At Home With the Other: Reclaiming the Ecological Roots of Development and Literacy
- 1 January 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in The Journal of Environmental Education
- Vol. 35 (1) , 33-43
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00958960309600593
Abstract
Drawing chiefly from Paul Shepard's (1982) Nature and Madness and David Abram's (1996) The Spell of the Sensuous, this essay draws attention to two underlying foundations of educational thought: the process of human social development and the emergence of language and literacy. A reading of Shepard and Abram implies that the meaning of human social development and the meaning of literacy must be recovered from our shared human heritage in which human beings developed a sense of interconnection with nonhuman others. This perspective suggests many challenges to environmental educators including (a) the need to take a more philosophical (and less instrumental) approach to our work, (b) the need for a working theory of development and literacy in education that takes nonhuman otherness seriously, (c) the need to advocate for more regular and extended experiences in the natural world in order to nurture relationship with otherness, (d) the need to reinvent “accountability” in education, (e) and the need to develop in all learners, including ourselves, a sense of at-homeness.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
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- The Human Relationship with NaturePublished by MIT Press ,1999
- Education and the Rise of the Global EconomyPublished by Taylor & Francis ,1998