Paulo Freire Children Quotations
Paulo Freire Quotes about:
Children Quotes from:
- All Children Quotes
- Maria Montessori
- Bible Bible
- Pope Francis
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
- Michael Jackson
- Rajneesh
- Bill Cosby
- George W Bush
- Marianne Williamson
- Erma Bombeck
- George Bernard Shaw
- Hillary Clinton
- Marian Wright Edelman
- Fred Rogers
- Mother Teresa
- C S Lewis
- Jodi Picoult
- Maurice Sendak
- Neil Gaiman
- Charles Spurgeon
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Dream Quotes
Educators need to know what happens in the world of the children with whom they work. They need to know the universe of their dreams, the language with which they skillfully defend themselves from the aggressiveness of their world, what they know independently of the school, and how they know it.
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Real Quotes
Finally, it is important to make it clear that imagination is not an exercise for those detached from reality, those who live in the air. On the contrary, when we imagine something, we do it necessarily conditioned by a lack in our concrete reality. When children imagine free and happy schools, it is because their real schools deny them freedom and happiness.
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Self Quotes
As one might expect, authoritarianism will at times cause children and students to adopt rebellious positions, defiant of any limit, discipline, or authority. But it will also lead to apathy, excessive obedience, uncritical conformity, lack of resistance against authoritarian discourse, self-abnegation, and fear of freedom.
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Philosophy Quotes
The parent-child relationship in the home usually reflects the objective cultural conditions of the surrounding social structure. If the conditions which penetrate the home are authoritarian, rigid, and dominating, the home will increase the climate of oppression. As these authoritarian relations between parents and children intensify, children in their infancy increasingly internalize the paternal authority.
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Society Quotes
I have never said, as is sometimes believed, or even suggested that lower-class children should not learn the so-called educated norm of the Portuguese language of Brazil. What I have said is that the problems of language always involve ideological questions and, along with them, questions of power.