Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Raising whole children

Fyodor Dostoevsky said, "Beauty will save the world."

Expanding on the above thought, I wanted to share a story I read in The "Ecological Literacy".
Here is a story by Michael Ableman in his essay on "Raising Whole Children Is Like Raising Good Food...." consider this:
           

        Every evening we wrap up our new born son in his favourite wool blanket and ever so slowly walk the length of our farm saying good night to the chickens, touching the leaves on the asparagus, rubbing our faces on various herbs and flowers, and quietly sneaking up on the thousands of frogs that inhabit our pond.
            It's the same route each evening, but every walk reveals something new. Most nights just as we reach the farm-gate and turn to walk back home, young Benjamin's eyes have started to close as he is lulled and calmed by the life on the farm, which is also drifting into sleep.
            These walks include no talk, no explanations; there is no reading or study required to understand and learn from our experiences. But I am sure that young Benjamin is absorbing it all., even when his eyes are closed and he is asleep.
            But just as I immerse my young son in the natural circles of the farm as I give him responsibilities to care for some of the animals and plant life that exists on it, and feed and nourish him from it, our society must find ways to offer similar experiences to all families and communities.
            We have to deal with the world of worry in which so many of our young people live and the constant struggle between hope and despair by focusing on the small successes: on local and incremental change; one handful of seeds, one child, one garden at a time.

References and readings:
Dewey, J. (1929). Experience and nature. New York: Dover.
Orr, D. W. (1992). Ecological literacy: Education and the transition to a postmodern world. Albany: State University of New York Press.


2 comments:

  1. Mona, You are making me think about how there are lots of spontaneous, "found" opportunities to highlight principles of ecological systems without being dry and didactic. This anecdote touches on the flow, cycles, development, diversity and interconnectedness of living systems, to name a few. And it does it in a way that fosters curiosity and wonder. Thanks! TomJ

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  2. Dear Tom,
    You are absolutely right. Thinking and wonder are almost always triggered by spontaneous, "found" opportunities. My best part of the story is in the last line, "One handful of seeds, one child, one garden at a time". its pretty amazing what one of many things can do to make a difference. Recently I read a story to my class "One seed can meke a difference" and a song, "It took one seed to make a difference, it took one seed to grow up tall, it took one seed to have the courage, one seed that's all......"
    Juts from this song alone, my kids wrote great stories highlighting how one of something can make a difference and yet everything is interconnected.
    Thanks Tom

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