All Thinkers

Paulo Freire

Paulo Freire (1921–1997) was a Brazilian educator and thinker. He grew up during a time of great poverty and saw how many poor people could not read or write. He believed that education was not just about learning facts — it was about understanding your world and changing it. His most famous book, Pedagogy of the Oppressed, has been read by teachers and activists all over the world.

Origin
Brazil, Latin America
Lifespan
1921–1997
Era
20th century
Subjects
Education Philosophy Politics Sociology Literacy Ethics
Why They Matter

Freire asked a simple but powerful question: who is education for? He argued that most schools teach students to be quiet and to accept what they are told — like empty containers that a teacher fills with information. He called this the banking model of education. He believed instead that students should think critically, ask questions, and use education to improve their own lives and communities. His ideas are especially important for teachers working with communities that have been treated unfairly or left behind.

Key Ideas
1
The banking model of education
Freire said that many schools treat students like empty bank accounts. The teacher deposits information and the student stores it. The student does not question, discuss, or create — they just receive and repeat. Freire thought this was wrong because it stopped students from thinking for themselves.
2
Reading the word and the world
Freire believed that learning to read was not just about words on a page. It was about understanding the world around you — why things are the way they are, who has power, and what could be different. He said we should read the word and the world at the same time.
Key Quotations
"Education either functions as an instrument to bring about conformity or it becomes the practice of freedom."
— Pedagogy of the Oppressed, 1968
Freire is saying that education always has a purpose. Either it teaches people to accept things as they are — to be quiet and obedient — or it helps people think freely and work for change. There is no neutral education. Every classroom makes a choice, even when the teacher does not realise it.
"The teacher is no longer merely the one who teaches, but one who is himself taught in dialogue with the students."
— Pedagogy of the Oppressed, 1968
Freire believed that real teaching goes in both directions. A teacher who is truly open learns from their students — from their experience, their questions, and their perspectives. This is not a weakness in the teacher. It is the sign of a genuine educator.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Education / Classroom discussion When asking students what they think education is for
How to introduce
Ask students: why do you come to school? What is school trying to do for you? After discussion, introduce Freire's idea: some people think school is about putting information into students' heads — like filling a container. Freire disagreed. He thought school should help students understand their world and change it. Ask: which idea matches your experience of school? Which would you prefer?
Critical Literacy When introducing the idea that reading is about more than words
How to introduce
Introduce Freire's phrase: reading the word and the world. Explain that he believed learning to read was not just about letters and sounds — it was about understanding why things in your community are the way they are. Ask: what does reading the world mean to you? What do you see in your community that you want to understand better?
Further Reading

The best starting point is a short video or summary of Freire's main idea — the banking model of education. Many free summaries are available online. The documentary about Freire's life, Paulo Freire: An Incredible Conversation (available on YouTube), gives an accessible introduction to his life and ideas in his own words.

