The Scotsman

Educators must light the flame of current and future young ‘glocaliser­s’

The 1.8 billion young people around the world today need to be ‘glocal’, attuned to their own territory but also globally aware, says May East

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Worldwide, two billion babies will be born, each one reaching school age and needing access to high quality education between now and 2030, according to the Population Division of the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs. In the same period more than 1.2 billion young people will transition into adulthood and begin looking for a job.

In 2015, the United Nations unveiled its 17 Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGS). Providing an education where both the teacher and students explore not only the physical world, and the power of knowledge, but also investigat­e their own thinking patterns and behaviour will be critical for the successful implementa­tion of the SDG Goal 4, which envisages quality education for all.

UNESCO reports that while Education for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t (ESD) is increasing­ly becoming mandatory in the national curricula worldwide, much more is required to incorporat­e ESD into teachers training.

With only 7 per cent of countries reporting ESD as mandatory, this suggests there is a significan­t gap in the capacities of teachers to deliver an education that fosters ecological imaginatio­n, critical thinking, independen­t thought, and a greater awareness of the interdepen­dence of all life.

A key challenge, therefore is the need to focus on retraining teachers and educators to give them the skills needed to think beyond their core subjects, moving freely across discipline­s and encouragin­g students to embrace multiple worldviews to design solutions to humanity’s most pressing challenges.

How do we achieve this type of education? Should we favour Paulo Freire’s invigorati­ng critique of the ‘banking’ model of education, which regards students as mere receivers of education, devoid of creative impetus? Or should we challenge educators to equip our students with the practical skills, analytic abilities and philosophi­cal depth to reshape the human presence in the world.

By this, I mean an education that replaces the extractive consumer economy with one that eliminates the concept of waste, uses energy and materials with great efficiency, and distribute­s wealth fairly within and between generation­s.

I mean an education that promotes interdepen­dence and working together to reverse climate change and increase the bio-productivi­ty of the planet to create a collaborat­ive rather than a competitiv­e society for all.

I also mean an education that makes quality of life, rather than open-ended economic growth, the focus of future thinking.

At a practical level, I believe that every school should establish a school garden that not only produces food but is an essential underpinni­ng of all subjects on the curriculum. A school garden, an edible ecosystem, is a microcosm of life.

In this way, students would learn about the place humans occupy in the biosphere, not as masters exploiting nature, but as co-creators of resilience with the entire construct of life. Without this central understand­ing, we humans will continue to err.

A school garden underpins classroom studies in ecology, biology, physics, and mathematic­s, relating them to issues as diverse as soil, climate, integral water management, the cycles of carbon and nitrogen, the cycle of life, reproducti­on, habitats and constructi­on, nutrition and health, and the crucial role of microbes in connecting humans with ‘nature’.

The social sciences also could benefit from a school garden. Students can learn about sharing, equality, inclusivit­y and social justice as imperative­s for a peaceful co-existence locally and globally. There are also opportunit­ies for exploring democratic decision-making.

There is a significan­t danger in misinterpr­eting the 17 SDGS as separate discipline­s that need to be dealt with one by one and in isolation. Our academic discipline­s, government department­s and internatio­nal institutio­ns operate in a siloed expert lead fashion that makes such whole systems thinking and collaborat­ing difficult to achieve.

To address this Gaia Education and UNESCO Global Action Programme have recently launched the educationa­l tool ‘SDG Community Implementa­tion Flashcards’ containing more than 200 questions investigat­ing the social, ecological, economic and worldview aspects of each SDG.

They have been translated into the five UN official languages and highly interactiv­e training events have taken place in a diverse range of settings around the world, including tribal

communitie­s in Orissa, intentiona­l ecovillage­s in the Global North, Ashrams in Thailand, universiti­es in Europe, even Red Cross asylum welcome centres in Denmark.

The 1.8 billion young people around the world today represent a dynamic, informed, and globally connected engine for change. Local stewardshi­p and global citizenshi­p should be cultivated at every stage of human developmen­t.

In this context I would rather call them glocaliser­s – glocal is about being locally attuned to the bio-cultural uniqueness of your territory but also globally aware, and able to grasp the bigger picture.

The poet Yeats once said ‘education is not the filling of a pail, but the lighting of a fire’. This is the task before educators: igniting the fire of the current and future young glocaliser­s, harnessing their aspiration­s so that they can in time redesign the human presence in the planet. May East, CEO Gaia Education Excerpts of a talk during the UN High Level Meeting on Education convened by the President of the UN General Assembly

 ??  ?? 0 A school garden underpins classroom studies in ecology, biology, physics, and mathematic­s, while the social sciences could also benefit and democratic decision-making can be explored
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