Saturday, December 7, 2013

Freire and Gatto

Freire and Gatto agree on the blandness of the classroom, and the static nature of education. Gatto presents more problems that solutions, and puts the issues on a larger scale of how they affect adulthood and how they fit people into society. Gatto doesn't specifically address the quality of the education in terms of real learning. Freire's more about the very low quality of education, and less about the overall purpose of education and where it leaves students at the end. It's hard to find much that the two agree on specifically because they address different aspects of the education system, and it happens that the basis of their criticisms overlap.

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