Ecological Education

Learning in Community
New forms of educational institutions that break from modern disciplinary “education for industry”, developing trans-disciplinary and immersive forms of learning in community

Context 

It is not only the things we learn but the ways in which we learn—the environments, relationships, and boundaries inside and through which we learn—that establish our worldview, and direct the ways in which we inhabit the world. Critical Pedagogy, a discipline often traced back to the work of Brazilian socialist and educator Paolo Freire, links questions of pedagogical practice to issues of social justice. Most modern industrialised societies, Freire argued, practice education as a unidirectional form of “training” designed to reproduce the status quo.1Paulo Freire. Pedagogy of the Oppressed, trans. by Myra Bergman Ramos (New York: Continuum, 2001). Separating forms of knowledge into disciplines, and separating humans from nature, eliminates the possibility of holistic thinking, and perpetuates a system whereby nature is exploited and people are separated by hierarchies. Freire proposed an alternative model of learning that is self-led, interdisciplinary, and anti-hierarchical. This model advocates for “education as the practice of freedom”,2bell hooks, Teaching to Transgress: Education as the Practice of Freedom (New York: Routledge, 1994). and with its liberatory appeal, invites a way of learning and living that takes greater care of the climate.  

Practice 

Across the world, a number of experimental colleges have adopted Critical Pedagogy in their provision of ecology and design courses, aiming to provide education for an age of environmentalism, not industry, and within a context of ecological breakdown.3Dartington Trust, ‘Schumacher College in the words of Satish Kumar’, YouTube, 22 July 2021 <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6EpnK6UMYEQ> [accessed 3 February 2023]. One of the longest-running of these is Schumacher College in Devon, founded by the environmental activist and pacifist Satish Kumar in 1991.  

Schumacher College offers programmes on various aspects of agroecology, philosophy, and economics that follow a principle of educating head, hand, and heart together: learning by doing, as well as by living together in Schumacher’s community.  

Responding to the frequent criticism that his style is somehow irrational, oddball, or overly-spiritualist, Kumar responds: 

“Is my approach unrealistic? Look at what realists have done for us. They have led us to war and climate change, poverty on an unimaginable scale, and wholesale ecological destruction. Half of humanity goes to bed hungry because of all the realistic leaders in the world. I tell people who call me ‘unrealistic’ to show me what their realism has done. Realism is an outdated, overplayed, and wholly exaggerated concept.”4John Vidal, ‘Soul man’, The Guardian, 16 January 2008 <https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2008/jan/16/activists> [accessed 3 February 2023]. 

Schumacher College’s postgraduate programme in Ecological Design Thinking encourages students to evaluate their own design practice through an ethos of whole-systems thinking, and approach design as a holistic and trans-disciplinary practice. This course speaks to the challenge of facing climate breakdown by addressing issues through their social, economic, human, and environmental relationships. 

Working with some of the same principles, Black Mountains College, in South Wales, offers a single undergraduate programme in Sustainable Futures: Arts, Ecology and Systems Change.5Though its name recalls the Black Mountain College—an art school which became a hive of creative experimentation between 1933 and 1957 in North Carolina, USA—the Black Mountains College takes its name from the group of hills spread across parts of Powys and Monmouthshire in southeast Wales, where the College is located. Established by a Welsh human rights researcher and a poet, both from the Black Mountains region of South Wales, the College provides environmentally-situated education in an immersive, sensory way. Its undergraduate programme revolves around asking what kinds of transformation are needed to build an ecologically sound and socially just future, and looks at ways of understanding the past, examining current practices, and experimenting with new futures, across disciplines. The College also offers free vocational courses, fully-funded by the Welsh government, which are designed to foster ecological care and stewardship. 

The Schumacher and Black Mountains College examples demonstrate the viability and fruitfulness of shaping education around ecological and social principles of care. Numerous other examples, from the Centre for Alternative Technology (also in Wales) to the Indigenous University of the Territory in southwestern Colombia, could also be mentioned. In these centres for learning, as students are encouraged to rethink the world around them and to challenge institutions of power, education realises its full potential for working across disciplinary and methodological boundaries for greater social and ecological good. Such an interdisciplinary and holistic approach to education is paramount in facing climate breakdown’s combined social and ecological challenges.

Notes

  • 1
    Paulo Freire. Pedagogy of the Oppressed, trans. by Myra Bergman Ramos (New York: Continuum, 2001).
  • 2
    bell hooks, Teaching to Transgress: Education as the Practice of Freedom (New York: Routledge, 1994).
  • 3
    Dartington Trust, ‘Schumacher College in the words of Satish Kumar’, YouTube, 22 July 2021 <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6EpnK6UMYEQ> [accessed 3 February 2023].
  • 4
    John Vidal, ‘Soul man’, The Guardian, 16 January 2008 <https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2008/jan/16/activists> [accessed 3 February 2023].
  • 5
    Though its name recalls the Black Mountain College—an art school which became a hive of creative experimentation between 1933 and 1957 in North Carolina, USA—the Black Mountains College takes its name from the group of hills spread across parts of Powys and Monmouthshire in southeast Wales, where the College is located.

External links

The Centre for Alternative Technologya pioneering eco-community and educational institution in Machynlleth, Wales (1973 onwards) 

Other courses within larger institutions in Europe include The University of Bolzano’s Master in Eco-Social Design and Transformation Design (Master of Arts) in HBK Braunschweig 

Ecoversities—a platform representing ecological education movements worldwide 

The Institute of Radical Imagination—a European network that hosts meetings and workshops relating to post-capitalist transitions