
Seeds of Freedom
Liberating Education in Guatemala
Clark Taylor(Author)
Routledge (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published on 30. August 2013
Book
Hardback
246 pages
978-1-61205-247-2 (ISBN)
Description
Seeds of Freedom is a remarkable case study of liberating education in the remote Guatemalan Maya indigenous village of Santa Maria Tzeja in the four decades since it was first settled in 1970. Clark Taylor's account begins at a time in which the majority of the village consisted of illiterate landless and land-poor peasant farmers working in conditions close to slavery. With the help of a Catholic priest, the village's founding pioneers were granted land, settled the village, established a school for their children, and began to prosper. By 2010 the village's emerging professionals were filling increasingly important social change roles at the local, regional, and national levels and nearly all children are educated with many to a university level. As such Santa Maria has come to exemplify the theory and practice of liberating education. The book tells the history of this remarkable community and reveals the transformative potential of the radical pedagogy of Paulo Freire and others. Santa Maria has thus become an example of dynamic liberating education, and its history has much to offer educators, students and solidarity activists throughout the world.
Reviews / Votes
"Seeds of Freedom proves with insight and rigor how important the work of Freire and the project of liberating education is on a global level, especially in Latin America. Pedagogy as the practice of freedom takes on new meaning in this book and offers a historical and contextual understanding of the power of education when it is connected to social change. This is a powerful and important book and should be on everyone's reading list."-Henry Giroux, McMaster University
"Seeds of Freedom is an extraordinary pedagogical tribute to a collective educational process, made possible by the unwavering commitment of a people to a liberating praxis for social change. Through on-going efforts by students, parents, and educators of the impoverished village of Santa Maria, a strong vision of liberatory education finds fertile ground to grow and evolve. Rooted in the philosophy of Mayan tradition, indigenous knowledge powerfully infuses life into this pedagogical struggle to recapture the human dignity of an oppressed community. In the midst of historical brutalities and the contradictions of everyday life, Clark Taylor weaves here an educational story of communal faith, hope, and perseverance-a story that emerges from a tiny fragile seed in the countryside of Guatemala, to become a global testimony to the indomitable power of a determined people to transform their destiny."
-Antonia Darder, Marymount University
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Publishing group
Taylor & Francis Inc
Target group
College/higher education
Illustrations
black & white illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 157 mm
Thickness: 18 mm
Weight
512 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-61205-247-2 (9781612052472)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
11/2015
Routledge
€40.99
Available for download

E-Book
11/2015
Routledge
€40.99
Available for download

Book
08/2014
1st Edition
Routledge
€46.10
Shipment within 3-4 weeks
Person
Clark Taylor combines a thriving intellectual curiosity with a passion for social justice. He began his career in 1960 as an ordained Protestant pastor, with a focus on justice and peace issues. In 1970 he continued graduate studies in urban planning, from which he took a position in 1972 as a founding faculty member of the College of Public and Community Service (CPCS) at the University of Massachusetts at Boston. Based on his work at the college, he wrote his PhD thesis on "Planning an Urban Experimental College," receiving his degree in 1976. Through his thirty-year career at the college, his teaching areas evolved through urban studies to progressive religion and finally to Latin American studies, with a focus on Guatemala. With his wife, Kay, he co-founded a partnership between their local Protestant church and the Guatemalan indigenous village of Santa Maria Tzeja in 1987, which continues and is the case study community for this book.
Content
Chapter 1 Introduction; Chapter 2 Seeds of Freedom; Chapter 3 Liberation from Bondage; Chapter 4 Liberation from Ignorance; Chapter 5 Freedom's Children; Chapter 6 Schools for Liberation and Domination; Chapter 7 An Educational Vision on the Way to Realization; Chapter 8 High School!; Chapter 9 From Village to University; Chapter 10 The Ongoing Harvest of Freedom; Chapter 11 Conclusion;