fact that it represents an ideal
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    in which no society is ever enough.
  • 00:07:22
    The concept, at its best, means it's unfinished.
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    It's never fully completed.
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    You always have to work at it. It's always a site of struggle.
  • 00:07:33
    Gramsci uses the term "interregnum".
  • 00:07:36
    He says it's a period when the old order is dying
  • 00:07:40
    and new societies are emerging,
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    and in the middle is that moment of restlessness,
  • 00:07:46
    that moment of uncertainty. That moment, today,
  • 00:07:50
    is increasingly dominated by a fascist politics.
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    It's dominated by right-wing groups, hate groups,
  • 00:07:57
    by people who hate immigrants, who hate refugees,
  • 00:08:00
    it's dominated by neo-Nazis, by white nationalists,
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    and we need to be aware that the language of democracy
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    has been undermined by neoliberalism,
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    by the hedge fund apparatus, by the capitalists,
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    and we haven't been able to recover.
  • 00:08:16
    Now we talk about "illiberal democracy".
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    In Hungary, in Poland... We say things like:
  • 00:08:22
    "Democracy means you have security, but you don't have freedom".
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    You have to give up freedom for security. Can you imagine?
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    That's the degree to which democracy has failed.
  • 00:08:34
    You can't have a democracy without informed citizens.
  • 00:08:37
    That's why education has to be at the centre
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    of any discourse about democracy, and it isn't.
  • 00:08:43
    That's where the left has failed.
  • 00:08:45
    It has failed to run education. They failed because they believe
  • 00:08:49
    that the most important structures of domination are entirely economic,
  • 00:08:53
    and not only those elements that trade in beliefs, in persuasion,
  • 00:08:58
    in pedagogy, in changing consciousness,
  • 00:09:01
    and motive identification.
  • 00:09:03
    Uncertainties can be a time of great anxiety,
  • 00:09:05
    and a time of great possibility,
  • 00:09:08
    a time to rethink the language of politics,
  • 00:09:11
    to rethink the language of struggle, to rethink the language of solidarity.
  • 00:09:15
    Power is not always about domination. Not exclusively.
  • 00:09:20
    It's also about resistance. Young people have a lot of power.
  • 00:09:23
    They can shut societies down. They can block streets,
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    engage in direct action, educate their parents.
  • 00:09:31
    They're a potent political force. What they need to do
  • 00:09:34
    is to recognise themselves as such, and I think they need to act,
  • 00:09:39
    because I think that a discourse of anxiety
  • 00:09:42
    should give way to a discourse of critique,
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    and a discourse of critique should give way
  • 00:09:47
    to a discourse of possibility, and a discourse of possibility means
  • 00:09:51
    that you can imagine a future very different from the present.
Tags
  • education
  • critical thinking
  • agency
  • democracy
  • capitalism
  • neutrality
  • technology
  • resistance
  • power
  • young people