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8.
Salt and vinegar: Education for sustainability in the Murray-Darling
Basin 1983-1998 (includes
Case study: Special Forever - a rural capacity realisation program)
by
David Eastburn ©
July
2001
The environmental
education program, along with the whole MurrayDarling Basin Initiative,
developed as a result of radical changes to management required to comply
with the water quality and environmental components in the River Murray
Waters Agreement amendment of 1982 (implemented in 1984). This amendment
followed the recognition of salinity as a serious issue for the health
of the River Murray, and the viability of the industries, towns and
cities dependent on its water, during the drought of 1967-68. There
was also a realisation that the scale of the problem would require interstate
cooperation.
Responsibility
for improved water quality and environmental health required River Murray
Commission input to the management of land in the catchments surrounding
the rivers and ultimately the integrated management of the whole MurrayDarling
Basin. This requirement was much more complex than the relatively mechanical
process of managing the Murray for water quantity. It led rapidly to
the establishment of the MurrayDarling Basin Ministerial Council
(1985), MurrayDarling Basin Agreement (1987), MurrayDarling
Basin Commission (1988), the Natural Resources Management Strategy (1989)
and the development of the MurrayDarling Basin Initiative to cooperatively
manage the resources of the million square kilometre MurrayDarling
Basin as one unit.
The people
who laid the foundations for the integrated management of the natural
resources of the MurrayDarling Basin, recognised that the future
viability of the region would require the active involvement of its
residents and gaining the support of other Australians. With the exception
of the Snowy Mountains Authoritys desire to gain public support
for its activities (Hudson 1965: Foreword), this represented a major
change in thinking for resources management organisations in Australia,
where access to information and participation in decision making
has never been encouraged by industry or government; in many cases
the public has been seen as an obstacle to be pushed aside by coercive
force if necessary (Bowen, 1994: 12).
Following
fact-finding tours of parts of the MurrayDarling Basin, on 24
August 1983, the bipartisan River Murray Parliamentry Committee (forerunner
of the MurrayDarling Basin Ministerial Council) presented a number
of recommendations and observations to Federal Parliament, of relevance
to a future community education program. It noted that there was a fundamental
deficiency of accessible information about the river system available
to the public and suggested that a cooperative educational approach
be employed in a national campaign to promote greater awareness of the
MurrayDarling Basin. It identified a need to take a long term
view and make all Australians aware of the significance of the MurrayDarling
Basin because should this area be permitted to deteriorate any
further, every Australian will suffer because of the severe impact on
our quality of life
i.e. resource degradation in the region
is ultimately a sociocultural problem of national significance.
The Committee
discussed a fundamental flaw in past attempts by State resource management
authorities to use simplistic technical and structural approaches alone
to address resource use issues:
There
is a tendency, I think, for governments to believe that the only way
to overcome these problems is by regulations, controls and other measures
of that type. We believe ... that we have to put tremendous emphasis
on education. Not only do we need to make every Australian aware of
the national significance of Australias one and only major water
resource but also, within the region itself, the educational program
must be directed to the individual
Connolly
1983
The MurrayDarling
Basin Commissions (MDBC) large scale environmental communication
strategy therefore had its origins in the field of education, which
involves maximising individuals potential to contribute to a sustainable
world, as well as information transfer. Community capacity building
through education would help to tap the Basins greatest resource
its people to more effectively contribute to the management
of their natural resources and to deal with the crisis of sustainability
in their communities:
As
a field of professional practice, environmental education seeks to
develop the understandings, values and action skills necessary for
people to work with others to improve the quality and sustainability
of their natural and social environments. Environmental education
seeks to provide lifelong learning experiences through which people
may take a place in society as informed, committed and active citizens,
who are capable of playing a part in making their society a better
place in which to live by caring about the needs of all species, and
by speaking out against social and ecological injustice.
Fien 1993: vi
Possible
institutional impediments to the effective management of the MurrayDarling
Basin were also discussed by the Committee in Parliament at the time.