Key Ideas
1
The problem-posing model
As an alternative to the banking model, Freire proposed problem-posing education. In this approach, teachers and students learn together. The teacher is not the only one with knowledge — students bring their own experience and understanding. Together they examine real problems from their own lives and communities. This makes learning relevant, active, and connected to real change.
2
Conscientisation
Freire used the Portuguese word conscientização — often translated as conscientisation or critical consciousness. This means developing the ability to see the social, political, and economic forces that shape your life. It is not enough to know that you are poor or treated unfairly — you need to understand why, and to believe that change is possible. Freire saw this awakening as the first step towards freedom.
3
The oppressor and the oppressed
Freire wrote about two groups: the oppressed — people who are treated unfairly, kept poor, or denied power — and the oppressors — those who hold power over others, often without realising the harm they cause. He argued that the oppressed must free themselves through education and critical thinking. But he also believed that the oppressors could not be truly free while they were dominating others — genuine liberation had to include everyone.
4
Dialogue as the foundation of education
For Freire, genuine education only happens through dialogue — real conversation between teacher and student where both speak and both listen. Dialogue requires humility: the teacher must not think they know everything, and must genuinely respect the experience and knowledge that students bring. Without dialogue, Freire argued, there is no real teaching — only transmission.
Key Quotations
"Washing one's hands of the conflict between the powerful and the powerless means to side with the powerful, not to be neutral."
— Pedagogy of the Indignant, 2004
Freire argued that there is no neutral position when injustice exists. If you choose not to act or not to speak, you are effectively supporting the way things are — which usually means supporting those who already have power. This idea is challenging for teachers who believe they should stay out of politics. For Freire, teaching itself is always a political act.
"Leaders who do not act dialogically, but insist on imposing their decisions, do not organize the people — they manipulate them."
— Pedagogy of the Oppressed, 1968
Freire applied his ideas about dialogue beyond the classroom to political leadership. A leader who tells people what to think and do — even with good intentions — is not truly serving them. Real leadership, like real teaching, requires listening, respecting, and working with people rather than acting on them.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Philosophy / Ethics When discussing fairness, power, and who benefits from the way things are
How to introduce
Present Freire's question: who does education serve? Whose interests does it support? Introduce the idea that education can either help people accept their situation or help them question and change it. Ask: can you think of examples of each type of education? Which type do you think you are receiving? Is that a choice that was made — and by whom?
History / Social Studies When studying colonialism, poverty, or social inequality
How to introduce
Introduce Freire's concept of conscientisation — developing the ability to see why your situation is the way it is, not just accepting it as natural or inevitable. Connect to the historical context students are studying: how did colonialism shape what counted as knowledge and who got to be educated? What did Freire mean when he said that the oppressed must name their world before they can change it?
Metacognition / Learning to learn When asking students to reflect on how they learn and what learning is for
How to introduce
Connect Freire's problem-posing model to metacognition: both ask students to be active in their own learning rather than passive recipients. Ask: do you feel like an active participant in your own education, or more like a container being filled? What would need to change for you to feel more active? What could you do differently yourself?
Further Reading

Pedagogy of the Oppressed (1968) is the core text — Chapters 1 and 2 are most directly relevant to classroom teaching and are manageable for strong secondary students. A more accessible entry point is bell hooks, Teaching to Transgress (1994), which applies Freire's ideas to real classroom practice and addresses some of his limitations. Richard Shaull's foreword to Pedagogy of the Oppressed is one of the clearest short introductions to why Freire matters.

Key Ideas
1
Praxis — the link between reflection and action
Freire used the concept of praxis to describe the essential link between thinking and doing. Reflection without action is empty — you think about the world but never try to change it. Action without reflection is blind — you act without understanding why or what you are working towards. True education, for Freire, produces praxis: people who think carefully and then act to change their world, then reflect again on what happened.
2
Freire and literacy programmes
Freire did not only write theory — he put his ideas into practice. In the 1960s he developed literacy programmes for poor communities in northeast Brazil, teaching adults to read and write in 40 days by connecting reading to their own real-life experience. His success led the Brazilian government, which feared the political implications of a literate poor population, to exile him from the country. He spent 16 years in exile, working in Chile, the United States, and Geneva, before returning to Brazil in 1980.
3
Critiques of Freire
Freire's work has been criticised from several directions. Some argue that his binary of oppressor and oppressed is too simple — real social situations involve many overlapping power relationships. Some feminist scholars argued that Freire did not sufficiently apply his ideas about liberation to gender inequality — that his own writing reproduced the male-centred assumptions he claimed to critique. Others argue that problem-posing education, while inspiring, is difficult to implement systematically in large, under-resourced school systems. Engaging with these critiques makes Freire's ideas stronger, not weaker.
Key Quotations
"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."
— Pedagogy of the Oppressed, 1968
This quotation captures Freire's view of knowledge as something that is always being made — not a fixed set of facts to be passed on, but something that humans create together through questioning and dialogue. Knowledge is not a thing to be received but a process to be lived. This has deep implications for how classrooms should work and what counts as valid knowledge.
"I am not hopeful out of stubbornness, but out of an existential, concrete imperative."
— Pedagogy of Hope, 1992
In his later work, Freire wrote extensively about hope — not as a comfortable feeling but as a necessity for human action. Without hope that things can be different, people stop trying to change them. Hope, for Freire, is not naive — it is the condition that makes struggle possible. This is especially relevant in contexts where injustice feels permanent or overwhelming.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Politics / Civic Education When discussing leadership, democracy, and the relationship between citizens and the state
How to introduce
Introduce Freire's argument that there is no neutral position in the face of injustice. Discuss his claim that choosing not to act is itself a political choice — it supports the existing situation. Ask: do you agree that neutrality is impossible? Can you think of situations where staying silent effectively supports one side? What does this mean for citizens in a democracy?
Teacher education / Professional development When teachers are reflecting on their own practice and relationship with students
How to introduce
Invite teachers to examine their own practice through Freire's lens: whose knowledge is valued in your classroom? Whose experience is treated as relevant? Do you use dialogue — genuine two-way exchange — or do you primarily transmit? This is not a judgement but an invitation to reflect. Freire was not against teaching — he was against teaching that silences students and treats their experience as irrelevant.
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Freire was against teachers and thought students should decide everything.

