Edited by: Hakim Mohandas Amani Williams, Hana Huskić, Christina M. Noto
Foreword by: Antonia Darder
Afterword by: Monisha Bajaj
Publication Date: March 22, 2024
Pages: 240
Series: Teaching for Social Justice Series
This timely book features rich examples of students and teachers, defined as learning partners, disrupting hierarchy in education by collaborating on social change projects. At the book’s core is Paulo Freire’s theorization of students and teachers working together toward co-liberation. Cowritten by learning partners, each chapter in this collection highlights a social change project that puts Freire’s theories into action. Projects span a range of academic disciplines and geographical locations from K–12, university/college, and non-formal educational contexts. Appropriate as both a textbook and a primer on collaborative social change-making, Disrupting Hierarchy in Education offers inspiration and models of community-engaged learning programs from across the globe. Topics include community education, public writing, using media for popular education, adolescent and youth development, climate change education, peace and justice leadership development, revolutionary nonviolence, literacy teacher education, citizenship education, development of Latin American studies, palliative care, reflections on identity and subjectivity, antiracism education, trauma-informed pedagogy, wellness, and art curation.
Book Features:
Hakim Mohandas Amani Williams is the Daria L. and Eric J. Wallach Professor of Peace and Justice Studies and associate professor of Africana studies at Gettysburg College. Hana Huskić graduated from Gettysburg College with a BA in anthropology and lives and works in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Christina M. Noto graduated from Gettysburg College with a BA in history and currently lives in Denver, CO.
“For veteran educators and activists in the struggle for liberation, who are watching with much frustration at our past gains in educational, labor, and women’s rights being undone by the proponents of dehumanizing neoliberal policies, Disrupting Hierarchy is a much-appreciated endeavor that reignites radical hope…. the chapters in this book signal a powerful decolonializing praxis to dismantle the debilitating relationships and practices of education that disrespect our differences and diminish our humanity.”
—From the Foreword by Antonia Darder who holds the Leavey Presidential Endowed Chair in Ethics and Moral Leadership in the School of Education at Loyola Marymount University
“A handbook for educators in K–12, community, and university settings for how to use education as a tool for liberation.”
—From the Afterword by Monisha Bajaj, professor of international and multicultural education, University of San Francisco
“At a time when critical and empowering forms of education are under siege by far-right extremists, it is crucial that educators make visible the nature of this threat and how to deal with it. Disrupting Hierarchy in Education is exactly the book educators need for taking on this challenge. It not only embraces a language of critique and possibility but relies on the narratives of teachers who are working together to reclaim schools as sites of struggle and empowerment. Disrupting Hierarchy in Education embraces pedagogy as a practice that disturbs, troubles, and unsettles hierarchical formations rooted in colonial forms of oppression. It is a book that every educator should read if they believe that critical education is fundamental to creating engaged, socially responsible students.”
—Henry Giroux, Chair Professor for Scholarship in the Public Interest, McMaster University
Contents (Tentative)
Foreword: Decolonizing Hierarchy as a Revolutionary Act Antonia Darder
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Modeling Prefigurative Praxes: Disruption for Social Change
Christina Noto, Hana Huskić, and Hakim Mohandas Amani Williams
Part I: Engaging Different Publics for Social Change
1. ”Our Ideas Were Welcomed”: Disrupting the Teacher/Student Binary in a Collaborative Writing Project With High School Students in South Africa
Ashley Visagie, Helene Rousseau, Taahirah Hoosain, Imaan Adams, Jason Cloete, and Thea Mennas
2. The Black Panthers, Multicultural Peace Education, and Power Sharing in a New York City Alternative High School
Krista Ambats and Matt Meyer
3. Disrupting Hierarchies for New Landscapes of Learning by Action: Experiences and Reflections From a Climate Change Course
Jing Lin, Virginia Gomes, Joey Haavik, Maha Malik, Shue-kei Joanna Mok, Jordan Scanlon, Emmanuel Wanjala, and Anna Grigoryeva
4. Cala-boca já morreu: Education Through Media
Grácia Lopes Lima, Mariana Casellato, and Milena Klinke
Part II Institutionalizing Social Change: Skills and Program Development
5. Education for Revolutionary Nonviolence: Enacting Decolonial Praxis
Hakim Mohandas Amani Williams, Christina Noto, and Daniel Jones
6. From Transformative Pedagogy to Transforming Collegiate Spaces: Creating a Network for Multicultural Scholars
Roberto Garcia, Paulina S. Lim, Jacqueline Nguyen, and Natalie M. Schneider
7. A Trio of Co-Conspirators: Teacher Educators, (Preservice) Teachers, and Elementary Students Working Together as Activist Researchers for Social Change
Katie Allison, Jessica Barnett, Vickie Godfrey, Jasmine Hashemi, James Hoffman, Beatrice Kyle, Catherine Lammert, Julie Mazur, and Theresa Nguyen
8. Brooklyn Arts Council’s Wellness Studio: Educational Praxis in Slow Curating for Social Change
Chief Baba Neil Clarke, Daniela Fifi, Desiree Gordon, David Gumbs, Miguelina Rodriguez, Griselda Rodriguez-Solomon, and Zane Rodulfo
9. Everybody Teach! Upending Traditional Disciplinary Curriculum to Create Co-Taught, Praxis-Based, Higher Education Courses
Alexander Fink, Bemnet Habtamu, Angela Kunkel-Linares, Morgan Pence, Kaiya Woller, and Ilene Dawn Alexander
10. To Be “In and Not Of” the University, but Beyond: Estudios Rebeldes as Relational Disrupting for Change
Agustin “Tino” Diaz, Hannah Filizola Ruiz, Leandra Hernandez, Jose Coreas, Lydia Kerr, Jorge Garcia, Carlos Alarco, and Mari Claudia Linares
Part III: Reflexivity and Conscientization for Social Change
11. ”Uncertaining” the Teacher and Student: Reflections between a Professor and a Medical Doctor
Nyna Amin and Laura Campbell
12. Working Toward Trauma-Informed Praxis: Reflections on a Shared Learning Process
Juleus Ghunta and Ute Kelly
EDITORS’REFLECTION
We Are the Ones We’ve Been Waiting For: Justice-Grounded Leadership
Hana Huskić, Christina Noto, and Hakim Mohandas Amani Williams
Afterword Monisha Bajaj
References
Endnotes
Index
About the Editors and Contributors
Professors: Request an Exam Copy
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