Description
A Question from a Classroom
We Shared with a War-Refugee Student
Questioning the Structure of School Education!
We Shared with a War-Refugee Student
Questioning the Structure of School Education!
This brief sentence was not simply a student’s assignment question.
It was a question about whether the student could belong in this classroom—within language, culture, and the invisible standards that shaped them.
This book begins with an encounter with a war-refugee student in a Canadian high school classroom: the barriers of language, the formality of fairness, and the repeated silences sustained by the illusion that we are “helping.”
The author comes to see those silences not as a personal problem, but as a structural one.
Choosing patience over speaking, reflecting on systems rather than individual goodwill, and eventually creating a small system called Language Club—these processes lead to a fundamental question: What is education?
This book does not present answers. Instead, it asks:
For whom has the classroom we take for granted been designed?
And quietly, it says it will not leave the questions alone.
It was a question about whether the student could belong in this classroom—within language, culture, and the invisible standards that shaped them.
This book begins with an encounter with a war-refugee student in a Canadian high school classroom: the barriers of language, the formality of fairness, and the repeated silences sustained by the illusion that we are “helping.”
The author comes to see those silences not as a personal problem, but as a structural one.
Choosing patience over speaking, reflecting on systems rather than individual goodwill, and eventually creating a small system called Language Club—these processes lead to a fundamental question: What is education?
This book does not present answers. Instead, it asks:
For whom has the classroom we take for granted been designed?
And quietly, it says it will not leave the questions alone.
Can You Help Me?
$16.80