Angel 's Reviews > Teachers as Cultural Workers

Teachers as Cultural Workers by Paulo Freire
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didn't like it it was ok liked it really liked it it was amazing
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190365
's review
Sep 06, 11

3 of 5 stars
bookshelves: education, politics-and-political-science
Read from July 31 to September 06, 2011, read count: 1

I finished this a couple of days ago, but it took me a while to finally get around to reviewing it. I am giving it three stars, but it is not because it is a bad book. The book can be a bit repetitive, especially if you have read some of Freire's other works, and a few passages can be a little dry. Having said that, there is a lot in this book for teachers and educators to reflect upon. I found myself making notes in my personal journal at various times, jotting down passages and quotes I wanted to remember for later. Freire covers a lot of ground in this book from the teaching of reading to the behavior of teachers, from the teaching act to political action and activism. I think a lot of what Freire wrote in this book is very relevant today if educators would take the time to read the book, reflect on it, then take action. I also think that the book has a lot to say to librarians, who are educators as well, and who often do a lot of teaching (especially if you are an instruction librarian, but even at the reference desk some degree of teaching goes on). Some of it also speaks to our profession in terms of the idea of library neutrality, a topic I have considered before (I have a book just on that topic listed in my GoodReads lists if anyone is interested).

I took this book with me when I went to Immersion (ACRL Institute on Information Literacy for those not in librarianship, an intensive institute for instruction librarians) this past summer. In part, I was looking for a bit of inspiration. I think I also longed to read something that is not necessarily present in the Immersion curriculum (or if it is, it is very well hidden or unacknowledged). I think Freire has a lot that can speak to librarians, if we take the time to listen.

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Reading Progress

09/04/2011 page 112
61.0%
09/04/2011 page 70
38.0% "Yet another reason why teachers are so important (not that Americans seem to care given how they treat teachers): "No society can assert itself without developing its culture, science, research, technology, and teaching. And all this begins in elementary school.""
09/04/2011 page 65
35.0% "A bit slow, but some good reflection material for educators here."
09/01/2011 page 49
27.0% "Finished the first letter. Freire had a lot to say about importance of reading and writing and of nurturing them together. I made a few notes in my journal for later reflection and reference. Moving on to the next letter."
08/09/2011 page 1
1.0% "I finally got through the introductory material. Some of it interesting, other less so. 49 pages between a Foreword, a Preface, and an Introduction. A bit much if you just want to get to the book itself. Moving along."
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