These included professional self-interest obstructing alternative approaches,
a bias towards engineering solutions by State authorities,
the tendency to treat the symptoms and not the problem, and delusions
of technocratic superiority excluding public input to decision making.
In 1984,
the River Murray Commission created an education position
in response to the River Murray Parliamentary Committee recommend-ations.
On my appointment to the position, I was informed that in the relatively
near future the organisation was likely to become a Basin Commission.
I was directed to develop foundations on which a long-term, integrated
community environmental education program could be built, according
to the recommendations of the Parliamentary Committee. A key role of
the program was to introduce the residents of the Basin to the concept
of ecologically sustainable development and to assist them into its
debate.
I carried
out extensive consultation with resource management organisations, non-government
organisations and relevant individuals between 1984-1989 to obtain ideas
for the establishment of a large scale environmental education program
for the MurrayDarling Basin and broadly to answer the question:
what has been wrong with our environmental [education] efforts
over the past
years
that they have not worked? (Bowen
1994: 36). This exercise revealed that the traditional use of education
by State resource management bureaucracies, to manage specific short
term situations, would not be adequate for an education program on a
Basin-wide (and national) scale. Consultation supported the River Murray
Parliamentary Committees call for a participative learning process
and suggested the development of a relationship-building education program
informed broadly by the Snowy Mountains Scheme model. It specifically
identified video/television as a key medium to reach both urban and
rural audiences, provide a voice for Basin residents and
scientists, and to facilitate ongoing consultation with the community
and associated government and non-government organisations through the
accessibility which video production provides.
Consultation
also revealed the use of science as the main vehicle for environmental
education in schools to be problematic because of its exclusive nature
and inadequate discussion of the sociocultural aspects of sustainability.
A medium was required that would accept the concept of diversity and
maximise the opportunities for individual participation. It had to be
able to integrate environmental education, science and social science
with communication and also command sufficient status within schools
and society generally to sustain continuity. Most importantly, it had
to be accessible to all who wished to participate. English classes were
to be the vehicle for school environmental education for a sustainable
MurrayDarling Basin. The education program for capacity building
would initially focus on primary schools as this would ensure total
geographic coverage of the Basin. Primary schools are at the centre
of most communities. Overseas research also supported my observations
that middle childhood (approximately 7-11) was a critical period in
a persons life for connecting with the environment.
A generation-long
community education strategy for the MurrayDarling Basin (as recommended
by the River Murray Parliamentary Committee in 1983) was developed in
1989 with the assistance of an Intergovernmental Communication Working
Group (ICWG) and consisted of a cumulative process which would evolve
through three broad, but not exclusive, eight year themes. Stage one
(1990-1998) would be about the MurrayDarling Basin to raise its
profile within the region and to all Australians; Stage two (1998-2006)
would involve relationship-building and human resource development with
communities in the MurrayDarling Basin (capacity building programs
such as Special forever and Reading the Land); and Stage
three (2006-2015) would involve working with empowered and informed
community members for the MurrayDarling Basin. It was anticipated
that this process would achieve the aim:
To
contribute significantly to the achievement of an informed, ecologically
literate, empowered and active community with a Basin (holistic) ethic,
in one generation (2015).
To reach
and involve a diverse audience over a huge geographic area, the ICWG
supported the establishment of a multi-faceted environmental communication
program consisting of a range of print and electronic mediums, events,
the implementation of community education projects and programs, and
the mass media. This decision was vindicated by Malcolm (1992: 33),
who suggested that effective in-depth environmental education depends
on using a wide range of mutually reinforcing educational approaches
in long-running programs. The communication infrastructure and
educational processes were designed to facilitate authentic community
participation and not simply to transfer information for propaganda
and control purposes.
The projects
that the Working Group recommended to commence the long-term education
process included:
- A Conference
of educators and community facilitators to establish a support base
throughout the MurrayDarling Basin;
- A video
program to reach a broad audience, provide two-way communication
between the government and Basin communities, and facilitate ongoing
consultation;
- A travelling
exhibition for initial regional and capital city awareness and team-building.
