ecojustice education and community-based learning the southeast michigan stewardship coalition
TRANSCRIPT
EcoJustice Education and Community-Based
Learning
The Southeast Michigan Stewardship Coalition
EcoJustice Education: A Crucial Kind of Change
Because the assumptions that belong to aculture are often invisible in their fullestdimensions and consequences, one must makethem visible before discerning change.The very process of seeing the structure ofthought is itself a crucial kind of change andgenesis. Susan Griffin, The Eros of
Everyday Life
An EcoJustice Framework
Social and ecological justice are not separate.
They share the same cultural roots.
An EcoJustice Framework
Ecology: From the root “Oikos” meaning “home”
• A strong emphasis on relationships and interdependence
• Disrupts the managerial model introduced mid-20th C. where science is applied to manage and control problems “out there.”
An EcoJustice Framework
Two Primary Strands:1.A deep analysis of the cultural
foundations of socio-ecological violence
2.A recognition of beliefs, behaviors, traditions, knowledge, and skills that lead to a smaller ecological footprint/sustainable communities
An EcoJustice Framework
Strand 1: A deep cultural analysis of how we think
Examining • “Discursive roots” of culture
--Language matters• How we come to think and behave in
relation to each other as well as the natural world as created in our symbolic systems
An EcoJustice Framework
Centuries-Old Cultural Discourses– Anthropocentrism– Ethnocentrism– Androcentrism– Mechanism– Individualism– “Progress” and “Growth”– Scientism
Dualisms and Hierarchized Thinking in Western
CultureBasic hierarchized structure
leading to hyper-separated consciousness and a logic of domination
• Culture/nature (anthropocentrism)• Reason/ emotion• Mind/body • Man/woman (androcentrism)
The Language of Mechanism
• “My aim is to show that the celestial machine is to be likened not to a divine organism, but to a clockwork.” Johannes Kepler (1571-1630)
• “For what is the heart, but a spring; and the nerves, but so may strings, and the joints but so many wheels, giving motion to the whole body.” Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan, 1651
• “Like the computer, the human mind takes in information, performs operations on it to change its form and content, stores information, retrieves it when needed, and generates responses to it.” Anita Woolfolk, from Educational Psychology, 1993
• “The machine that biologists have opened up is a creation of riveting beauty. At its heart are the nucleic acid codes which in a typical vertebrate animal may comprise 50,000 to 100,000 genes.”
The Language of Individualism
The idea that humans are “autonomous individuals” with the independent capacity to reason outside of our relationship or shared language with others.
Assumes that the most “advanced” societies are those that maximize the so-called inherent drive to accumulate individual wealth and power. Thus, competition is seen as normal, and hierarchized social relations are a natural outgrowth of rewards for individual merit.
The Language of Individualism
Examples: “Think for yourself!”
We all construct “our own meaning.”
Social inequality is a result of inherent genetic or cultural “deficits.”
The Language of “Progress”
The idea that rapid social or technological change is inevitable and necessary to “advance” culture.
The Language of “Progress”
• “You can’t stop progress!”• “unimproved land”• “developed” vs “underdeveloped”• “growth” • “innovation”• “advanced” vs “backward”
What would you expect to see in a culture organized by an anthropocentric world view?
“It seems to me that in a culture organized
by an anthropocentric way of thinking, it would be a short leap to treating some people like they are inferior.”
Sabrina Clark, 12th grade
Strand 2: Attention to local communities and indigenous
cultures
Revitalizing the cultural and ecological “commons”
Practices and traditions, relationships that have a smaller ecological footprint
Shared without the need for monetary exchange
Strand 2: Attention to local communities
Attention to the relationship among biological, cultural, and linguistic diversity as the strength of any community.
Problem of cultural, linguistic, and ecological destruction via economic and cultural globolization
Strand 2: Attention to local communities
Earth democracy: recognizing the need for collective decision making by those who are most affected by the decision
Recognizing the importance of decisions that take seriously the right of other living creatures to renew themselves.
Strand 2: Attention to local communities
It is not quite imaginable that people will exert themselves greatly to defend creatures and places that they have dispassionately studied. It is altogether imaginable that they will greatly exert themselves to defend creatures and places that they have involved their lives in.
~Wendell Berry
Developing Citizen Stewards: EcoJustice and Community-Based
Education
Southeast Michigan Stewardship Coalition(SEMIS)
Three Key Strategies
• Community-based Learning
• K-12 Professional Development
• Community Partnerships
SEMIS Professional Development
What does this all mean for what we need to do?
Developing the habits of mind and heart necessary for stewardship and creation of sustainable communities.
EcoJustice Habits of Heart & Mind Guiding QuestionsWhat are root causes of the social and ecological crises
we face? How are the projects we are working on contributing to
alternatives (more sustainable alternatives)? How do we know if our thinking and actions (or their
implications) support or undermine life/living systems?
How do we reflectively listen/understand the messages/ communication/ Nature/living systems are sending?
How do we become ethical participants in an “Ecology of Mind”?