By teaching our students to think, care, and act, we empower them to build a peaceful future.


Welcome to Think, Care, Act, where teachers and students can find rationales and resources to infuse required curricula with peace, character, global, and multicultural concepts throughout the year.

To act in a world whose problems seem overwhelming requires being able to use the powers of critical and creative thinking and compassionate and inclusive care. Employing these tools, adults and youth alike can work effectively and conscientiously to solve problems big and small, global and local.

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE ON PEACE EDUCATION: TOWARDS A POSSIBLE WORLD FREE OF VIOLENCE

“Knowledge emerges only through invention and re-invention, through the restless, impatient, continuing, hopeful inquiry human beings pursue in the world, with the world, and with each other.”
—Paulo Freire (Pedagogy of the Oppressed, 1970/2000, p. 72)
“Our work is inspired by a vision of a transformed global society, a human future for all the Earth’s people and a healthy future for our shared planet.”
Betty Reardon (Learning Peace, 1994, p. 40)
Transformative researchers and practitioners from all over the globe use conceptions of critical thinking that are—at heart—the same.  Further, they see such thinking as a tool to change the world for the better.  Brazilian education reformer Paulo Freire (1970/2000) sees critical reflection and committed social action in a deeply intertwined cycle arising from questioning and rethinking knowledge.  American Nel Noddings’s (2007) definition encompasses reasoned analysis of issues, as well as reflection on moral and social beliefs and action. Tanzanian-born Ladislaus Semali (2004) offers perspectives from elders in his native Chaggaland, who describe critical thinking as imanya, (“to know intellectually and to be morally or spiritually motivated”) and kusare (“to consider all the possibilities ... think deeply”).  He concludes, “Critical thinking is a lived activity, not an abstract academic pastime” (pp. 170-171).
Joe Kincheloe (2004) adds that critical thinkers recognize that they are part of a social fabric woven by threads of racial, economic, class, gender, religious, and geographical circumstances and awareness, and that they understand that these connections affect the ways they think, learn, and change.
International Institute on Peace Education: Weaving the Fabric of Peace

In July 2013, at Puerto Rico University in San Juan, transformative global citizens from over twenty countries brought critical thinking to life.  A seventy-person learning community gathered to participate in the weeklong International Institute on Peace Education.  IIPE is described as an “annual, intensive, international learning experience in peace education.  For thirty years, the IIPE has brought together educators, professional workers and activists in the field of peace education, gathered from around the world to exchange experiences and learn with and from each other in an intensive short-term learning community that embodies the practices and principles of critical, participatory peace pedagogy.”   

Founded in 1982 by Betty Reardon and colleagues at Teachers College, Columbia University, IIPE’s original focus was on nuclear disarmament and peace education methodologies.  There were few such initiatives in educational institutions at the time.  Over the past thirty years, IIPE has become more holistic, evolving into what Reardon describes in conversation as a peace education “swap shop.”  Reardon, Alicia Cabezudo, (2002) and a group of global educators use the term “comprehensive peace education” (p. 19) to describe the broad outcomes envisioned and multiple strands of education employed in the effort to teach and learn for peace.  It is a participatory process. 
In contrast, Freire (1970/2000) denounces “banking education,” in which “the teachers make communiqués and make deposits which the students patiently receive, memorize, and repeat” (p. 72).  As students are denied opportunities to develop critical and transforming thinking, they become apathetic and passive.  Not so at the IIPE.  Participants were engaged and active as they constructed the reality of the 2013 theme: “Towards a Possible World Free from Violence: Pedagogies, Proposals and Politics for Human Rights and Peace.”

A Perfect Storm: Cooperation, community, content, culture, Chantal?
What makes IIPE work?  In 2013, there was a perfect storm of components.  Energy and organizational expertise came from members of the IIPE staff, Tony Jenkins (Global Director/Coordinator) and Janet Gerson (Education Director).  Host-organizers Anita Yudkin Suliveres, Anaida Pascual Moran, and Lourdes Torres Santos tirelessly offered inspiring vision, hard work, and warm welcomes along with their team at the UNESCO Chair in Peace Education at the University of Puerto Rico.  They planned for years and hosted with enthusiasm, even managing to send Hurricane Chantal on her way around, rather than through the island. The passionate culture, food, music, and diversity—along with the ongoing anti-colonial struggles—of the Puerto Rican people became part of IIPE learning as well.  Content was rich, relevant, and reflectively developed.  Core to the community is the community itself: seventy individuals from over twenty countries, creating a temporary village with far-reaching implications.  Participating with this dedicated and diverse team of professors, student volunteers, researchers, and activists, one feels another world IS possible. 
The plenary gatherings and workshops offered by participants helped community members construct multiple paths to peacebuilding.  Too numerous to detail all here, four highlights will allow readers to construct their own impressions of IIPE.

