Reflections and Interpretations: – the Freedom Writers’ teaching methodology
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Torbjørn Ydegaard (Ed.)
Torbjørn Ydegaard is a Freedom Writer Teacher and teaching coming teachers at University College South-Denmark.
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Reflections and Interpretations - Torbjørn Ydegaard (Ed.)
Writers
Torbjørn Ydegaard
Foreword
For a long time I have considered to produce a book on The Freedom Writer–methods as I have felt a professional need for texts explaining, not only how the tools are being used, but also why they work so convincingly well. I was looking not for guidelines, but for explanations based on theory. Within some few hours, walking my dog in the forest, I realized the book should be an anthology written by the help of my fellow Freedom Writer Teachers – who else could do it as an insider job? I therefore wrote the following text on our Facebook-page. Now you are holding the result in your hands!
I know Erin is not too keen to talk about the theories behind the Freedom Writers methods, and as long as the methods give the desired results the pragmatism of ‘practice’ is of course well worth focusing on. However, as a college-teacher I often feel the need to be able to relate the practice to theories. Students writing about the methods in examination papers will be asked to refer them to theories – this is the conditions of ‘academia’, like it or not!
Therefore, I need a book containing reflections and interpretations on the Freedom Writers teaching methodology!
I cannot write such a book on my own. I need the help of my fellow Freedom Writer Teachers. If anyone of you would like to contribute to an anthology, it would be great. You can write a purely theoretical paper, or you can write with reference to your own practical experiences. I will write reflections based on readings of Hannah Arendt and Karl Popper – both philosophers of Jewish descent, with backgrounds in the German language-area and both had to flee the Nazi-regime. In addition, both with strong opinions on learning and teaching! There will be plenty of room for other perspectives, both the broad and well known and the more narrow views!
Conditions:
The target-groups will be primarily students of teaching on bachelor or diploma levels
All texts will be in English
There are no limits on the length of texts – short ones as well as long ones are welcome
Deadline will be March 1. The book will then be presented at #5515
The book will be published as print-on-demand, with an ISBN-number
The book will be available on Amazon – and maybe other platforms
All royalties from the book will be donated to The Freedom Writers Foundation
The texts in this book are short and long, reflecting practical matters, giving specific suggestions, going into depth with theories of learning and teaching. But they are all written with the sole concern to bring education to those in need – and whom among us can honestly say they are not in need?
All texts are arranged in alphabetic order due to the author’s surname.
Torbjørn Ydegaard
Denmark, March 2015
Erin Gruwell
To right a wrong with words, not weapons
Twenty years ago, when I walked into Room 203 at Woodrow Wilson High School in Long Beach, California, I had no idea that those same struggling students who sat before me would become the inspiration for an educational movement. A movement that transcended their simple classroom and their chaotic community to help validate vulnerable learners in other classrooms and other communities reach similar success.
I once described my students—the Freedom Writers—as colorful as a box of crayons…and as this educational journey has spread to other countries and continents, the crayons have multiplied and the colors have intensified. Now, other shades share their story and a variety of hues paint personal pictures. While the stories and pictures may be slightly different based on community, culture or class, there is a common thread throughout – a thread of hope that celebrates change and that empowers the human spirit to soar.
Since my initial lessons to write a wrong with words, not weapons, the Freedom Writers have turned their literary lessons into a legacy. One of the catalysts for their change was when Miep Gies, the simple secretary who helped hide Anne Frank in the attic, shared the importance of turning on a small light in a dark room.
Her moving metaphor motivated my students to become torchbearers. And although the Freedom Writers may have started this odyssey as struggling students, through time, they have transformed into talented teachers who help turn the darkness into light. Luckily, Miep Gies ignited their passion, and now, the Freedom Writers pass the torch to others. Each flame that they light becomes a Freedom Writer Teacher
and collectively, their fire burns brightly.
The Freedom Writers and I wanted to share the magic we experienced during our educational journey, and to do so, The Freedom Writers Diary
became a testament to our time in Room 203 and beyond. Once our book made its way into the hands of teachers and students alike, we decided it was time to try and capture lightening in a bottle (or better yet, a book) and publish a teacher’s guide that would showcase strategies and the creative curriculum that defined my pedagogical process. And thus, the Freedom Writer Teacher movement was born. We are now 400 strong. And growing. The Freedom Writer Teachers geographical reach spans states in America, provinces in Canada, and over a dozen countries worldwide, but our purpose is palpable— to give a voice to the voiceless.
