Guest-Blogger Bill Farren: Education for Well-Being
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I’ve invited Bill Farren, who teaches at an international school in the Dominican Republic, and with whom I’ve become acquainted in our Project Global Cooling project planning Ning, to guest blog on Beyond School once a week for as many weeks, really, as he desires. My hope is to help us all learn more, through his posts, about his Education for Well-Being idea and website.
Before I hand this post over to Bill, I want to first point to my original post featuring Bill’s “Did You Ever Wonder?” video, particularly to note that Karl Fisch and Scott McLeod graciously took the time to comment, to correct some of my own misstatements, and to generate some dialog that allowed us all, I hope, to understand each other better. The upshot of those talks might be summarized to state: a) Karl and Scott are not opposed to sustainability as a plank in the platform of 21st century education, and b) I’m not in any way denying the validity and importance of the points they make in the “Did You Know?” video. They can correct me if I’m wrong, but I think it’s safe to say they are as supportive of the idea of sustainability becoming a “viral” idea as I am.
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For background, I’m also going to post both the “Did You Know?” and the “Did You Ever Wonder?” videos here for everybody’s convenience. Ye olde schooly comparison/contrast essay might serve a valuable real-world purpose by watching the two back-to-back - or showing them back-to-back to others.
“Did You Know?” by Karl Fisch and Scott McLeod
“Did You Ever Wonder?” by Bill Farren
Now I can hand the mic over to Bill. And I really hope the comment thread becomes as valuable a resource for us all. There’s certainly a lot at stake here.
Education for Well-Being, by Bill Farren
I’d like thank Clay for inviting me to guest post here. It’s quite an honor to be able to do so and to be able to share some of my (humble) opinions about education and well-being with such a thoughtful readership.
A couple of summers ago I stumbled across an article having to do with well-being called the Happy Planet Index. The HPI ranks countries according to how ecologically efficient each is at delivering well-being to its citizens. It was interesting to see the country where I was born, Colombia, ranked number two out of 178; Honduras, were I once lived, ranked seventh; the country where I currently live, the Dominican Republic, ranked 27th; and I was unsurprised to see the USA ranked at 150. My experiences overseas, in countries considered poor, confirmed to me what was in the report: nations where people have more stuff and are able to hire more services, don’t necessarily produce more well-being for their citizens. The well-being that wealthy countries produce comes at a high price to the planet.
This made me reflect again on the current state of education: Why are we subjecting kids to an educational system that, for too many, dulls the senses, erodes natural curiosity, and forces kids to choose grades over learning, all in the quest for a high-paying job that will not necessarily make them happier or healthier? If someone wanted to create a system to reduce well-being for all, they need look no further than the current educational approach found in most schools. Losses pile up, one on the other, as first students have to endure, instead of enjoy school. Consequently, their ability to learn is diminished as inquisitiveness is all but extinguished. Finally, having never been adequately equipped to appreciate or care for their natural world, they will diminish their chances of living well on a planet with a finite biosphere. To quote David Orr, “Students are fed through a conveyor belt of requirements, large classes, deadlines, and general busy-ness. What they learn seldom ads up to anything like a coherent, ecologically solvent worldview.”
But of course, there are many opinions about the ultimate purpose of education. Mine is just one against the many other louder voices politicking for higher standards and harder work in the name of job protection. While economic well-being is certainly important, to think of it without considering how it interacts with, and is dependent on social and environmental well-being, is to deny the importance of people and places as sources of both happiness and prosperity. One of the main goals of Ed4Wb then, is to try to get more people thinking about the direction of education and to help education live up to its potential as an agent of good change. I believe that, despite all the talk about wanting to produce critical thinkers, education has done very little to expose students to critical thought or to world views that are not in the mainstream. Most textbooks for example, are produced by large corporations, who by their very nature have an obligation to benefit their shareholders, not necessarily students. Expecting these companies to publish anything that challenges the status quo in which they profit, is simply unrealistic.
Below, with the help of interested people, are just some ideas that Ed4Wb would like to advance:
· Counter the idea that school, in order to be effective, must be hard, painful work for the student. I realize that probably everyone reading this here believes school should be enjoyable. However, I’m guessing we’ve all met too many educators, parents and policymakers who believe medicine must taste bad in order for it to work. Unhappily, for too many, it’s hard to understand that education is a remedy that works best when sweet.
· Debunk the belief that people have to choose between the economy and the planet. As the authors of Natural Capitalism remind us, “The environment is not a minor factor of production but rather is an envelope containing, provisioning, and sustaining the entire economy.” We would be wise then, to teach our kids how to protect their most important source of economic well-being.
There is plenty of innovative thinking happening right now that demonstrates how acting green not only is profitable in the long term, but also in the short term, often beating returns on investments from capital markets without the downside risks, all the while improving the environment. Why invest your money in stocks like gold mining corporations that will degrade the environment when instead, you could invest your money in items like efficient appliances, solar water heaters (or in companies that make them) which will not only improve the environment, but also give you great, risk-free returns?
The incredible amount of waste in modern society presents huge opportunities for wealth creation while at the same time increasing the habitability of the planet. Paul Hawken points out, “That inefficiency is masked because growth and progress are measured in money, and money does not give us information about ecological systems, it only gives information about financial systems.”
