Praxis intervention is a form of participatory action research. The praxis intervention model emphasizes working on the praxis potential, or phronesis, of its participants, where other forms of participatory action research emphasize the collective modification of the external world (Madhu 2005). "Praxis potential" means the 'members' potential to reflexively work on their respective 'mentalities'; by 'participant' it is not just meant the clientele beneficiaries of the praxis intervention project alone, but also the organisers and experts participating in such a project. The praxis intervention aims at leading its members through a "participant objectivation". The praxis intervention method prioritizes unsettling the settled mentalities, especially where the settled mindsets prevalent in the social world or individuals is suspected to have sustained or contributed to their suffering or marginality (McLaren 2001).
Read more about Praxis Intervention: Reflexive and Routine Praxis, Reasons For Praxis Intervention, Systematic Participant Objectivation in Praxis Intervention, Praxis Intervention in Practice, See Also
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“I was curious, I was avid to know only what I found more real than myself, that which allowed me to glimpse the thoughts of a great genius, or the force or grace of nature left to its own devices, without the intervention of man.”
—Marcel Proust (18711922)