by StevenSlaughter » Thu 21 Aug 2008, 08:52:32
Being new to this board (and off of message boards in general for several years), I am really stunned and impressed by the number and quality of responses I've received so quickly. Wow! Thank you all so much, and if anyone has further thoughts or resources, keep them coming.
One thing I have in my favor is a good reputation at my school and very supportive parents. It is an interesting school. The neighborhood boundaries include some of the city's wealthiest and some below the poverty line, all in the same classroom, which is very unusual -- it is normally much more economically homogenous. So I have kids who have never experienced much beyond their few blocks sitting next to others who fly off to Vail for the weekend. We are building a rooftop greenhouse and other green initiatives, and, as liberals, in general the parents are VERY supportive of environmental education (at least in the abstract), so whenever it can be done, they support it.
As others have mentioned, kids today are growing up exposed to far more than most of us were. Even if we were exposed to the Red Scare -- and it was no doubt scary -- none of us were relentlessly bombarded by media the way kids are today, since the media simply was not as pervasive.
The Red Scare, the threat of nuclear holocaust, is an interesting case study, it seems to me. As one born in the summer of love ('67), this was before my time, but I see some useful parallels. While the threat was great and ominous, it never materialized the way doomsayers were certain it would (at least to date). So, helping kids understand the very real threat, which later led many of them to activism against nucs, etc. was a good thing; on the other hand, wherever it was framed as inevitable doom, kids were made terrified about something that didn't materialize. We must always hold out hope, whatever other information we are giving them.
I am convinced that PO will change everything, and I am not at this point a techno-optimist who believes we will be able to fix it in time with a miracle pill. I think life WILL be much different. My job, I believe, is to do whatever I can to help my students discover (for themselves to whatever degree is possible, the best way to learn anything) the truths that life on the planet is changing. This is nothing really new to them. And while alternative energy and conservation may not be able to completely rescue us from the over-indulgent lifestyle we cannot sustain, these are important things for them to know, for they will help, either large or small scale, and they can be taught with hope and fun.
I taught a lesson that was very powerful, and I plan on doing it again about resource distribution. We had all of the 5th grade classes together (about 60 kids) and I brought out a HUGE cake that my baker brother had made. I passed out colored slips of paper and the kids grouped themselves accordingly. I showed them a world population pie chart and pointed out that they were grouped the same way. So, if there were 4/60 Americans and Canadians, there were 36/60 Asians, 6/60 Europeans, etc. I asked them how we should split up the cake; of course they said proportionately. I showed them a second pie chart showing the ratio of resource consumption as it actually is and announced we'd be splitting the cake that way. So those four N. Americans received about 25% of this giant cake, while the Africans and Asians received what amounted to a small bite or two each. Kids this age have a high regard for "fairness", so of course this was rather upsetting.
I separated the groups into different rooms for discussion and deliberation about how they would divide their part of the cake, and it was so interesting. In the end, while a couple of the rich nation kids gorged themselves, most shared with the poorer countries. Their impulse to fairness led them to want to be generous. I made sure to point out that this was a very simplified demonstration, that I was not trying to sell them on a worldwide communist system. It opened up their eyes to the enormous inequity and wastefulness in the world. It launched further discussions at school and at home -- about corrupt dictators who get rich from our good will donations, about how we can be generous in ways that truly help people, etc. One girl asked me about how her family could sponsor a child in another country.
Another piece of this that I'd like your feedback on is finding ways to teach them that some traditional or low-tech activities/skills can bring them more pleasure in life than the mountains of gadgetry and years they will otherwise spend in the front of the glowing screen of TV. I've read on these boards about mental/psychological strength to weather the coming storms. Kids today are so saturated in media and high tech toys that they really see no other pleasure in life, despite it being rather empty in the end, IMHO. It is such a lie that everyone has just accepted. Rather than ranting about it in a negative way, I want to expose them to the fun they can have doing simpler, low-tech things. Give kids a chance and they LOVE gardening, examining the soil for insects, etc. Many of them also love to cook, maybe because it is such a novelty in their lives (they've never seen anyone do more than reheating before). Nobody gives kids a chance to build things on their own. (It's interesting...the very popular "Dangerous Book for Boys/Girls" books were given to a lot of my students last year, but I wonder how many parents showed their kid how to use a few hand tools -- if they own any -- to let them actually build or create anything on their own.)
Thanks again for all of the great thoughts and ideas.
Warm Regards,
Steven Slaughter
Chicago