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Diversified Thinkers: Diversified World

Tralfamadorian's picture

 

 

When we are babies we learn language by mimicking the sounds we hear our parents say. As children, we are caricatures of the environment that we are growing up in. If as humans, we learn and grow by mimicking our environment it can be argued that by learning about and experiencing other cultures we are able to diversify our understanding of the world.   Ecological Intelligence is about the world not just the environment, we must foster relationships between different cultures and environments in order to grow and diversify as a world community.

            If you live in the city and do not have access to a vast amount of trees how do you learn about trees?  In a Western Society like ours we would probably google it, or watch a documentary. As children we all watched The Magic School Bus and from that some of us developed an early interest in science. We are mimicking what we see on TV and the internet and sometimes that is a great thing. Where this becomes problematic is when there is no representation within the media. Junot Diaz makes an eloquent comment about representation in the media, “You guys know about vampires? … You know, vampires have no reflections in a mirror? There’s this idea that monsters don’t have reflections in a mirror. And what I’ve always thought isn’t that monsters don’t have reflections in a mirror. It’s that if you want to make a human being into a monster, deny them, at the cultural level, any reflection of themselves.” When People of color, People that fall on the LGBTQ+ spectrum, and people with disabilities are not represented in the media, or are represented negatively we -as a society- create them into monsters.As a result they are not only ashamed of their selves but we as a society are afraid of

 

them.This causes major problems for improving our ecological intelligence. Without diversity in the media how will people who are underrepresented ever going to have a voice.

             Bruno Latour stresses the importance of knowing how to tell our common geostory. I think that if we are trying to tell this common geostory in the most accurate way we cannot let only a select set of people tell the story. An example of how letting a few people tell the story could be problematic is in Naomi Kline’s article about the Paris climate change conference. During this conference people were not allowed to protest due to the recent Paris attacks. Protesting is often the only outlet that people have access to. Without protests only the government officials have a platform in these official climate change conferences. This is not right. Not having the right to protest is in a way devaluing the common people’s opinions. This idea of a one sided story is not a new concept, the age old saying of “history is told by the winners,” did not start from nowhere.  This is saying that if you are not a part of a certain group your voice and your story do not matter. Ecological Intelligence does not work when it is told from one point of view. 

Paulo Frier talks about the importance of teaching people in a way they will understand. When Frier was a Portuguese school teacher he never taught students reading and writing with the syntactical charts utilized in most classrooms. Instead, Frier taught by using living experiences. This is not only more engaging for students, but also incredibly beneficial in the way that they view the world. There is an argument that learning in general should be interdisciplinary. If we talked about the environment in more ways than just regards to the environment we would reach more people with this cause. Too often the topic of the environment and climate change is approached with the idea of economics in mind. Instead of focusing on topical issues as solitary problems we as a community need to be able to look at each as intertwined.

At a liberal arts college, like Bryn Mawr interdisciplinary learning is both stressed and encouraged. A great example of this is ESEM. We not only practice improving our writing skills, but we also focus on topical issues going on all over the world. This type of learning should be stressed in every school, not only in colleges. It helps students become more informed, worldly learners. If we do not know how to talk about issues we will never grow as individuals and we most certainly will not grow as a world community. Educators and learners all over agree that our education system is flawed, and that there needs to be changes to improve the state of it. This system of interdisciplinary learning could be the start of that change. There are charter schools who already implement this type of learning, and it’s working to help children learn about topical issues, and to make informed opinions on them. This type of learning in practice could help create diverse thinkers all over the world. So often we wear a lens that is tainted by our own experiences. Though there is nothing wrong with this, we as a society should be able to have more than one lens. These lenses would help us as community grow and be able to have more conversations about all of the issues in the world. If we only wear our own tainted lens it is probable that we will step on other’s feet. This would help us as a community grows, if we know more about the world in context of our own experience it is easier to have constructive conversations about issues going on in our world and how to best solve them in a way that would be equally fair to everyone.