Title: Love, actually
1Love, actually
- An exploration of the philosophical foundations
of Environmental Education - Karla Bradley, PhD Student
- Dr. Steve Hollenhorst, Major Professor
2IN WHICH we explore the foundational philosophies
at work in Environmental Education and tensions
are revealed.
- WHAT Overview of education philosophies and
some key philosophers - SO WHAT Place Environmental Education within
the context of these philosophies - NOW WHAT Discuss current tensions and where we
go from here
3Disclaimer
- Tug on anything at all and you'll find it
connected to everything else in the universe - John Muir
4Eeyores wisdom
- if, every time I want to sit down I have to
brush away half a dozen of Rabbits smaller
friends-and-relations first, then this isnt an
Expo whatever it is at all, its simply a
Confused Noise. - Eeyore,
- IN WHICH Christopher Robin leads an Expotition to
the North Pole
5Philosophies of Education
6Technocratic Education
7Purpose of Education
- Factory Model, Traditional Learn to earn
- To help students develop the knowledge, skills
and values they will need to get productive jobs
and succeed in a competitive marketplace - It is what we go back to when we go back to
basics (No Child Left Behind) - (Hutchinson, 1998)
8Methods
- Pre-determined goals and objectives
- Teacher-centered Learning mainly occurs through
a one-way dissemination of knowledge from teacher
to student - Uses outcome-based assessments of learning
standardized testing - (Hutchinson, 1998)
9BF Skinner (1904 - 1990)
- Anti-philosophical
- Purpose of education is behavioral conditioning
- Humans are controlled by their environment, the
conditions of which can be studied, specified and
manipulated. - Mistrusts self-consciousness
10Progressive Education
11Purpose of Education
- Reaction to Traditional education
- To promote social change
- To give learners practical knowledge and
problem-solving skills - (Hutchinson, 1998 Elias Merriam, )
12Methods
- Problem-based approach using the scientific
method of inquiry - Teacher is facilitator, guides learning through
experience stimulates, instigates, evaluates
learning process - Student-centered learners needs, interests and
experiences are key elements - (Elias Merriam, 1995)
13John Dewey (1859 - 1952)
- Education should prepare students to be active
participants in a democratic society - School and society should be integrated
- Experience is central to learning
- Educators have the responsibility of using their
surroundings to foster good educational
experiences - (Experience and Education, 1938
- The School and Society, 1909
- Democracy and Education, 1916)
14Holism
15Purpose of Education
- To help students develop intellectually,
spiritually and emotionally to prepare them to be
lifelong learners and caring members of society - Montessori, Waldorf Schools
- (Hutchinson, 1998)
16Methods
- World is seen as interconnected, studies are
interdisciplinary (extra-discplinary) - Teacher is a facilitator of the discovery process
- Learner participates emotionally, spiritually and
intellectually in learning
17Liberty Hyde Bailey (1858 - 1954)
- We are a part of the creation
- We have not treated the earth well
- We have a moral obligation to act rightly towards
the earth - Contact with the natural world puts humans in
right relationship with earth - (The Holy Earth, 1915
- Outlook to Nature, 1911)
18Critical Pedagogy
19Purpose of Education
- To bring about structural, social, political and
economic changes in society through education - Also known as radical or reconstructionist
- (Elias Merriam, 1995)
20Methods
- Teacher helps to raise awareness, bring students
to critical consciousness empowers learners to
become more autonomous - Learners create social change as they become
aware of the cultural hegemony and through
awareness achieve autonomy
21Paolo Freire (1921 - 1997)
- Banking education creates passive students
- Conscientization raises consciousness to
transform reality - (Pedagogy of the Oppressed, 1970)
22Humanism
23Purpose of Education
Humanism
- To enhance personal growth and development
- To help students reach self-actualization
24Methods
Humanism
- Student-centered learner assumes responsibility
for own learning - Teacher is facilitator, helps to promote a
positive learning environment - Affective as well as cognitive processes are
emphasized
25Kurt Hahn (1886 - 1974)Outward Bound School
- Ultimate goal is compassion
- Building up the physical body for the sake of the
soul - Overcoming innate weakness
26- Transformation of society
- ?Context is more important than subject
- ?Process is more important than outcome
- Transmission of knowledge
- ?Subject is more important than context
- ?Outcome is more important than process
27So, where does EE fit?
