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Participatory Approach

Participatory Approach. Background In 1960s, Paulo Freire developed a literacy program for peasants in Brazil. He started the dialogues about problems

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Page 1: Participatory Approach. Background In 1960s, Paulo Freire developed a literacy program for peasants in Brazil. He started the dialogues about problems

Participatory Approach

Page 2: Participatory Approach. Background In 1960s, Paulo Freire developed a literacy program for peasants in Brazil. He started the dialogues about problems

Background

In 1960s, Paulo Freire developed a literacy program for peasants in Brazil.

He started the dialogues about problems in their lives.

The dialogues became the basis for literacy development.

Page 3: Participatory Approach. Background In 1960s, Paulo Freire developed a literacy program for peasants in Brazil. He started the dialogues about problems

Background (cont.)

Paulo Freire:

“education is meaningful to the extent that it engages learners in reflecting on their relationship to the world they live in and provides them with a means to shape their world.”

Page 4: Participatory Approach. Background In 1960s, Paulo Freire developed a literacy program for peasants in Brazil. He started the dialogues about problems

Participatory Approach vs. Content-based Approach

Widely discussed in 1980’s. Similar to content-based approach:

-begins with content that is meaningful to the Ss.

Different with the nature of the content. Content that is based on issues of concern to Ss.

Page 5: Participatory Approach. Background In 1960s, Paulo Freire developed a literacy program for peasants in Brazil. He started the dialogues about problems

Goal

Help Ss to understand the social, historical, cultural forces that affects their lives.

Help empower Ss to take action and make decision to gain control over their lives.

Page 6: Participatory Approach. Background In 1960s, Paulo Freire developed a literacy program for peasants in Brazil. He started the dialogues about problems

Procedures

Ss discuss the problem in their lives. T listens and takes notes. T leads questions with visual aids to g

et Ss to relate the problem to their experience.

T proposes the question in an attempt to contextualise the problem.

Page 7: Participatory Approach. Background In 1960s, Paulo Freire developed a literacy program for peasants in Brazil. He started the dialogues about problems

Procedures (cont.)

T records Ss’ answers. Ss writes down what they said and

reread it, edit it and revise.

Page 8: Participatory Approach. Background In 1960s, Paulo Freire developed a literacy program for peasants in Brazil. He started the dialogues about problems

Conclusion

Language focus is not established in advance.

It follows from content and emerges from ongoing, collaborative investigations in Ss’ lives.

Page 9: Participatory Approach. Background In 1960s, Paulo Freire developed a literacy program for peasants in Brazil. He started the dialogues about problems

Conclusion (cont.)

Auerbach (1992)

“ Real communication, accompanied by appropriate feedback that subordinates form to the elaboration of meaning, is key for language learning.”