Leading with Conscience: Dr. George I. Sánchez, Dean Charles R. Martinez, Jr., and the Wisdom of Praxis
by
It is a deep honor to pay tribute to the civil-rights legacy of Dr. George I. Sánchez—an intellectual, a trailblazer, and a visionary educator whose influence continues to reverberate across generations. The building where I work at the University of Texas at Austin bears his name, as does a local elementary school with its own civil-rights history—one that now faces possible closure under the rhetoric of “consolidation” and “re-sets.” However phrased, such moves threaten the educational lifeworlds of emergent bilingual children and, in doing so, wound Dr. Sánchez’s legacy. The community, true to his spirit, is resisting.
When we invoke Dr. Sánchez’s name, we are not simply recalling a historical figure. We are evoking a living tradition—one rooted in justice, scholarship, and an unwavering faith in the transformative power of education. As Carlos Blanton (2015) reminds us in his seminal work George I. Sánchez: The Long Fight for Mexican American Integration, Dr. Sánchez’s life exemplified the scholar-activist’s role in bridging research and advocacy, intellect and moral purpose. His work calls us to examine not only what we teach, but why we teach, for whom, and to what end.
For our students in the College of Education, three interwoven principles emerge from his legacy: critical consciousness, moral courage, and what Antonia Darder (2018)—drawing from Paulo Freire’s (2000) Pedagogy of the Oppressed—so beautifully calls the “wisdom of praxis.” This wisdom is embodied, ethical, culturally situated, and context-sensitive. It animates the work of transformative educators committed to teaching as a moral and liberatory practice.
Dr. Sánchez understood, as Freire later articulated, that education is never neutral. His research on testing and segregation in the 1930s and 1940s—especially his exposure of so-called “intelligence tests” as culturally biased—revealed how inequity hides beneath the language of meritocracy. Curriculum and assessment, he showed, mirror what society chooses to value—and whom it chooses to value.
For today’s students—future teachers, administrators, and researchers—this carries an urgent message: knowledge must not merely be absorbed; it must be interrogated. We must ask: Whose knowledge counts? Whose history is told? Whose future is imagined through our teaching? Critical consciousness, as Freire taught, is not awareness alone but the recognition that the world can be transformed—and that each of us is called to act as an agent of that transformation. Dr. Sánchez embodied this stance long before the term existed.
He also modeled moral courage. At a time when segregation was legal and challenging “English-only” schooling could cost one’s career, he stood firm. He used his scholarship to expose injustice and did so at great personal and professional cost. He was branded a radical, even a communist—but he understood that neutrality in the face of injustice is complicity.
Today, we inhabit a similar climate—one where honest conversations about race, gender, identity, and inequality are under attack; where diversity, equity, and inclusion are being dismantled; and where educators are urged to teach without touching the truth. Dr. Sánchez’s courage reminds us that education is not a technical profession but an act of moral and civic engagement. To teach authentically today requires bravery: the bravery to protect our students’ dignity, to nurture their full humanity, and to stand together in solidarity for the survival of public education as a cornerstone of democracy.
The third principle—what Darder calls the wisdom of praxis—lies at the heart of Freirean pedagogy: the unity of reflection and action upon the world in order to transform it. Darder expands this idea into a moral framework for educators, describing the deep discernment that arises when love, humility, and critical inquiry guide our practice.
Dr. Sánchez lived this wisdom. He used scholarship not only to critique injustice but to build bridges—between research and advocacy, between the university and community, between intellect and lived experience. For our students, the implication is profound: education must never collapse into compliance with policy or performance metrics. It must remain a site of reflection, relationality, and transformation.
Praxis demands that we learn with and from communities rather than impose solutions upon them. It calls us to enter classrooms and neighborhoods with humility, compassion, and the conviction that education must serve the cause of justice. Were he here today, I imagine Dr. Sánchez reminding our students that being an educator is not merely about pedagogy—it is about purpose. It is about thinking critically, acting courageously, and living that delicate wisdom of praxis that unites our hearts with our work.
Here at UT Austin, we have witnessed these very qualities embodied in Dean Charles R. Martinez, Jr. Throughout his leadership, Dean Martinez has modeled critical consciousness by naming inequities others overlook and by championing an education grounded in justice, inclusion, and belonging. He has shown moral courage in navigating political headwinds with integrity and composure, steadfast in his commitment to serve all learners. And he has lived the wisdom of praxis through a leadership style that is relational, reflective, and deeply humane—bridging policy and compassion, scholarship and service.