· Discredit current economic doctrine: “For all their power and vitality, markets are only tools. They make a good servant but a bad master and a worse religion. This theology treats living things as dead, nature as a nuisance, several billion years’ design experience as casually discardable, and the future as worthless.” (Authors, Natural Capitalism) We would do well to expose our students to innovative thinking like that found at New Economics Foundation whose motto is: economics as if people and the planet mattered. “Education as if people and the planet mattered” is Ed4Wb’s principal message.
· Put forward the idea that most of our biggest problems aren’t due to lack of technology, lack of resources, lack of knowledge or lack of intelligence, but instead, are due to a lack of congruence with what it is we are told to believe and with the way a planet with a finite biosphere actually functions. We are taught, through a half trillion dollar a year industry called advertising, to value that which isn’t needed at the expense of that which is. There is an uncritical acceptance of the belief that economies can grow indefinitely within a finite biosphere. At some point, we’ll have to start wondering if more, faster and bigger is really progress. Do we really need another artificial island off the coast of Dubai?
· Promote the idea of nature as teacher. Help eliminate the arrogant posture that what we humans create outshines what nature produces. We’re proud of our Kevlar, steel and plastics. However, we don’t mention too loudly that we require huge energy inputs and use various toxins to heat, beat and treat these materials into existence. Nature makes materials that are just as effective, if not more so, using very little energy at low temperatures, all the while, improving the environment in which they are made. 3.8 billion years of trial and error could teach us something.
· (The following idea was put forth by David Orr in his book Earth in Mind but has not been carried out yet.) Create, through a Wikipedia-like / sourceforge.net collaboration (you!) a ratings system to rank and rate schools according to how much well-being they help produce. The school ratings available today (i.e. US News and World Report) push an agenda of speed, elitism, testing, and consumerism, while in the process, stressing kids out and diminishing the kind of learning that will serve them and their planet. Something else is sorely needed that will give students better information while also acting as an agent to promote better education. The ratings would look at how ecologically responsible a school is in its daily operations, how beneficial its curriculum is at promoting wellness, how healthy and happy its students are while attending school, and finally, it would look at what kind of life work is produced by its graduates.
Changing institutions is never easy. However, I believe it’s worth trying. I also believe there are two important factors that should help us consider whether to act or not: 1) We are seriously messing with our chances to live well on this planet. Our numbers are huge. Our desires are infinite. Our ability to physically alter our biosphere is unprecedented. Our institutions of production and marketing are out of control. Actually, they are in control and answer to no one. 2) In a world of del.icio.us, Google, YouTube, Wikis, Nings, e-mail, blogs, Skype…different points of view finally have a chance. Call me naïve.
“Nobody makes a greater mistake than he who does nothing because he could do only a little.” Edmund Burke
I would love to hear your ideas on how to help education become an instrument of well-being. Thanks for reading and for helping expand the discussion. Be well, Bill Farren
If you like this post, please spread it:
- The Age of Paradox (Guest Blogger Bill Farren, no. 4)
- The Hidden Curriculum (guest-blogger Bill Farren, post 2)
- Random Acts of Deceleration (Bill Farren Guest-Post 3)
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17 Mar 08 at 3:43 pm
I resonate well with your post Bill, and I love how you modified NEF’s slogan into “Education as if people and the planet mattered”.
I truly believe what H.G. Wells said increasingly rings true in our time, that “The world is more and more in a race between education and catastrophe”.
Here, I would like to add another potential tool for this kind of education called WiserEarth (www.wiserearth.org), the brainchild of Paul Hawken whose work you quoted many times in your post. I’m sure you’ve heard of it before, but if you haven’t, I recommend you to do some exploration.
WiserEarth is a platform combining the power of wiki and social networking. Think a cross-breed of wikipedia and myspace (minus advertisement) and geared to help us move “Toward a Just and Sustanable World Created by Community”.
WiserEarth:
“serves the people who are transforming the world. It is a community directory and networking forum that maps and connects non-governmental organizations and individuals addressing the central issues of our day: climate change, poverty, the environment, peace, water, hunger, social justice, conservation, human rights and more. Content is created and edited by people like you.”
More at http://www.wiserearth.org/article/About
In WiserEarth, there’s a place where anyone can learn about all the relevant issues for an “Education as if people and the planet mattered” called the Areas of Focus. Paul Hawken called it the curriculum of the future.
More at http://www.wiserearth.org/aof/browse
Overall, WiserEarth is still a newborn baby, not even a year old (launched on Earth Day 2007), that needs and welcomes passionate and concerned citizens (which includes educators and teachers) to contribute in making it into a true global resource for transformative learning, networking and collaboration.
I’m currently experimenting with it’s group feature to create online learning courses and communities at http://www.wiserearth.org/group/weversity
It’s just around two weeks old, so not much at the moment. But I think and see potential.
I hope to see you in WiserEarth Bill.
Best wishes and be well,
Bowo
Wibowo Sulistio
17 Mar 08 at 4:18 pm
Your page is now on StumbleUpon!
30 Mar 08 at 2:21 am
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