Penn State

Consortium forSocial Movements and Education
Research and Practice

A Comparative Study of Youth and Adult Education in Three Social Movement Contexts

A Comparative Study of Youth and Adult Education in Three Social Movement Contexts

Mai Atta, Kamil M. Gerónimo-López, Javier Campos-Martínez, John D. Holst, María Alicia Vetter
2021
2021

Abstract

This article presents the results of a comparative study of learning and education in contemporary student movements in Chile, Egypt, and Puerto Rico, which arose as responses to neoliberal economic grievances. The study uses an andragogical lens to analyse these movements as examples of collective self-directed pedagogical practice by and within social movements. Drawing on Santos’ (2006) sociologies of absence and “emergence”, the study utilizes autoethnographic and secondary data analysis to voice social movement-based learning alternatives. We argue that, despite the different contexts of each movement, they still share many commonalities in organizing and educating in response to global neoliberalism.

Article
Our Research

Abstract

This article presents the results of a comparative study of learning and education in contemporary student movements in Chile, Egypt, and Puerto Rico, which arose as responses to neoliberal economic grievances. The study uses an andragogical lens to analyse these movements as examples of collective self-directed pedagogical practice by and within social movements. Drawing on Santos’ (2006) sociologies of absence and “emergence”, the study utilizes autoethnographic and secondary data analysis to voice social movement-based learning alternatives. We argue that, despite the different contexts of each movement, they still share many commonalities in organizing and educating in response to global neoliberalism.

Social Movements

Anti-Capitalist, College student movements, Student Activism

Keywords

Africa, Class, Democracy, Globalization, Higher Education, Informal Learning, Knowledge Production, Latin America, Pedagogy

Theme

Popular Education; Adult Education; and Social Movement Learning, Social Movements Within; Through; and for Public Education

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