What Is Education For?
Six myths about the foundations of modern education,
and six new principles to replace them
by David Orr
One of the articles in The Learning Revolution (IC#27) Winter 1991, Page 52
Copyright (c)1991, 1996 by Context Institute
We are accustomed to thinking of learning as good in and of itself. But
as environmental educator David Orr reminds us, our education up till now
has in some ways created a monster. This essay is adapted from his commencement
address to the graduating class of 1990 at Arkansas College. It prompted
many in our office to wonder why such speeches are made at the end, rather
than the beginning, of the collegiate experience.
David Orr is the founder of the Meadowcreek Project, an environmental
education center in Fox, AR, and is currently on the faculty of Oberlin
College in Ohio. Reprinted from Ocean Arks International's excellent quarterly
tabloid Annals of Earth, Vol. VIII, No. 2, 1990. Subscriptions $10/year
from 10 Shanks Pond Road, Falmouth, MA 02540.
If today is a typical day on planet Earth, we will lose 116 square miles
of rainforest, or about an acre a second. We will lose another 72 square
miles to encroaching deserts, as a result of human mismanagement and overpopulation.
We will lose 40 to 100 species, and no one knows whether the number is 40
or 100. Today the human population will increase by 250,000. And today we
will add 2,700 tons of chlorofluorocarbons to the atmosphere and 15 million
tons of carbon. Tonight the Earth will be a little hotter, its waters more
acidic, and the fabric of life more threadbare.
The truth is that many things on which your future health and prosperity
depend are in dire jeopardy: climate stability, the resilience and productivity
of natural systems, the beauty of the natural world, and biological diversity.
It is worth noting that this is not the work of ignorant people. It is,
rather, largely the result of work by people with BAs, BSs, LLBs, MBAs,
and PhDs. Elie Wiesel made a similar point to the Global Forum in Moscow
last winter when he said that the designers and perpetrators of the Holocaust
were the heirs of Kant and Goethe. In most respects the Germans were the
best educated people on Earth, but their education did not serve as an adequate
barrier to barbarity. What was wrong with their education? In Wiesel's words:
"It emphasized theories instead of values, concepts rather than human
beings, abstraction rather than consciousness, answers instead of questions,
ideology and efficiency rather than conscience."
The same could be said of the way our education has prepared us to think
about the natural world. It is a matter of no small consequence that the
only people who have lived sustainably on the planet for any length of time
could not read, or, like the Amish, do not make a fetish of reading. My
point is simply that education is no guarantee of decency, prudence, or
wisdom. More of the same kind of education will only compound our problems.
This is not an argument for ignorance, but rather a statement that the worth
of education must now be measured against the standards of decency and human
survival - the issues now looming so large before us in the decade of the
1990s and beyond. It is not education that will save us, but education of
a certain kind.
SANE MEANS, MAD ENDS
What went wrong with contemporary culture and with education? There is
some insight in literature: Christopher Marlowe's Faust, who trades his
soul for knowledge and power; Mary Shelley's Dr. Frankenstein, who refuses
to take responsibility for his creation; Herman Melville's Captain Ahab,
who says "All my means are sane, my motive and object mad." In
these characters we encounter the essence of the modern drive to dominate
nature.
Historically, Francis Bacon's proposed union between knowledge and power
foreshadows the contemporary alliance between government, business, and
knowledge that has wrought so much mischief. Galileo's separation of the
intellect foreshadows the dominance of the analytical mind over that part
given to creativity, humor, and wholeness. And in Descartes' epistemology,
one finds the roots of the radical separation of self and object. Together
these three laid the foundations for modern education, foundations now enshrined
in myths we have come to accept without question. Let me suggest six.
First, there is the myth that ignorance is a solvable problem.
Ignorance is not a solvable problem, but rather an inescapable part
of the human condition. The advance of knowledge always carries with it
the advance of some form of ignorance. In 1930, after Thomas Midgely Jr.
discovered CFCs, what had previously been a piece of trivial ignorance became
a critical, life-threatening gap in the human understanding of the biosphere.
No one thought to ask "what does this substance do to what?" until
the early 1970s, and by 1990 CFCs had created a general thinning of the
ozone layer worldwide. With the discovery of CFCs knowledge increased; but
like the circumference of an expanding circle, ignorance grew as well.
A second myth is that with enough knowledge and technology we can
manage planet Earth.. "Managing the planet" has a nice
a ring to it. It appeals to our fascination with digital readouts, computers,
buttons and dials. But the complexity of Earth and its life systems can
never be safely managed. The ecology of the top inch of topsoil is still
largely unknown, as is its relationship to the larger systems of the biosphere.
What might be managed is us: human desires, economies, politics,
and communities. But our attention is caught by those things that avoid
the hard choices implied by politics, morality, ethics, and common sense.
It makes far better sense to reshape ourselves to fit a finite planet than
to attempt to reshape the planet to fit our infinite wants.
