My grade 2 class showing love for Earth. Why won't these kids solve the problems of the world. They are already proactive.:)
Friday, May 17, 2013
Fyodor Dostoevsky said, "Beauty will save the world."
"Eco-phobia" this word as I understand means "the fear of the environment". Actually
Eco-phobia is more common in adults, youth and children than we think. I
presume this is because we expose our children and students too early about the
problems of the world - the problems that they think will end life on the
planet.
Instead
of instilling eco-phobia in kids, how about first making children fall in love
with Earth -their planet and if we can do this successfully they will know the
problems themselves. Children are experts at creating visions of places they've
seen only in their imagination- places made real by the act of creation.
Imagine what they could do when they are exposed to wonder and not catastrophe.
In recent
years environmental education has too often focused on environmental problems
and crisis such as pollution and species extinction. David Sobel says, "Emphasizing environmental problems
with children, especially young ones, can leave them feeling disempowered and
hopeless about the state of the world and their ability to affect it". It is so true, I believe that if
children can learn to love a place or their connection with mother Earth, they
will naturally grow up to take care of her.
There is
an organization called RIVERS OF WORDS (ROW) founded by Pamela Michael which
practices place-based learning by inviting children to use the arts to explore
and express their understanding of and connections to their home places. People
at ROW believe that children who come to understand and to love their home
places will grow into engaged, effective citizens committed to preserving those
places.
Fyodor
rightly said, "Beauty will save the world".
Appreciating the local environment - How do children connect?
Place based
learning appears as a new concept that is being talked about in the education
world, but actually it is not new. Real education that is practical and
experiential needs to be rooted in the local environment. I will highlight some
background on this topic from the pedagogical standpoint and then extend my
point with examples of how I integrate this pedagogy in my practice.
Place-based
education has many roots: from the age-old practice of learning
from our surroundings, to the ideas of Dewey (1929) and Geddes
(Higgins and Nicol, 2009). However the phrase became popular in the
last two decades in the United States through the work of the Orion
Society (2010) and educators such as Gruenewald (2003), Knapp (2001)
and Smith (2002). Place-based education marks the development of
environmental education to include local as well as global issues,
and engage learners with the interdependence of ecological
and community issues around them (Smith, 2002).
Place-based
learning is a philosophy of education that uses the local community and
surrounding environment as an integrating context for multidisciplinary
learning. It is characterized by student-driven, project-based explorations of
local environmental issues, social questions, cultural heritage, or civic
leadership.
The approach to
Educating for Sustainability, as stated by the Center of Ecoliteracy, follows
the following guiding principles:
- Nature is our teacher
- Sustainability is a community
Practice
- The real world is the Optimal
Learning Environment
- Sustainable living is rooted in
a deep knowledge of PLACE
We practice Place
Based Learning by growing rice, taking care of the crop, harvesting it and
finally storing, selling or consuming it - this is a possibility because we are
in a rice producing area, i.e Bali. If you are in a wheat producing area
then you can teach your child/children to grow, harvest and devour the local
grain. Similarly children can grow vegetables that are suited to the local
climate rather than always buying non seasonal vegetables from the market. Such
real opportunities help children to connect with their local environment and
they learn first-hand several key science concepts that cannot be substituted
by reading or experimenting alone.
Last
year my students extended their connection to the place by collaborating with
the local school to address a very local problem of unmanaged waste in the
neighborhood. When children connect to a place they can take proactive measures
in finding solutions to issues out of love and compassion for the place, much
like increasing awareness
of waste management amongst students and teachers of local schools and being role
models for them in the community. This type of
contextualized learning and creative participation in the
locality can provide opportunities for students to investigate and
deepen their relationship to their home places.
As parents we can extend our children's learning in
Bali by encouraging and participating in place-based activities like local
ceremonies, rice plantings, and walking through the rice paddies. We can
inculcate love for our locality and a feeling of belonging by interacting with
the local population. Eating locally grown foods is beneficial for our health,
economy, environment and spirit. Encouraging children to make paints from
plants, take care of animals, and collect seeds to re-grow them
provides hands on nature based holistic enjoyment. These and many more
activities provide experiences that create special meaning and memories for our
children, nurturing their connection with the environment and place.
References:
American Institutes of Research. 2005. Effects of
Outdoor Education Programs for Children in California. Sacramento.
Bai, H., & Scott, G. (2009). Touching the earth
with the heart of enlightened mind: The Buddhist practice of mindfulness for
environmental education. Canadian Journal of Environmental Education,
14.
Cameron, J. I. (2003). Educating for place
responsiveness: an Australian perspective on ethical practice. Ethics,
Place & Environment 6(2), pp. 99-115.
Dewey, J. (1929). Experience and
nature. New York: Dover.
Gruenewald, D. A. (2003). Foundations of place: A
multidisciplinary framework for place conscious education. American
Education Research Journal
Orr, D. W. (1992). Ecological literacy:
Education and the transition to a postmodern world. Albany: State
University of New York Press.
Tuesday, May 7, 2013
Hidden Curriculum - Can we educate for sustainability through the hidden curriculum?