Communities would have the opportunity to showcase their region and
to tell their story as part of the exhibition;
- A program
to involve primary school children, to ensure the representation of
future generations (an attempt to address the generally hollow policy
of intergenerational equity). It would also achieve extensive geographic
coverage of the MurrayDarling Basin as primary schools are generally
at the centre of communities;
- A well
illustrated book to be written about the MurrayDarling Basin
(a frank assessment of the conditions of the Basins resources).
At the
launch of the Natural Resources Management Strategy for the MurrayDarling
Basin in April 1989, the MurrayDarling Basin Ministerial Council
announced the establishment of a communication and consultation unit
with a strategic role to encourage community understanding, support,
and participation in the MurrayDarling Basin Initiative. One responsibility
highlighted by the Council was to show how local concerns fit
into a broader Basin-wide picture. Funding for the Unit (and the
Community Advisory Committee) was to be provided equally by the governments
and, although administered by the MurrayDarling Basin Commission
office, be clearly identified and separate from Commission office funding.
I applied for and won the position of Director of Communications. The
educational objectives of the Natural Resources Management Strategy
for the MurrayDarling Basin were to promote a stewardship ethic
by increasing the communitys knowledge and appreciation of the
Basins natural and cultural resources; to:
- Develop
community appreciation of environmental and ecological values.
- Develop
community understanding of natural processes.
- Develop
community appreciation of the values of Aboriginal and historic heritage.
A change
in executive staff (significantly with no Snowy Mountains Scheme experience)
introduced the traditional State department perception of a Communications
Unit being arms and legs for the office. The strategic role,
professional status and particularly the scope of the program were contested
from 1990. The community conference, identified by the Intergovernmental
Communication Working Group as the most immediate priority, was vetoed
at an advanced stage of planning and the Group itself disbanded. So
began a process identified by UNESCO (1980: 26, cited in Robottom 1992:
84) as a recourse to technocracy:
The
problems of the environment are indeed complex ones. They involve
numerous parameters and interrelations. Lacking the necessary knowledge
and approaches, individuals admit defeat and hand the problems over
to the specialists. It is in terms such as these that recourse to
technocracy is frequently justified. The result is the abandonment
of any attempt to involve ordinary people, who come to be regarded
as mere operatives or consumers.
While the
momentum developed before this time ensured that most of the proposed
educational activities were implemented (video program, primary school
program and touring exhibition), the overall program was slowed by budget
cuts to strategic activities, pre- and post review decision limbo,
and mandate/policy indecision. The pendulum began its recourse
to technocracy from tremendous emphasis on education.
My research after leaving the Commission identified a clear pattern
that contestation largely related to community capacity building activities.
Commission office support, such as media liaison, speech writing and
information publication (print and electronic) was highly respected
by target audiences. Fortunately, one capacity building strategy, the
primary school Special forever program, survived unscathed;
possibly because it conformed to traditional perceptions of an educational
activity being for children. This case study provided the
opportunity to examine the philosophy and approach proposed for the
overall MurrayDarling Basin Commission environmental communication
strategy in microcosm.
Special
forever refers to a quality sustainable future. It is an inclusive
environmental educationliteracy program, involving activities
that provide primary school children with space and encouragement
to explore, reflect on and to express what is environmentally and socially
important to them. The program, developed in partnership with the Primary
English Teaching Association (PETA), was designed to encourage cooperation
and individual empowerment to enable students to deal with the crisis
of sustainability. It uses life as much as school
education. It is a participatory learning process, whereby students
develop and present their own stories and images about the region for
each other and other Australians, as a contribution to national awareness,
MurrayDarling Basin awareness, personal awareness, problem-solving,
and self-esteem. The general outcome of this process was well expressed
in feedback from Robinvale Consolidated School in Victoria which stated
The result was fantastic. Non-interested writers suddenly became
authors
. Plumwood (1996: 81) suggests that the articulation
of personal experience is a significant learning and emancipatory process:
Many
liberatory educationists ... have emphasised the importance of the
sphere of personal experience
the articulation of personal
experience is a crucial learning resource for the oppressed who are
routinely insulted, ignored or downgraded in dominant styles of education
which aim to create universal forms of knowledge and interchangeability
or uniformity of educational product.