A third myth is that knowledge is increasing and by implication human
goodness. There is an information explosion going on, by which I mean
a rapid increase of data, words, and paper. But this explosion should not
be taken for an increase in knowledge and wisdom, which cannot so easily
by measured. What can be said truthfully is that some knowledge is increasing
while other kinds of knowledge are being lost. David Ehrenfeld has pointed
out that biology departments no longer hire faculty in such areas as systematics,
taxonomy, or ornithology. In other words, important knowledge is being lost
because of the recent overemphasis on molecular biology and genetic engineering,
which are more lucrative, but not more important, areas of inquiry. We still
lack the the science of land health that Aldo Leopold called for half a
century ago.
It is not just knowledge in certain areas that we're losing, but vernacular
knowledge as well, by which I mean the knowledge that people have of their
places. In the words of Barry Lopez:
"[I am] forced to the realization that something strange, if not
dangerous, is afoot. Year by year the number of people with firsthand experience
in the land dwindles. Rural populations continue to shift to the cities....
In the wake of this loss of personal and local knowledge, the knowledge
from which a real geography is derived, the knowledge on which a country
must ultimately stand, has come something hard to define but I think sinister
and unsettling."
In the confusion of data with knowledge is a deeper mistake that learning
will make us better people. But learning, as Loren Eiseley once said, is
endless and "In itself it will never make us ethical [people]."
Ultimately, it may be the knowledge of the good that is most threatened
by all of our other advances. All things considered, it is possible that
we are becoming more ignorant of the things we must know to live well and
sustainably on the Earth.
A fourth myth of higher education is that we can adequately restore
that which we have dismantled. In the modern curriculum we have fragmented
the world into bits and pieces called disciplines and subdisciplines. As
a result, after 12 or 16 or 20 years of education, most students graduate
without any broad integrated sense of the unity of things. The consequences
for their personhood and for the planet are large. For example, we routinely
produce economists who lack the most rudimentary knowledge of ecology. This
explains why our national accounting systems do not subtract the costs of
biotic impoverishment, soil erosion, poisons in the air or water, and resource
depletion from gross national product. We add the price of the sale of a
bushel of wheat to GNP while forgetting to subtract the three bushels of
topsoil lost in its production. As a result of incomplete education, we've
fooled ourselves into thinking that we are much richer than we are.
Fifth, there is a myth that the purpose of education is that of giving
you the means for upward mobility and success. Thomas Merton once identified
this as the "mass production of people literally unfit for anything
except to take part in an elaborate and completely artificial charade."
When asked to write about his own success, Merton responded by saying that
"if it so happened that I had once written a best seller, this was
a pure accident, due to inattention and naiveté, and I would take
very good care never to do the same again." His advice to students
was to "be anything you like, be madmen, drunks, and bastards of every
shape and form, but at all costs avoid one thing: success."
The plain fact is that the planet does not need more "successful"
people. But it does desperately need more peacemakers, healers, restorers,
storytellers, and lovers of every shape and form. It needs people who live
well in their places. It needs people of moral courage willing to join the
fight to make the world habitable and humane. And these needs have little
to do with success as our culture has defined it.
Finally, there is a myth that our culture represents the pinnacle
of human achievement: we alone are modern, technological, and developed.
This, of course, represents cultural arrogance of the worst sort, and a
gross misreading of history and anthropology. Recently this view has taken
the form that we won the cold war and that the triumph of capitalism over
communism is complete. Communism failed because it produced too little at
too high a cost. But capitalism has also failed because it produces too
much, shares too little, also at too high a cost to our children and grandchildren.
Communism failed as an ascetic morality. Capitalism failed because it destroys
morality altogether. This is not the happy world that any number of feckless
advertisers and politicians describe. We have built a world of sybaritic
wealth for a few and Calcuttan poverty for a growing underclass. At its
worst it is a world of crack on the streets, insensate violence, anomie,
and the most desperate kind of poverty. The fact is that we live in a disintegrating
culture. In the words of Ron Miller, editor of Holistic Review:
"Our culture does not nourish that which is best or noblest in
the human spirit. It does not cultivate vision, imagination, or aesthetic
or spiritual sensitivity. It does not encourage gentleness, generosity,
caring, or compassion. Increasingly in the late 20th Century, the economic-technocratic-statist
worldview has become a monstrous destroyer of what is loving and life-affirming
in the human soul."
WHAT EDUCATION MUST BE FOR
Measured against the agenda of human survival, how might we rethink education?
Let me suggest six principles.
First, all education is environmental education. By what is included
or excluded we teach students that they are part of or apart from the natural
world. To teach economics, for example, without reference to the laws of
thermodynamics or those of ecology is to teach a fundamentally important
ecological lesson: that physics and ecology have nothing to do with the
economy. That just happens to be dead wrong. The same is true throughout
all of the curriculum.
A second principle comes from the Greek concept of paideia. The
goal of education is not mastery of subject matter, but of one's person.
