MORAIS, S. A.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/0446813658488490; MORAIS, Simony Araújo de.
Resumo:
In the last two decades, the recognition of the right to education for rural populations has been
one of the most important achievements recorded in the Brazilian educational scenario.
However, social and educational asymmetries between rural and urban areas persist despite the
advances that have been made. The research sought to reflect and explain how such
asymmetries remain, supported by the logic of coloniality present in the social imaginary, in
the historical trajectory of education in Brazilian society and in the sociability between different
social groups, which are reinforced in the mentality of individuals in a unique way based on
their social place and structured habitus. We analyzed, through the experience of rural education
in the municipality of Campina Grande-PB, in which I have been working as an educational
supervisor in rural schools since 2008, how forms, symbols and actions express social
hierarchies and differentiate the rural from the urban, even though both are constituent parts of
society. Following the qualitative design for the methodology of this research, we combined
theoretical reflections, bibliographic and documentary review with field research inspired by
situational analysis involving observation and interviews. Direct observation took place at
events called pedagogical training and at a municipal school in the district of Catolé de Boa
Vista, a rural area of Campina Grande. As collaborators in the interviews, we had interlocutors
involved in public education policy actions in the field within the institutional framework of
the municipal Department of Education and the school community. We saw that the dichotomy
that marks the rural/urban relationship influences the way in which individuals act on the
school, located in rural areas, attributing less importance and value to it. Based on the evidence
of hierarchical relationships, it was possible to show the conditions under which rural education
lives and is carried out, with so many absences and faults that we group into the following
dimensions: symbolic hierarchies (invisibility, indifference, silencing) material and social
hierarchies (lack of water , lack of transport, lack of road maintenance, lack of an adequate
physical structure of the school building) which highlight forgetfulness, abandonment and an
idea of sub-citizenship, diametrically opposed to the efforts of the agents who live and manage
the school. Showing that there are also ruptures and resistances.