Judith Conde Pacheco (Puerto Rico): Diary Writers of Peace Made Invisible by History
Co-founder of the Vieques Women’s Alliance, Judith described the role of women of Vieques as they protested the presence of the United States Navy on their island east of Puerto Rico.  Military maneuvers took place near civilian areas, health of civilians deteriorated, and long-term heavy-metal residue still pollutes the island.  Women started to document the impact of the military on their lives, becoming—for once—visible after years of “invisibility.”  One woman wrote that she would “nunca (never)” strike, volunteering instead to cook for protesters.  As conditions for civilians deteriorated, however, she started banging her cooking pot at demonstrations to protest the imposed curfew. 
Women organized because they perceived risk to their families and communities, overcoming their fear of commonly perceived stigmas against protesters.  The contributions of everyone—women, men, and children—were respected.  They determined as a group who would be arrested and who could not.  Women elders volunteered to risk arrest, noting their children were grown and their husbands could take care of themselves.  Judith noted that her own child learned to walk and talk protesting in front of the Camp Garcia gate.  A feminist and inclusive ideology gave face and voice to the women of Vieques.  Although the Navy “left” in 2003, numerous unexploded ordinances remain, cancer rates are high, and the struggle continues.  The story of nonviolent civil protest and the struggle for human rights on Vieques is one that should be explored by our students, who can research via news accounts and various web resources. (See links below.) 

Liliana Cruz and Yara Lari Gorbea Colon of Puerto Rico: Theatre for Building Another Possible World.  
Theatre of the Oppressed was developed by Brazilian Augusto Boal, integrating the roles of actor and spectator into “spect-actors.”  This format envisions alternate political and social realities and engages participants in political and social action via the arts.  Liliana and Yara explored with participants various exercises common to Theatre of the Oppressed, allowing participants to select real-life circumstances, transform the situations, and build ideal images of a better possible world. 
Striking poses representing oppressive situations that violate rights expressed in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, participants mirrored partners’ poses, worked in groups to clarify the departures from human rights, and re-interpreted the problems represented.  Through discussion and exercises in groups, actor-participants re-worked their poses and scenes, portraying the possible world free of violence and abuse. 
Students in the youth theatre workshop Pintar Teatraliz(ando)” worked with adult participants to clarify and enrich scenes.  Later in the day, donning masks they had created, these youthful actors presented scenes they wrote and revised, transforming human rights abuses to scenes of respect, dignity, and cooperation.  Theatre of the Oppressed exercises, such as striking poses and having a partner mirror the pose, having groups mirror each other’s portrayals, and using ideas from the group to alter scenes’ outcomes are effective tools for any classroom or group.  (See links below.)

Casa Pueblo: Adjuntas, Puerto Rico: Sustainable Development, Ecopedagogy, and Peace in Context
During the two-hour ride to Adjuntas, Puerto Rican IIPE members pointed out landmarks of ongoing struggles on the island, including a wind-farm that does not produce wind, a Monsanto farm intruding on local farmers, and the Jíbaro monument to people of the mountains.  Arriving at Casa Pueblo, we revived ourselves with artisan shade-grown coffee, one of the sustainable initiatives of this ecologically conscious organization started in 1980 as a cultural center.  Our hosts, founder Alexis Massol González along with his family and staff, detailed the history of Casa Pueblo, starting with their efforts to stop open-pit copper mining in the area in the 1980s.  The story is a textbook case of nonviolent social action for human rights that should be in textbooks!
Planning the first big demonstration was frustrating: after weeks of publicizing and organizing, only one person showed up.  Shortly thereafter, 800 students formed anti-mine slogans that were photographed from above by journalists in helicopters.  By the end of the successful campaign that included cultural groups, students, environmentalists, scientists, and religious groups, 10,000 people turned out to celebrate.  Instead of falling apart or forming factions as many movements do, this activist community evolved from protest to proposal, petitioning for Bosque del Pueblo, a 748-acre forest preserve that was granted in 1996.  
 The struggle was not over, however.  Government leaders proposed a gas pipeline that would destroy the pristine mountain preserve.  Again the Casa Pueblo community mobilized to defeat the ill-conceived pipeline, opposed by over two-thirds of Puerto Rico’s population but pushed forward by the governor.  Protesters learned that contracts had been awarded to friends of the governor who lacked pipeline-building experience.  Scientists in the movement (among them sons of Massol González) demonstrated that copper deposits would form corrosives oxides; the pipeline was also in an active seismic zone, making it unstable ecologically.  The pipeline was defeated.

Using a process of governing themselves as equals and striving for consensus, Casa Pueblo activists have created a network that includes a community school with art and a symphony orchestra.  To provide energy independence, solar panels were installed.  The butterfly garden thrives.  In August 2013, Bosque Escuela (Forest School) will be inaugurated.  “People are dominated when made dependent,” Massol González says, and Casa Pueblo uses initiatives such as coffee sales, sales of local artisans’ work, and radio station WOQT (1020 AM), to fund programs.  The community itself is in charge of managing the government preserve.  For his work with his community to protect the environment and create ecologically sustainable cultural, educational ecological and economic projects, Alexis Massol González was awarded the Goldman Environmental Prize in 2002.  Students should know the story of Casa Pueblo.  (See links below.)
 

