Education is suffering from narration sickness.The modern education system has extensively adopted the "banking concept" of education. The subject (teacher) narrates, and the objects (students) listen. The reality and context of the material being taught are narrated in a way that renders them lifeless and petrified.
In the banking concept of education, teachers give and students receive. It is akin to people depositing money in a bank, with the bank merely keeping it. This concept is called "banking" because of this analogy. In this framework, the teacher fills the students with the content of his narration. The students record, memorize, and repeat this content without realizing or questioning its true significance.
What’s the problem with this?Narration leads students to become containers, mechanically memorizing what’s narrated. What is worse than the narration itself is what it produces:
The more they memorize, the better students they are.
This creates a flawed outcome.
Just because they have memorized everything does not mean they have learned it.In this concept, teachers become depositors, and students become depositories. The concept fundamentally misunderstands education and knowledge as processes of inquiry. It alienates students from teachers. Teachers assume that students know nothing, preventing them from discovering that students can also educate them.
Education must begin with the solution to the teacher-student contradiction.
Here, libertarian education is attractive because it reconciles the sides of the contradiction so that both are simultaneously teachers and students. The banking concept does not offer this solution. Instead, it perpetuates this contradiction: the teacher teaches, and the students are taught. The concept implies that an individual is a spectator, not a re-creator.
Education is the practice of freedom; it is not the practice of domination or possession.
You do not just keep it once you have it; you apply it and stretch it as much as you want. If you simply keep it in your head and don’t make use of it or question it until someone tells you to do so, you are no different from a robot. Therefore, it can be implied that in the banking concept of education, teachers do not make you human.
No one can be authentically human while preventing others from being so.