Subject matter is simply the tool. Much as one would use a hammer and chisel
to carve a block of marble, one uses ideas and knowledge to forge one's
own personhood. For the most part we labor under a confusion of ends and
means, thinking that the goal of education is to stuff all kinds of facts,
techniques, methods, and information into the student's mind, regardless
of how and with what effect it will be used. The Greeks knew better.
Third, I would like to propose that knowledge carries with it the
responsibility to see that it is well used in the world. The results
of a great deal of contemporary research bear resemblance to those foreshadowed
by Mary Shelley: monsters of technology and its byproducts for which no
one takes responsibility or is even expected to take responsibility. Whose
responsibility is Love Canal? Chernobyl? Ozone depletion? The Valdez oil
spill? Each of these tragedies were possible because of knowledge created
for which no one was ultimately responsible. This may finally come to be
seen for what I think it is: a problem of scale. Knowledge of how to do
vast and risky things has far outrun our ability to use it responsibly.
Some of it cannot be used responsibly, which is to say safely and to consistently
good purposes.
Fourth, we cannot say that we know something until we understand the
effects of this knowledge on real people and their communities. I grew
up near Youngstown, Ohio, which was largely destroyed by corporate decisions
to "disinvest" in the economy of the region. In this case MBAs,
educated in the tools of leveraged buyouts, tax breaks, and capital mobility
have done what no invading army could do: they destroyed an American city
with total impunity on behalf of something called the "bottom line."
But the bottom line for society includes other costs, those of unemployment,
crime, higher divorce rates, alcoholism, child abuse, lost savings, and
wrecked lives. In this instance what was taught in the business schools
and economics departments did not include the value of good communities
or the human costs of a narrow destructive economic rationality that valued
efficiency and economic abstractions above people and community.
My fifth principle follows and is drawn from William Blake. It has to
do with the importance of "minute particulars" and the power
of examples over words. Students hear about global responsibility while
being educated in institutions that often invest their financial weight
in the most irresponsible things. The lessons being taught are those of
hypocrisy and ultimately despair. Students learn, without anyone ever saying
it, that they are helpless to overcome the frightening gap between ideals
and reality. What is desperately needed are faculty and administrators who
provide role models of integrity, care, thoughtfulness, and institutions
that are capable of embodying ideals wholly and completely in all of their
operations.
Finally, I would like to propose that the way learning occurs is as
important as the content of particular courses. Process is important
for learning. Courses taught as lecture courses tend to induce passivity.
Indoor classes create the illusion that learning only occurs inside four
walls isolated from what students call without apparent irony the "real
world." Dissecting frogs in biology classes teaches lessons about nature
that no one would verbally profess. Campus architecture is crystallized
pedagogy that often reinforces passivity, monologue, domination, and artificiality.
My point is simply that students are being taught in various and subtle
ways beyond the content of courses.
AN ASSIGNMENT FOR THE CAMPUS
If education is to be measured against the standard of sustainability,
what can be done? I would like to make four propsals. First, I would like
to propose that you engage in a campus-wide dialogue about the way you conduct
your business as educators. Does four years here make your graduates better
planetary citizens or does it make them, in Wendell Berry's words, "itinerant
professional vandals"? Does this college contribute to the development
of a sustainable regional economy or, in the name of efficiency, to the
processes of destruction?
My second suggestion is to examine resource flows on this campus: food,
energy, water, materials, and waste. Faculty and students should together
study the wells, mines, farms, feedlots, and forests that supply the campus
as well as the dumps where you send your waste. Collectively, begin a process
of finding ways to shift the buying power of this institution to support
better alternatives that do less environmental damage, lower carbon dioxide
emissions, reduce use of toxic substances, promote energy efficiency and
the use of solar energy, help to build a sustainable regional economy, cut
long-term costs, and provide an example to other institutions. The results
of these studies should be woven into the curriculum as interdisplinary
courses, seminars, lectures, and research. No student should graduate without
understanding how to analyze resource flows and without the opportunity
to participate in the creation of real solutions to real problems.
Third, reexamaine how your endowment works. Is it invested according
to the Valdez principles? Is it invested in companies doing responsible
things that the world needs? Can some part of it be invested locally to
help leverage energy efficiency and the evolution of a sustainable economy
throughout the region?
Finally, I propose that you set a goal of ecological literacy for all
of your students. No student should graduate from this or any other educational
institution without a basic comprehension of:
- the laws of thermodynamics
- the basic principles of ecology
- carrying capacity
- energetics
- least-cost, end-use analysis
- how to live well in a place
- limits of technology
- appropriate scale
- sustainable agriculture and forestry
- steady-state economics
- environmental ethics
Do graduates of this college, in Aldo Leopold's words, know that "they
are only cogs in an ecological mechanism such that, if they will work with
that mechanism, their mental wealth and material wealth can expand indefinitely
(and) if they refuse to work with it, it will ultimately grind them to dust."
Leopold asked: "If education does not teach us these things, then what
is education for?"
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