Kanti Mendez Aramburu (Puerto Rico): Nuestra Escuela (Our School): An Alternate Model to Violence
Imagine a school whose core mission is love.  Imagine a school that is family. Imagine a school where there are no grades, where sports are intense but not overly competitive, where students are motivated to learn.  Imagine a school in which students who had been abandoned by the school system find success and graduate, having created their own personally compelling curricula.  Such a school exists: Nuestra Escuela (Our School).  Inspired by the vision of founder Justo Méndez Arámburu, Nuestra Escuela is an alternative school founded in 2000, whose students are referred by the education department, families, or by request of the students themselves.  Acknowledging that education is a basic human right, Kanti Mendez Aramburu explained how Nuestra Escuela invests human, social, and cultural capital to “develop social responsibility and citizenship,” developing attitudes among students that inspire them to reject violence and build their communities on a basis of love and respect.
Students who come to Nuestra Escuela have been abandoned and damaged by the system.  Pillars of love, family, nation, freedom and a service model surround these youth in a cocoon of safety and healing.  Staff members recognize students’ life experiences, often lived in conditions of violence and dysfunction.  Incoming students participate in a three-day retreat to help them process their life experiences and goals for their futures.  With the help of teacher guides, students create a personalized education asking questions like, “Who am I?  What do I want to do?  How to do it?” 
The school’s 98% retention rate is testament to the efficacy of the school’s emphasis on individualized education that is personal and relevant, enabling students to “recover the capacity to dream and turn dreams into reality.”  Service and practical projects include gardens, fisheries, and business initiatives.  Recognized as an Exemplary Program by the Department of Education of Puerto Rico, it is also deemed a “Best Practice Project” by the U.S. Department of Education.   Practicing democratic education, Nuestra Escuela’s program enriches the emotional, physical, and mental well-being of its students in Caguas, Loiza, Vieques, and Culebra, Puerto Rico.  Nuestra Escuela shows that alternative education can be effective with diverse learners from a variety of socio-economic settings.  Ask teaches, staff, students, and families what is at the core of Nuestra Escuela’s success?  Love.  Students and teachers should know about Nuestra Escuela.  (See links below.)

Esperanza (Hope): Transformative optimism for a peaceful future

Realizing the education system is too often instrumental in preparing compliant, silent masses, Paulo Freire urged an education model that allows students to construct and create relevant, empowering knowledge in cooperation with teachers and peers willing to create democratic and dynamic spaces for these efforts to take place.  The IIPE community created such spaces. 

This account mentions only four initiatives.  So much more work was shared that upholds human rights and build peace using diverse approaches.  There are the fourth graders taking action against the death penalty in Puerto Rico.  There is the school for refugees in Burundi.  There is the cosmetology school economic cooperative in Puerto Rico.  There are student leaders running school wide human-rights initiatives in the U.S., from Newtown Square, PA to Washington, D.C. to Berkeley, CA.  There is the Kinokuni Children’s village, a democratic eco-school in Japan.  There is Growing Green, an educational model for children with autism and other behavioral differences.  There are the conflict resolution initiatives in Sri Lanka.  There is the upcoming documentary Singers in the Band, helping us connect modern-day sex trafficking with the U.S. military.  Countless other initiatives deserve mention.  Many days ended in reflection groups in which we shared our optimism based on the case studies about which we had learned and the educational activities we had created and analyzed together. 


Freire emphasizes the importance of hope combined with critical understanding of realities. Thus, Freierean scholar Cesar Rossatto calls for us to embrace transformative optimism: awareness of our potential for being effective actors in collective and critical efforts for transformation and change (Bajaj, 2008).  The IIPE theme pointed participants “towards a possible world free from violence.”  Having shared stories, employed methodologies, and developed initiatives, participants have returned to their far-flung homes empowered to build this possible world.  With your students and colleagues, use the links below to investigate—and build—the world that is possible. 

-- Susan Gelber Cannon, July 2013

LINKS: 

References:
Bajaj, M. (2008). Introduction. In M. Bajaj (Ed.), Encyclopedia of peace education (pp. 1-11). Charlotte, NC: Information Age Publishing.
Freire, P. (2000). Pedagogy of the oppressed (30th anniversary ed.). New York, NY: Continuum International. (Original work published 1970)
Kincheloe, J., & Weil, D. (Eds.). (2004). Critical thinking and learning: An encyclopedia for parents and teachers. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.
Noddings, N. (2007). Critical lessons: What our schools should teach. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
Reardon, B. & Nordland, E., (Eds.). (1994) Learning peace: The promise of ecological and cooperative education. New York, NY: State University of New York Press.
Reardon, B., Cabezudo, A., & Teachers College, Columbia University Peace Education Team. (2002). Learning to abolish war: Teaching toward a culture of peace: Vol. 1. Rationales for and approaches to peace education. Retrieved September 5, 2010, from http://www.haguepeace.org/?index.php?action=resources
Semali, L. (2004). Indigenous ways of knowing and critical thinking. In J. Kincheloe & D. Weil (Eds.), Critical thinking and learning: An encyclopedia for parents and teachers (pp. 167-171). Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.

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