28Commonly Referenced Foundations
Using experiential methods outdoors
Outdoor Education
Experiential Education
Studying nature using experiential methods in the
outdoors
Kurt Hahn
John Dewey
Humanist
Progressive
Studying nature in the outdoors
Studying nature using experiential methods
Nature Study
Liberty Hyde Bailey
Holist
29Tension in EE
- Purpose of Environmental Education
- For improvement of the environment? For
improvement of education? For the improvement of
human beings? - Methods of Environmental Education
- In the environment? Through the environment?
About the environment? Is it a subject or a
process of education?
30- Transformation of society
- ?Context is more important than subject
- ?Process is more important than outcome
- Transmission of knowledge
- ?Subject is more important than context
- ?Outcome is more important than process
31- Transformation of society
- ?Context is more important than subject
- ?Process is more important than outcome
- Transmission of knowledge
- ?Subject is more important than context
- ?Outcome is more important than process
32Benefit to Humans
Lieberman Hoody
- Transformation of society
- ?Context is more important than subject
- ?Process is more important than outcome
- Transmission of knowledge
- ?Subject is more important than context
- ?Outcome is more important than process
David Sobel
David Orr
Harold Hungerford
Benefit to the Environment
33The problem
- those approaching environmental education from
its several dramatically different perspectives
are likely to say the same words when they mean
different things - (Disinger, 1997)
34Emergence of EE
- The term Environmental Education was first used
in the late 1960s - Growing awareness that the world is not
indestructible - Related strands of education had advocated
education IN the environment or ABOUT the
environment education FOR the environment was new
35UNESCO
- Environmental education, properly understood,
should constitute a comprehensive lifelong
education, one responsive to changes in a rapidly
changing world. It should prepare the individual
for life through an understanding of the major
problems of the contemporary world, and the
provision of skills and attributes needed to play
a productive role towards improving life and
protecting the environment with due regard given
to ethical values (UNESCO, 1977)
36Harold Hungerford
The main goal of Environmental Education
is ...to aid citizens in becoming
environmentally knowledgeable and, above all,
skilled and dedicated citizens who are willing to
work, individually and collectively, toward
achieving and/or maintaining a dynamic
equilibrium between quality of life and quality
of the environment (Goals for Curriculum
Development in Environmental Education, 1980)
37Harold Hungerford
- Based on imparting knowledge, skills and
attitudes that lead to responsible environmental
citizenship - Traditional environmental education
- aphilosophical
38Benefit to Humans
- Transformation of society
- ?Context is more important than subject
- ?Process is more important than outcome
- Transmission of knowledge
- ?Subject is more important than context
- ?Outcome is more important than process
Harold Hungerford
Benefit to the Environment
39In the context of Technocratic Education,
Traditional EE
- Tends to be based on fear
- Values the idea that we can produce a citizenry
that has the capacity to solve world
environmental problems through technology and
critical thinking - Is focused on outcomes, not the process of
education
40What are the alternatives?