What to teach instead

Freire was not against teachers — he was against a particular style of teaching that treats students as passive. He believed teachers play a vital role but that the role is one of dialogue, not transmission. The teacher brings knowledge and so does the student — both are learners. Freire valued expertise and rigour. He simply insisted that expertise must be shared in a spirit of respect and genuine curiosity about what students already know.

Common misconception

Freire's ideas are only relevant to poor or oppressed communities.

What to teach instead

Freire developed his ideas in the context of poverty and illiteracy in Brazil, but his core arguments apply wherever education is used to produce compliance rather than critical thinking. His question — who is education for? — is relevant in every classroom, rich or poor. Some of the most important applications of his work have been in wealthy countries where students are expected to absorb and reproduce information without questioning whose knowledge it is or why it is valued.

Common misconception

The banking model is easy to identify and avoid.

What to teach instead

Most teachers who use the banking model do not know they are doing it. It is embedded in many taken-for-granted classroom practices: the teacher at the front, the student as listener, assessment that rewards accurate reproduction of what was taught. Even teachers who believe in dialogue can fall into banking patterns under pressure of curriculum and examinations. Freire's point is not that banking is something only bad teachers do — it is a structural feature of many educational systems that good teachers must actively resist.

Common misconception

Freire thought that all knowledge from outside the community should be rejected.

What to teach instead

Freire did not reject external knowledge — he rejected the idea that external knowledge is the only valid knowledge. He believed that students' own experience, community wisdom, and local knowledge are genuine forms of knowing that deserve a place in education alongside formal academic knowledge. The goal is not to replace one with the other but to bring them into genuine dialogue.

Intellectual Connections
Influenced By
Karl Marx
Freire drew on Marx's analysis of how economic systems produce inequality and how dominant groups maintain their power. His concepts of oppressor and oppressed reflect Marxist class analysis, though Freire applied them specifically to education and consciousness rather than economics alone.
Influenced By
Antonio Gramsci
Gramsci's concept of hegemony — the way dominant groups maintain power by making their worldview seem like common sense — deeply influenced Freire's thinking about how oppression is maintained not just by force but by shaping what people believe is natural and inevitable.
Influenced By
Frantz Fanon
Fanon's analysis of the psychological effects of colonialism on colonised people influenced Freire's understanding of how the oppressed can internalise the values of their oppressors — coming to see themselves as inferior and their own knowledge as worthless. Freire dedicated Pedagogy of the Oppressed partly to Fanon.
Influenced By
John Dewey
Dewey's progressive education movement — which argued that education should be connected to real life and that students learn best by doing and experiencing — is an important forerunner of Freire's problem-posing approach, though Freire gave Dewey's ideas a much more explicitly political dimension.
Influenced
bell hooks
The American educator and writer bell hooks built directly on Freire's work, particularly his ideas about dialogue and the importance of students' experience. She also offered an important feminist critique — arguing that Freire did not sufficiently address gender as a dimension of oppression — while remaining deeply indebted to his framework.
Influenced
Henry Giroux
Giroux developed Freire's ideas into a broader theory of critical pedagogy — the use of education as a tool for democratic participation and social justice. His work brought Freire's ideas into mainstream educational debate in the English-speaking world.
Further Reading

The complete Pedagogy of the Oppressed is essential. Pedagogy of Hope (1992) — Freire's later reflection on his earlier work — is equally important and more personal.

For critical engagement

Ira Shor (ed.), Freire for the Classroom (1987) shows how teachers have applied and adapted his ideas in practice.

For feminist critique

Carmen Luke and Jennifer Gore (eds.), Feminisms and Critical Pedagogy (1992).

For postcolonial engagement with Freire

Antonia Darder, Reinventing Paulo Freire (2002). The Paulo Freire Institute maintains archives and resources at paulofreire.org.