Affifi R. R. (2011) What weston’s spider and my shorebirds might mean for bateson’s mind: Some educational wanderings in interspecies curricula. Canadian Journal of Environmental Education 16: 46–58. https://cepa.info/999
Affifi R. R.
(
2011)
What weston’s spider and my shorebirds might mean for bateson’s mind: Some educational wanderings in interspecies curricula.
Canadian Journal of Environmental Education 16: 46–58.
Fulltext at https://cepa.info/999
Education has institutionalized a process that reifies cultures, ecological communities, and ultimately evolution itself. This enclosure has lessened our sensitivity to the pedagogical (eteragogical) nature of our lived relations with other people and with other living beings. By acknowledging that learning and teaching go on between species, humans can regain an eteragogical sense of the interspecies curricula within which they exist. This article explores interspecies lived curricula through a selection of ideas from ecopragmatist Anthony Weston, and cybernetician Gregory Bateson, and through lived experiences with shorebirds of Lake Ontario. Some gulls and a tern teach the author to enrich and diversify, rather than constrict, the potentiality of life. In so doing, being ecological and being educative become unified concepts. Relevance: The publication is concerned with the relational implications between humans and other species of Bateson’s cybernetic theory of learning.

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