Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Right to Intellectual Community

Children need access to mentors, peers, and communities of inquiry where their ideas are taken seriously and intellectual growth is nurtured.

Juana
Why It Matters

Despite her isolation in the convent, Sor Juana maintained correspondence with fellow intellectuals, finding community through shared ideas and mutual recognition. This concept asserts that children's rights include access to intellectual fellowship—relationships with adults and peers who take their thinking seriously, challenge them generously, and model engaged intellectual life. Many children, particularly poor children and children in under-resourced schools, lack such communities. They may have no one who asks them thoughtful questions, discusses their ideas with respect, or demonstrates that intellectual work matters. Creating conditions for children's intellectual development requires building communities of inquiry: classrooms where discussion flourishes, mentorship relationships that extend beyond transactions, libraries and spaces where young people encounter diverse minds, and access to peers engaged in serious thinking. In Sor Juana's tradition, intellectual solitude is sufferable but intellectual community is transformative. Children deserve spaces where their curiosity is welcomed, their questions are engaged seriously, and they discover that thinking together amplifies individual capacity. Such communities protect children's intellectual rights while nurturing the collaborative inquiry essential to human flourishing.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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