college teacher
Two professors just published an entire anthology dedicated to teaching educators how to infuse their curriculum with "social justice concerns."

The book, Promoting Social Justice Through the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, published by Indiana University Press, was spearheaded by Georgia Southern Professor Delores Liston, and Regina Rahimi, who teaches at Armstrong State University.

"[T]eachers must recognize their role as one as one of mentor, even peer, on the journey towards greater justice in society." Tweet This

Teachers should use both "critical pedagogy" and "transformative practice" in their classes to promote social justice, Rahimi and Lison argue in the book's introduction.

Critical pedagogy, they say, refers to "a variety of perspectives that encourage learners to think critically," including "multiculturalism, postmodernism, deconstructionism, constructivism, black feminist thought, critical race theory, and critical race feminism."

These theories must then be implemented through "transformative education" or "transgressive practice," both of which refer to the "use of critical pedagogy to engage students in the 'practice of freedom,'" Rahimi and Liston note.

Central to uplifting students is the recognition of students' "lived experience." The oppressed, the professors say, "know their own social locations," and therefore have "epistemic privilege" that gives them access to unique forms of information.


Comment: A bunch of meaningless catchphrases and word salad. Can't they just express themselves clearly?


Therefore, teachers should not assume students know nothing.

"The role of the teacher is not to deposit bits and bytes of knowledge into students. Rather, teachers must recognize their role as one as one of mentor, even peer, on the journey towards greater justice in society," the pair write.

The anthology includes chapters on using learning to "engage with social justice," the link between "ethics and social justice," and using personal narratives to "fight for social justice in the classroom," among others. The majority of contributors are college professors.

According to her CV, Liston, the lead co-editor, takes a feminist approach to teaching.

"I have studied the problematic forces of conservatism, capitalism and racism, and have found that integrating feminism with spiritual and poetic language can generate practical solutions," she writes.

"My goal is to participate as a teacher-educator in re-forming the American cultural consciousness through teaching courses in philosophy, ethics and feminism," Liston added.

Campus Reform reached out to Rahimi and Liston for comment, but neither responded in time for publication.