Why Education Must Come Back to Nature
By Will Stanton
“Unless we are
willing to encourage our children to reconnect with and appreciate the natural
world, we can’t expect them to help protect and care for it.” – David Suzuki
Humanity has lost its connection with the Earth. As a
species, we too easily distance ourselves from the war being waged on the
environment. Most of us are opposed to the destruction of the Amazon rainforest
and the oil pollution in our oceans, yet we continue to let it all happen. We
care, but we don’t care enough to put a stop to all the madness. Why? Because
we have lost touch with nature. Sadly, we do not feel the planet’s hurt. Her
cries of protest are falling on deaf ears. For the most part, we have become
anaesthetised by modern society and the trappings of economic pragmatism.
We have a responsibility to the future generations to make
sure they do not make the same mistake that we have made in severing our
connection to the land. Our children must learn to empathise with the natural
world if our species is going to reverse the damage we have done. The youth are
the future caretakers and custodians of the planet, and the Earth’s fate will
one day rest in their hands. The only way for our children to experience a real
connection with nature is to immerse them in nature. Education cannot be
confined to the classroom. We cannot teach our children about plants, animals,
rocks and streams through textbooks and computers. They need to experience
these things for themselves in the real world. They need to get out of the
classroom as much as possible and learn through direct exposure to the natural
environment.
Children need to be given the freedom to explore and
discover the world around them. I’m not talking about excursions or field trips
that happen once every year or two, or even the occasional school camp… I’m
talking about a revolution in education where children regularly spend time
learning outside the traditional classroom. One of the big problems with the
education system is that we think that in order for children to learn they have
to intellectualise everything. We think that they don’t gain any important
lessons unless they can put pen to paper and demonstrate they have acquired the
concepts set out in the curriculum. What our schools keep failing to understand
is that life xperience imparts a far greater wisdom than any teacher could. The
rivers and the mountains and the songbirds have much to teach us, but as pupils
we make no attempt to understand the language they are speaking. If we only
learned to attune to that language, we would defend and protect the natural
world at any cost.
New Study Shows Regular Contact with Nature Reduces Crime,
Increases Social Cohesion Schools should be introducing children to the marvels
of plant consciousness. At the Federation of Damanhur in Piedmont, Italy,
plants have been taught to express themselves through song. By hooking up an
electrode to the leaf of a plant and then connecting it to a MIDI-synthesizer,
plants are able to create their own music. The plant controls both pitch and
rhythm entirely by itself, only the instrument is predetermined by the
synthesizer. You can see a video of this phenomenon here.
Experiments carried out in the 1970s by Cleve Backster, a
former CIA polygraph specialist, showed that plants are capable of telepathy.
Backster hooked up a common houseplant to a polygraph machine to gauge its
reaction to various stimuli. After establishing a baseline reading, he dipped
one of the leaves in a mug of hot coffee and the polygraph needle did not move.
He figured that the plant would be more likely to react if he burned one of its
leaves with a match. Immediately on the intention entering his mind to burn the
plant, the polygraph needle jumped across the page. Backster had not moved from
his seat. He had not physically reached for his matches. Somehow, the plant
picked up on his intentions to cause it harm. He repeated the experiment and
found that the plant did not react when he merely pretended to burn it, but
only reacted when he fully intended to burn the leaves.
Why Education Must Come Back to Nature
Fascinated by this, Backster continued his research on plant
telepathy. He set up another experiment by placing brine shrimp in a dish
suspended above a pot of boiling water. He configured the apparatus to tip the
brine shrimp into the pot after a random interval of time, more than a few
hours. In a separate enclosed room, well away from the apparatus, but in the
same building, he hooked up a houseplant to a polygraph machine and established
his baseline reading. Backster then left the building and drove hours away from
the lab. When he returned to check the reading on the plant, he found a huge
spike in activity at the precise moment that the brine shrimp fell to their death
in boiling water. Sadly, much of Backster’s work has been scoffed at by the
mainstream scientific community and this area of research still remains largely
underground. For more on plant consciousness, see the documentary The Secret
Life of Plants.
There is much about our natural world that still remains a
mystery. One thing is for sure – these experiments give great credence to the
notion that we are all bound together by the fabric of consciousness that makes
up the entire universe. It is absolutely crucial that children are able to
establish a conscious connection with nature if they are to learn to respond to
environmental injustice with action instead of indifference. We need to
completely change the way we educate our kids so that we can sustain life on
our planet for many generations to come.
Something is very wrong with our education system. Children
are being told what to think when we should be teaching them how to think.
Schools are places of indoctrination when they should be places of inspiration.
Creativity needs to be nurtured, not suppressed.
Education Revolution dares to call it out for what it is.
Throughout the book, Stanton tackles a wide range of controversial issues from
the desperate need for critical thinking in our schools to the alienation of
our brilliant minds. He takes a step outside the box and looks at what
education is really doing to future generations of human beings, and takes a
solutions-based approach to these problems and offers up an entirely new model
for education which he calls The Six Dimension Model.
The paradigm needs to change. Humanity must evolve…
About the author:
Will Stanton is an Australian author and educational
activist who has worked in a number of Melbourne schools and a government
school in the slums of Kathmandu, Nepal. Dedicated to changing the education
paradigm, he is the creator of a new educational framework called the Six
Dimension Model, which aims to bring much-needed balance back into education,
and empower children to reach their highest potential.
His book, Education Revolution, is available in paperback
format on Book Depository, and as an eBook on Kindle (Amazon), Nook & Kobo.
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