The Special
forever program reached and directly involved hundreds of thousands
of people throughout the MurrayDarling Basin in a participative
learning community to contribute to sustainability. Twenty-five
volunteer Regional Coordinators provided support to more than 1,200
volunteer teachers who involved around 35,000 students and tens of thousands
of community members in the project each year. Volunteer professionals
(journalists, librarians, educators, authors) from the communities involved,
evaluated tens of thousands of pieces of childrens work (every
student who participated) at the school, region and Basin level. The
childrens work was exposed to a range of audiences and some was
selected for inclusion in an annual anthology. The published anthology
was sent to all contributors before the end of the year. These results
provided concrete evidence that a non-hierarchical voluntary community
process based on relationship-building could be highly efficient, effective
and enduring.
The Special
forever program was to have been complemented by a second large
scale community environmental education-capacity building program called
Reading the Land. It was designed to encourage all members
of communities throughout the MurrayDarling Basin to actively
participate in the transformation to a sustainable society. Initially
this was to involve a stocktake and celebration of the human
and environmental assets of each region and then showcasing it to other
Australians. It was proposed that the program would focus on the 19
Integrated Catchment Management (ICM) Regions in the Basin, which approximate
bioregions, and would involve a close association with local government.
Bioregions are areas with common geographic characteristics such as
watersheds, soils, climate, native plants and animals, and common human
cultural practices. Reading the Land was designed to assist
residents to relate to their bioregions.
During
1992-1996, in an attempt to regain professional status for members of
the Communications Unit, and to gain legitimacy for large scale public
environmental education, the Unit entered national and state environmental
and communication awards. Seven prestigious awards were received (including
Vision for Australia, Banksia, and Landcare) for the whole communication
strategy; specific areas such as electronic media and educational publishing;
and for specific programs such as Special forever, Video,
and Adult Learning Circles. However, none of the traditional measures
of program success such as positive peer review, demonstrated
effectiveness, positive community feedback, demonstrated initiative,
innovation, productivity, or value-adding appeared to be visible
to management.
The manifestation
of these tensions, in the case of the role, scope and status of environmental
education in the MurrayDarling Basin Initiative, is well expressed
in the following quotation:
These
problems pertain to the inbuilt contradictions of a social order which
appears to be saying Lord make us truly green but not
just yet, and a situation where society simultaneously expects
environmental education to nurture fundamental social change whilst
effectively constraining both the critical aspects of environmental
education and the overall education context within which it operates.
Sterling 1993: 73
Persistence
in attempts to nurture fundamental social change by the
Communications Unit ultimately resulted in the expulsion of its members.
In 1998, all five members of the Unit were forced to take involuntary
redundancies as a business decision (Blackmore pers comm
7/5/98) to make way for additional technical staff. I suggest that this
action was largely a political statement. It sent a powerful message
in a capitalist society loss of career, family income, and to
some extent identity to deter any further perceived threats to
the technocratic status quo, from sociocultural professions. It appears
to support the prediction by Fien and Trainer (1993: 41) that Strenuous
resistance to the transition [to an ecologically sustainable society]
is predictable as it constitutes a death sentence for the established
world order.
Fortunately,
a rapid and coordinated political response from community supporters
of Special forever, and the partnership with PETA, enabled
that program to survive.
Conclusion
The
more we study the major problems of our time, the more we come to
realize that they cannot be understood in isolation. They are systemic
problems, which means that they are interconnected and interdependent.
Capra 1997: 3
In April
1970, at the Australian Academy of Science conference on Education and
the Environmental Crisis, Stephen Boyden argued that:
The
suggestion that all our problems will be solved through further scientific
research is not only foolish, but in fact dangerous
the environmental
changes of our time have arisen out of the tremendous intensification
of the interaction between cultural and natural processes. They can
neither be considered as problems to be left to the natural scientists,
nor as problems to be left to those concerned professionally with
the phenomena of culture
all sections of the community have a
role to play, certain key groups have, at the present time, a special
responsibility.