Dean Martinez’s work reminds us that Freire’s insistence on education as the practice of freedom is not an abstraction. It lives in the choices of leaders who refuse cynicism and act from hope. In many ways, he stands in the living lineage of Dr. Sánchez—a leader whose every decision reaffirms that education at its best is an act of love and conscience. His example challenges all of us—faculty, students, and community partners—to carry forward that same spirit of reflection, courage, and transformative action.
This brings us to the question: What does it mean to be a critical scholar today?
Dr. Sánchez was a public intellectual in the fullest sense—an educator whose expertise extended from classroom to courtroom, from the academy to the public square. His research and testimony informed landmark desegregation cases; his policy advocacy exposed inequalities others preferred to ignore. Yet he never divorced scholarship from ethics. For him, knowledge was not an end in itself—it was a means of liberation.
In our own time, to be a critical scholar is to connect knowledge to justice. We live amid profound contradiction: unprecedented access to information coexists with the weaponization of misinformation, the erosion of truth, and the narrowing of academic freedom. In this climate, we cannot retreat into abstraction or silence. As Freire might say, our vocation is not simply to interpret the world but to transform it—through teaching, research, and public engagement.
Dr. Sánchez refused the false divide between “academic” and “activist.” He understood, as Freire did, that the scholar’s moral task is to link reflection with action. Today, that work means producing public scholarship, mentoring students who feel isolated or fearful, testifying before legislatures, and defending the spaces where critical inquiry still breathes. It also means expanding our sense of who counts as an intellectual: community elders, parents, artists, organizers, and students all produce vital knowledge. Our role is not to dominate those conversations but to connect and amplify them.
The intellectual of today—like Dr. Sánchez and Dean Martinez—must be multilingual in the broadest sense: fluent in the languages of justice, solidarity, and hope. And we must model integrity in our work, understanding that the goal is not accolades but the cultivation of the public good. If our scholarship does not help people think more critically, act more humanely, or live more freely, we have lost sight of the moral purpose that animated Dr. Sánchez’s life.
Were Dr. Sánchez here among us, I imagine he would look upon the College of Education—this vibrant community of future teachers and scholars—and say, The work is not finished. He would remind us that democracy must be renewed with every generation, through the daily acts of teaching, mentoring, and standing up for what is right. And yes, I think he would encourage our faculty to join Texas AAUP-AFT, now 300 members strong at UT!
He would urge us to keep education tethered to humanity, compassion, and the belief that safeguarding every child’s potential is sacred work. He would ask each of us to reflect: Are we using our knowledge to open doors or to close them? Are we preparing students to comply with authority or to question it thoughtfully? Are we aligning with comfort or with conscience?
Here again, we find inspiration close to home. Dean Charles R. Martinez, Jr. has modeled these very principles in his steady, visionary leadership. It is deeply disappointing that the university has chosen not to renew his contract (see Valenzuela, 2025). Yet in the spirit of Dr. Sánchez, Dean Martinez has shown us what it means to lead with critical consciousness, with moral courage, and with the wisdom of praxis—weaving reflection, research, and ethical action into a seamless practice of compassionate leadership.
His example reminds us that the legacy of Dr. Sánchez is not a monument to the past but a mandate for the present: to teach truthfully, to research courageously, and to live out what Darder (2018) and Freire (2000) together describe as the wisdom of praxis. It is a call to embody what Dr. Sánchez showed us so powerfully—that knowledge without justice is hollow, and that the most enduring scholarship—and the most meaningful leadership—are those that serve the dignity of all people.
References
Blanton, C. K. (2015). George I. Sánchez: The long fight for Mexican American integration. Yale University Press.
Darder, A. (2018). The student guide to Freire’s Pedagogy of the Oppressed. Bloomsbury Academic.
Freire, P. (2000). Pedagogy of the oppressed (30th anniv. ed.). Continuum. [pdf]
Tevis, M. (1976). George I. Sánchez: Pioneer in education and advocacy for Mexican Americans. Texas State Historical Association, Handbook of Texas. https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/sanchez-george-isidore
Valenzuela, A. (2025, September 16). Dean Charles Martinez and a legacy of equity, belonging, and impact. Educational Equity, Politics & Policy in Texas. https://texasedequity.blogspot.com/2025/09/dean-charles-martinez-and-legacy-of.html
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