Can we educate for sustainability through the hidden curriculum? What do you think?
I feel I always want to talk about this important element of our lives. LIVES- did I say LIVES! Yes, Our kids are influenced heavily by their environment. We are what we are because of the environment we grew up in, to most part of it, if not all. I still find myself exhibiting many of my parents' behaviours. What we present to our children implicitly is what I think I mean by 'hidden curriculum'.
I read an essay on "The Power of
Words" by Earnest Callenbach. I found it very interesting and relevant to
education and community. You may find it interesting too. Curriculum for the Center for EcoLiteracy means the totality of a student's experiences, a mix
of content and context. Organizing classes around projects rather than academic
subjects is curriculum.
An overlapping term, " Hidden curriculum"
coined by Briar Jackson in the 1960s is
the aspect of schooling that is implicit, usually unintentional that plays a role in constructing
a student’s image of self, others, and the world. These hidden aspects of learning are
generally value-based ideas communicated indirectly, through actions and words
that are part of the everyday life for children in their school community. The messages imparted through the hidden
curriculum usually deal with attitudes, values, beliefs, and behavior.
I could
identify several examples of Hidden curriculum in all the schools I have worked
at. What about soda vending machines in the hallways of schools that are trying
to promote healthy eating! I read about what the Wichita tribe, a Native American Indian tribe did when constructing roundhouses. They built roundhouses (community houses) that fall apart every 20 years, the
reason is simple, they want every generation to have a chance to rebuild it.
" If you want to make a building last you do it one way, but if you want
to make the knowledge last, you do it another way. There are so many examples of hidden curriculum, we can find in our daily lives in we look and in schools. In an article 'Raising Whole Children', by Michael
Ableman: he writes that making learning implicit rather than explicit, helps children make
connections with systems rather than in isolation.
The
development of morals is rooted in relationship to other people, animals, and
the natural world. This is related to the insight that we all gain together.
This is why schools have the responsibility to be aware of what messages we
impart to children about learning, life, relationships, and connection to the
world around them. The school framework
and institutional design, how children are learning, and how they are assessed
are all key functions of what children learn in the hidden curriculum.
I really believe that what teachers have to do mostly is be a good role model for their students. In one my earlier posts on 'teachers as role models...' I try to strive for this.
Saturday, May 4, 2013
Educating for sustainability: Educating for Sustainability impact
Educating for sustainability: Educating for Sustainability impact: Gaining a Masters in Educating for Sustainability from Antioch University, New England has had a profound impact on my thinking. Having a c...
Educating for Sustainability impact
Gaining a Masters in Educating for Sustainability from Antioch University, New England has had a profound impact on my thinking. Having a chance to interact and learn from Tom Wessels, David Sobel, Susan Dreyer Leon, Sue Gentile, Paul Bocko and Tom Julius among many others is a privilege. The summer of 2012, I spent in Keene is sketched all over my being. Secretly I never wanted that time to end. I wanted to go for forest walks everyday with Tom Wessels and just wanted to sit among my peers and teachers and absorb every bit of their intelligence and wisdom.
As I think Educating for sustainabilty several words come to mind.
Place based education, environment, economy, society, community, equity, nature, love of learning, civic engagement, child study, connections, self-organization, real time learning, practical, student centered, inquiry, stewardship, balance, systems, limits to growth, relationships, caring, love, interdependence, inhabitant etc - I think you get the picture.
As I consciously integrate our natural environment in my classroom lessons, I observe that students are becoming more appreciative of their natural world in which they live. Learning about the natural world like the river, eco-systems and their dwelling place is increasing their sense of place, self-identity, regional pride and conservation ethic. Similarly not only I feel this way, but magically as we live here longer and connect more to the community, my daughters have begun to take in this place with more patience, humility and attention to the smaller details. Recently I read them the chapter on 'Indian Pedagogy.....' by Malcolm Margolin who writes about his commitment to the preservation of tradition from a place based perspective.
For sure this commitment only comes from loving a place and then understanding the needs of the place and then being engaged as a citizen. To understand place based, civic engagement and service learning I reasearched and created ths comparison table. It is beginning to dawn clearly that one leads to another, have a look and share your thoughts:
Place-based Learning
Place-based learning is an
educational approach that
uses all aspects of the local
environment, including local
cultural, historical, and socio-political situations and the
natural and built environment,
as the integrating context for
learning. In its most developed
forms, it includes a clear focus
on learning through civic
engagement and participation
in service projects of obvious
relevance to the local school
and community.
|
Civic Engagement
Civic engagement promotes civic knowledge, responsibility, and
participation in individual and
collective actions in support of
the stewardship of community
natural and cultural resources,
and the resolution of issues
of public concern. Youth
civic engagement generally
involves youth in identifying
appropriate projects. Civic
engagement is most effective
when it builds on the foundation
developed through place-based learning.
|
Service Learning
Service learning is a method
whereby students learn
and develop through active
participation in a thoughtfully
organized service that is
conducted in and meets the
needs of a community while
also meeting the students’
educational objectives.
While service learning is an
important component of
PBL, not all service-learning
projects are grounded in local
PBL experiences.
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