This message is even more relevant today than it was 30 years ago because
such painfully slow progress has been made in the development of the
sociocultural aspects of sustainability. Woodhill and Roling (1998)
suggest that the sociocultural and the biophysical aspects of ecologically
sustainable development are like the two wings of a sustainability eagle
which has not been able to take off to date because it has only been
flapping its technological wing to address the biophysical
symptoms. If the eagle is not to continue to flap in circles
on the ground, its sociocultural wing must be strengthened (through
capacity building programs and resources) to match its technological
wing.
My research
and experience reveal that some of the greatest impediments to the achievement
of sustainable resource use and sustainable communities in the MurrayDarling
Basin are institutional rather than logistical:
the scientific/technocratic/managerial paradigm
is not a neutral,
detached, objective process but is highly political. Its politics
are those of preservation of the status quo
of dynamic
stability in the face of change.
Robottom
and Hart 1993: 51
The MurrayDarling Basin Commission, like most bureaucracies, is
locked into a mechanistic worldview but it has been given a task that
cannot be achieved through an industrial model and a technical
knowledge base alone. However, since 1990 it has tended to deny the
sociocultural aspects of sustainability. An informed and involved community
appears generally to be seen by management bureaucracies as threat rather
than an asset, despite 'government-community partnership' rhetoric:
The
vast majority of thought about a sustainable society
has to do
with hardware. I think it is time to ask about the software of sustainability
as well, and thus about the qualities people will need to build and
maintain a durable civilisation.
David
Orr 1992
Sustainability
is about investing in the future of our land and its people. The relative
lack of investment in individual and community capacity building means
that the residents of the MurrayDarling Basin are being prevented
from even a fighting chance of dealing with the crisis
of sustainability in their communities, despite their great potential
to do so.
References
Bowen,
J. 1994. The Imperative for Environment Education in Bowen,
J. (ed) Environment Education-Imperatives for the 21st Century, James
Nicholas, Albert Park.
Boyden,
S. 1970. Environmental change: Perspectives and responsibilities.
In Jeremy Evans and Stephen Boyden (eds) Education and the Environmental
Crisis. Australian Academy of Sciences, Canberra: 9-22.
Capra,
F. 1997. The Web of Life. Harper Collins, London.
Connolly,
D. 1983. River Murray Waters Amendment Bill - second reading
in House of Representatives Hansard 24 August. Commonwealth of Australia,
Canberra: 151-156.
Curtis,
A. 1995. Landcare in Australia: a critical review. Albury: Johnstone
Centre of Parks, Recreation and Heritage, Report No. 33, Charles Sturt
University.
Fien,
J., 1993. Education for the Environment - Critical Curriculum Theorising
and Environmental Education. Deakin University, Geelong.
Fien,
J., and Trainer, T. 1993. A Vision of Sustainability in
Environmental Education: A Pathway to Sustainability? Deakin University,
Geelong, PP. 24-42.
Hudson,
W. 1965. Foreword, Conducting Officers Manual,Snowy Mountains
Authority, Cooma, New South Wales.
Jacobi,
R. 1983. River Murray Waters Amendment Bill - second reading
in House of Representatives Hansard 24 August. Commonwealth of Australia,
Canberra:
190-194.
Malcolm,
S. 1992. Education for Ecologically Sustainable Development. Victorian
Environmental Education Council, Occasional Paper 1.
Martin,
P. 1998. Democracy Matters, Life Matters, ABC Radio National,
2 November.
Nancarrow,
B.E., Casella, F., Syme, G. J., and Bishop, B. J. 1993. A Report on
the Major Issues Arising from Discussions with the Regional Communities,
MurrayDarling Basin Commission Irrigation Management Strategy
Public Involvement Program Stage 2. Consultancy Report No. 93/22, Australian
Research Centre for Water in Society, CSIRO, Canberra.