In the spirit of giving a voice to the voiceless, we discovered that teachers’ voices need to be heard too because they are story tellers themselves. To celebrate their unique story, along with those they serve, we invite these dynamic educators to Long Beach to spend a week with the original Freedom Writers and me to participate in an intensive, professional development training designed to improve their professional practice. While the Freedom Writer Teachers are with us, each of them get a speak-peak at the actual ingredients used to create our secret sauce.
Our intention is that after enculturation in the Freedom Writers ethos and methodology, each of the Freedom Writer Teachers will return to their own educational environment with a purpose. Upon return, our goal is for them to take the recipe for the secret sauce
and make it their own. We encourage Freedom Writer Teachers to adapt, tweak and personalize the lesson plans from Room 203 into their own setting, for their own students. May they add a personal touch or a modern day twist, may they do it better than we did, and may they continue to share their success.
Thus, the success of the Freedom Writer Teachers is that they collaborate, commiserate and celebrate with one another. Freedom Writer Teachers are bold thinkers, they take risks and they solve problems. They are resilient in the face of bureaucracy, they are relevant when challenged with unrealistic expectations, and they fight to create a healthy sense of self. And not only do they revel in relationships, but they foster familial bonds. Like my father once told me, they too are blessed with a burden
—and that burden is to reach their brethren, to overcome obstacles, to tell their tale, and to dare to dream.
While using the Freedom Writers curriculum in their respective classrooms, eight passionate educators decided to showcase the pedagogical and instructional practices that they use to engage, enlighten and empower. The eight collaborators of this book may speak different languages, practice different customs, and teach different students, but they each share a universal belief—that the art of teaching is bigger than all of us. These noble teachers help inspire many voices, be it that of a troubled teen, an aspiring college student, or even a soldier on the heels of healing. I am proud of how this compelling compilation weaves best practices together, gives credibility to an educational movement, and encourages the teacher in each of us. Whether you stand at a pulpit, a podium or in front of a room full of pupils, may you, like these phenomenal Freedom Writer Teachers, teach one to teach another!
Erin Gruwell
Doug Ball
Freedom Writers Pedagogy: Literacy, Hip-Hop & Hope
For the first time I heard a teacher take a question seriously.
– Freedom Writers Diary, #40
Apologia
Given their chances of dropping out or being gunned down in the streets what happened to the students in room 203, Wilson High, was an educational miracle. A white, middle-class teacher from a gated community discovered in the weltanschauung of her street-smart students their terms
for becoming school-smart. The Freedom Writers Diary (1997) and The Freedom Writers Diary Teacher’s Guide (2007) reveal their pedagogy of hip-hop and hope, whereby teacher became renegade, gangstas became grad students. In Part I of this paper I discuss why Freedom Writer pedagogy (FWP) is a relevant model for teacher education acquainting pre-service teachers with the critical issues and choices they will face in today’s diverse classrooms, especially when it comes to equal education opportunity for students put at risk by poverty and despair; by institutionalized racism and oppression. Academics may dismiss FWP as cultish California cumbaya because it lacks roots in theory and researched-based practices; however, I connect its well documented, undeniably wholesome outcomes to Freire’s theory of critical pedagogy as well as to academic studies about the needs of at-risk students (e.g., Murray & Naranjo, 2011). In Part II of this paper I discuss in particular how a curriculum of relevant literacy awakened the Freedom Writers’ critical questions, critical hope, and conscientização, which Freire, the Brazilian liberation theologian, considered requisite for emancipatory education.
Part I
Hands up, don’t shoot…
In 1989 Aarons predicted the greatest challenge facing educators in the next 20 years will be helping the underclass of poor students. Now in 2015 with nearly 25% of children in the USA living in poverty¹, the recalcitrant achievement gap is still the pachyderm in the classroom. In too many urban schools dropout rates² are as high as 40% and when 98% of students in these schools are Latinos and/or African Americans (often the case), the equal education victory of Brown v. Board has become perversely distorted.
Shorris (1998) described the anomie of oppressive forces that surround the poor, including racism and police brutality, creating a