Remember that values questions have a “you” in them. The goal is to involve people in relating what they see on the screen to their own lives, not to analyze the filmmaker’s technique or to engage in intellectual criticism. Allow the conversation to flow along a values and feelings track.
Ralph Beliveau
Henry
I had worked in media
I had worked in media production in Chicago and LA, and ended up teaching radio and television at a high school on the border of the South-west side of Chicago. I was trying to understand how to take my popular culture interests and combine them with my teaching and intellectual curiosity (searching for what Henry jenkins would later call the Acafan).
I was in the Borders in Oakbrook, IL (remember when they were real bookstores with university press and radical books?). I picked up a copy of Popular Culture, Schooling, and Everyday Life which was edited by Henry Giroux & Roger Simon. The authors in this collection demonstrated how one could link teaching, learning, media, and serious cultural critique. Giroux stood out because of his intellectual rigor, but also because of his passion for education as a home for social justice.
The students I had been working with wre trying to see the connection between their passions and their life directions. As I read more of Giroux's writing I saw how popular culture and schooling were where intersectional identities were forming, and this would accelerate on a massive scale as the following years saw the digital network become the place where that would happen. Giroux, heavily influenced by Herbert Marcuse and Paolo Freire, taught me where and how to look to find a place where critical thinking met popular culture and took seriously the responsibility for using medial literacy to achieve social justice in all of its identity formations.
John
Dewey is a bridge between so
Dewey is a bridge between so many fundamental ideas in the development of American thinking, from education to philosophy to critical thinking.