Orr,
D. 1992. Ecological Literacy: Education and the Transition to a Post
Modern World. State University of New York Press, Albany.
Plumwood,
V. 1996. Environmental Education, Liberatory Education and Place-Sensitive
Narrative in Jickling, R. (ed) A Colloquium on Environment, Ethics,
and Education, Yukon, Canada.
Robottom,
I. 1992. Towards inquiry-based professional development in environmental
education in Robottom (ed) Environmental Education: Practice and
Possibility. Deakin University, Geelong.
Robottom,
I and Hart, P. 1993. Research in Environmental Education-Engaging
the Debate. Deakin University, Geelong.
Sterling,
S. 1993. Environmental Education and Sustainability: A View from
Holistic Ethics in Fien, J., Environmental Education: A Pathway
to Sustainability? Deakin University, Geelong.
Woodhill,
J., and Roling, N. 1998. The second wing of the eagle: the human
dimension in learning our way to more sustainable futures. In
Roling and Wagemakers
(eds), Facilitating Sustainable Agriculture. Participatory learning
and adaptive management in times of environmental uncertainty, Cambridge
University Press, Cambridge: 46-72.
Case
study: 'Special Forever' a rural capacity realisation program
Ideally,
environmental education should involve students, teachers and community
agencies in collaborative investigations of real environmental issues
in their local environments.
Robottom and Hart 1993: 24
'Special
forever' is another way of saying 'a quality sustainable future'. The
'Special forever' environmental education-literacy program involves
children discussing, writing and producing artwork about what is environmentally
and socially important to them. This takes place in primary school English
classes throughout the MurrayDarling Basin. The work is shared
with local communities, with other primary school children, and sometimes
with regional and national audiences through a range of publications,
and radio and television exposure. It is an effective and just way for
children to contribute to the creation of a picture of the vast MurrayDarling
Basin and to establish links and empathy with distant parts as well
as with their local areas. The education process is based on participative
learning and has a socially-critical orientation:
Critical
pedagogy empowers students by drawing upon their own cultural resources
as a basis for engaging in the development of new skills and interrogating
existing knowledge claims. It helps them to interpret their everyday
realities and facilitates the consideration of possible alternatives
which are more humane, just and equitable.
Sultana 1989
'Special
forever' commenced in 1993 as a partnership between the MurrayDarling
Basin Commission (MDBC) and the Primary English Teaching Association
(PETA) to broadly address the following:
- the
difficulty for individuals to perceive and relate to the vast MurrayDarling
Basin;
- the
perceived need to help prepare rural primary school children, as possibly
the most vulnerable members of Australian society to the impacts of
resources degradation, for sustainable ways of living. (Developing
'survival' skills critical thinking, holistic thinking, self-esteem,
self-reliance but the ability to work as a team member, scientific
and local knowledge to produce informed responses, and effective communication);
- the
apparent inadequacy in the traditional (logical) use of
science as the primary vehicle for environmental education. The need
for the discussion of sociocultural as well as technical aspects of
unsustainable resources use and unsustainable communities in rural
Australia;
- the
perceived poor literacy standards as a major concern in rural areas
and ultimately an impediment to the achievement of ecologically sustainable
development (ESD);
- apparent
institutionalised intergenerational inequity; and
- the
apparent general lack of preparedness of individuals and communities
in the MDB to deal with the 'crisis of sustainability, the fit between
humanity and its habitat
the terms and conditions of human survival
'(Orr
1992).
Since that
time, this voluntary program has involved more than 50% of all primary
schools in the million square kilometre MurrayDarling Basin. It
generally involves 30-38 000 children each year and was a key component
in the MurrayDarling Basin Commissions multi-faceted communication
strategy designed to contribute to the achievement of environmental
and sociocultural sustainability in the MurrayDarling Basin. It
is the only remaining element of the generation-long environmental education
community capacity realisation strategy which was abandoned as
a business decision in 1998 (after only eight years) in
order to provide additional technical staff for MDBC office activities.
