Learning to Navigate (in) the Anthropocene
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Summer, the end of another academic year. A couple of colleagues from all over the university are having a meeting of the Network for Sustainability Education, a recently launched initiative at the authors’ university. During the network meeting, a professor in biology takes the word and begins a story about an educational activity he co-supervised. For this activity, students from the natural sciences were put together in an interdisciplinary manner. The students were asked to work on a project in which they had to develop ideas in order to make the shoreline of their country more sustainable. Talking about this activity to the Network, the professor makes clear that it took little effort for the students to start making plans for constructing a more sustainable future shoreline: full passion, they talked about reinforcing the country’s dikes, about anchoring new data cables onto the seabed that should enable more sustainable communications, about improving architecture of the shoreline’s apartments, and about yet a dozen other initiatives. Sharing this story with the Network, the professor makes clear that he was not exactly impressed with his students showcasing so much techno-optimism. “Whereas all that optimism is well-meant”, he says, “it is rather unreflexive and not fully thought-out. I mean, of course they offer technological solutions—they’re natural scientists, after all. So I asked them: What about the life under water? What about these apartments? What do they do to coastal life and how do they shape what it is to live at the country’s coast? What about installing data cables that we will probably never be able to clean up in the future? Doesn’t all that deserve to be taken into account as well?”
2. The Anthropocene
2.1. The Blurring of Distinctions between the Human and the Natural
2.2. Anthropocenic Reconfigurations of Space, Time, and Collectives
3. HESD in the Anthropocene
3.1. The Learning Milieu as Educational Space
3.2. Temporal Rhythms Slowing Down the Present
3.3. Learning through Belonging
4. Discussion: Learning to Navigate (in) the Anthropocene
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Decuypere, M.; Hoet, H.; Vandenabeele, J. Learning to Navigate (in) the Anthropocene. Sustainability 2019, 11, 547. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11020547
Decuypere M, Hoet H, Vandenabeele J. Learning to Navigate (in) the Anthropocene. Sustainability. 2019; 11(2):547. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11020547
Chicago/Turabian StyleDecuypere, Mathias, Hanne Hoet, and Joke Vandenabeele. 2019. "Learning to Navigate (in) the Anthropocene" Sustainability 11, no. 2: 547. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11020547
APA StyleDecuypere, M., Hoet, H., & Vandenabeele, J. (2019). Learning to Navigate (in) the Anthropocene. Sustainability, 11(2), 547. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11020547