41A holistic approach
42David Sobel (1949 - )
- Politically correct EE may be backfiring
- Love, not fear
- Place-based education
- (Beyond Ecophobia Reclaiming the
- heart in nature education, 1996)
43Benefit to Humans
- Transformation of society
- ?Context is more important than subject
- ?Process is more important than outcome
- Transmission of knowledge
- ?Subject is more important than context
- ?Outcome is more important than process
David Sobel
Harold Hungerford
Benefit to the Environment
44A critical pedagogy approach
45David Orr (1944 - )
- The crisis is not one of technology, but one of
mind, will and spirit - We need know-why more than know-how, wisdom more
than cleverness - Promote love, not fear the Biophilia revolution
- Rethink the purpose of education
- Preserve childhood
- Recover our sense of place
- (Earth in Mind, 1994)
46Benefit to Humans
- Transformation of society
- ?Context is more important than subject
- ?Process is more important than outcome
- Transmission of knowledge
- ?Subject is more important than context
- ?Outcome is more important than process
David Sobel
David Orr
Harold Hungerford
Benefit to the Environment
47A progressive approach
48Lieberman Hoody
- Education THROUGH the environment
- Interdisciplinary, collaborative, community-based
- Learner-centered, Constructivist
- Uses local natural and community surroundings as
the context for instruction, learning and service - Reported outcomes include
- Better performance on standardized tests
- Greater pride and ownership of learning
- Reduced discipline problems
- (Closing the Achievement Gap Using the
- Environment as an Integrating Context for
Learning)
49Benefit to Humans
Lieberman Hoody
- Transformation of society
- ?Context is more important than subject
- ?Process is more important than outcome
- Transmission of knowledge
- ?Subject is more important than context
- ?Outcome is more important than process
David Sobel
David Orr
Harold Hungerford
Benefit to the Environment
50A humanist approach
51Outdoor Education
- Focuses on the development of human potential
- Uses the outdoors as a classroom for teaching
outdoor leadership skills (hard and soft)
52Benefit to Humans
Kurt Hahn
Lieberman Hoody
- Transformation of society
- ?Context is more important than subject
- ?Process is more important than outcome
- Transmission of knowledge
- ?Subject is more important than context
- ?Outcome is more important than process
David Sobel
David Orr
Harold Hungerford
Benefit to the Environment
53So, what?
54In the context of Technocratic Education,
Place-based education
- Requires a philosophical shift to Holism and / or
Critical Pedagogy and a radical change in our
conception of the purpose of schooling - Becomes an educational methods reform movement
without the goal of benefiting the environment
55- Oh, help! said Pooh. Id better go back.
- Oh, bother! said Pooh. I shall have to go
on. - I cant do either! said Pooh. Oh, help and
bother!
56Stuck
- Hungerfords model works well with current ideas
in schooling but does it just turn into
catastrophe education? - Sobel Orrs ideas require a radical shift in
the dominant educational philosophy. Seen as
touchy feely or weak - Lieberman Hoody take a pragmatic approach that
does not address environmental concerns
57- Theres only one thing to be done, he said.
We shall have to wait for you to get thin
again. - How long does getting thin take? asked Pooh
anxiously. - About a week, I should think.
- But I cant stay here a week!
- You can stay here all right, silly old Bear.
Its getting you out which is so difficult.
58- Then would you read a Sustaining Book, such as
would help and comfort a Wedged Bear in Great
Tightness? - So, for a week Christopher Robin read that sort
of book at the North end of Pooh, and Rabbit hung
his washing on the South end.
59Now what?
- Where do we go from here?
60Benefit to Humans
MOSS
Lieberman Hoody
Kurt Hahn
MOSS
MOSS
- Transformation of society
- ?Context is more important than subject
- ?Process is more important than outcome
- Transmission of knowledge
- ?Subject is more important than context
- ?Outcome is more important than process
David Sobel
MOSS
David Orr
MOSS
MOSS
Harold Hungerford
Benefit to the Environment
61Questions?
62Holistic
Technocratic
Critical Pedagogy
Progressive
Child Centered
Subject Centered
Cognitive
Affective
Anthropocentric
Biocentric
Atomistic worldview
Organic worldview
Individual
Social
Transmission of knowledge
Transformation of society
63Harold Hungerford
Entry
Ownership
Empowerment
- Environmental Sensitivity
In-depth knowledge about issues
Knowledge skill in using action strategies
Personal investment in issues and the environment
Knowledge of Ecology
Locus of control
Intention to act
Attitudes towards pollution, etc.
Knowledge of consequences of behavior
64Harold Hungerford
Entry
Ownership
Empowerment
Citizenship Behavior
65Characteristics of Place-based Education
- It emerges from the particular attributes of a
place. The content is specific to the geography,
ecology, sociology, politics, and other dynamics
of that place. This fundamental characteristic
established the foundation of the concept
(Woodhouse Knapp) - ? It is inherently multi-disciplinary
- ? It is inherently experiential
- ? Its purpose is broader than learn to earn it
is education that fosters care for community and
all its constituent parts - ? It connects place with self and community web
of connections.