This program only survived because of community protest from throughout
the Basin, vindicating one of the primary purposes of education in a
democracy which is to show individuals how they can function together
in society (Saul 1997: 142).
Special
forever places education into an ecological model which integrates
personal experience/local knowledge and formal school learning.
It establishes children as part of a learning community working towards
a more sustainable future by helping to release their intellectual and
emotional energy. It enables investigations of local environmental and
social concerns. While guidelines, themes and other support are provided;
the great strength of the program is its flexibility. Its implementation
is left up to the imaginations and local knowledge of teachers as the
experts in this area. The primary emphasis of the program is on the
educational process (dialogue/ communication) rather than specific environmental
knowledge or other prescribed content transfer (Robottom and Hart 1993:
70).
Celebrating
diversity
The
principle of diversity maintains that there is not necessarily just
one answer, or one right way of doing things, and so encourages a
range of responses.
Ife 1995: 46
The ability
to accommodate and celebrate diversity is one of the great strengths
of Special forever as it encourages participation, enriches
the appreciation of the MurrayDarling Basin and local assets,
and assists with problem-solving. The tendency in our society to seek
the right or best answer and then to impose it universally (Ife1995:47)
largely excludes opportunities for discussion, interpretation and may
stifle creativity.
Diversity
is one of the main principles of ecology and sustainability. Diversity
and flexibility enable ecosystems to survive disturbances and adapt
to changing conditions (Capra 1997: 293). Broomfield (1997: 224) suggests
that diversity gives communities alternative ways to grow
but the price of diversity is periodic disagreement and contention.
Special forever participants are encouraged to present their
own experiences, values, local solutions and ways of doing things. The
encouragement of initiative in communication and problem-solving was
the reason for the establishment of the Black Cockatoo Award which has
become the most coveted Special forever award. Difference
rather than uniformity is valued (Ife 1995:47).
The
power of personal experience
Plumwood
(1996: 81) suggests that the articulation of personal experience is
a significant learning and emancipatory process and that personal
experience which is devalued in institutional and universalising models
is crucially important in establishing ecologically-sensitive relationships
to place(1996: 83).
Children
learn a lot about their own areas through involvement in Special
forever. They also gain satisfaction from sharing their knowledge
because it is valuable to others, and they enjoy hearing about activities
and other parts of the region from children of their own age. The children
are the experts in this program (Shipway 1998). Similar
sentiments were expressed during a television interview by Linda Marsh
when commenting on a detailed hazard-type board game produced
by her son (tvED program, Open Training and Education Network, SBS,
23 October 1995). She explained that through the process of developing
the game he had learned a lot about making a living from a grazing property
north-west of Bourke in far western NSW. She and her husband had been
amazed at the local knowledge that their son had retained. She also
enjoyed seeing her son working closely with his father and gained satisfaction
from the interest that the local community had shown in the project
because it articulated their lifestyles.
A participatory
action research approach to environmental education evolved as an integral
part of the Special forever program. It aims to produce
knowledge and action that is directly useful to a group of people through
research, education, and sociopolitical action. It also seeks to empower
people to a deeper level through the process of constructing and
using their own knowledge (Reason 1994, in Denzin and Lincoln
eds: 328).
Personal
awareness and self-esteem are identified as essential to empowerment
and participation in social action for the environment (Knapp and Goodman
1981 in Fien 1993: 48; Malone 1996: 103). Ison (1993: 98) also points
out that it is increasingly recognised that a form of metaphorical
analysis can provide great insights into organisational culture and
can be used to process change.
The Special
forever project encourages cooperation and individual empowerment
to assist students to deal with the crisis of sustainability.
Sterling (1993: 73) supports this view with the suggestion that whether
a future marked by disaster or true sustainability and equity lies ahead,
the need for self-directed people will be paramount. The following
statement from Sterling (1996: 200) about the characteristics of education
for sustainability could have been written to describe Special
forever:
The
emphasis is on capability and confidence-building, participation,
ownership, empowerment and the generation of meaning
Participants
perceptions, values and concerns are the starting point for any change
and people feel themselves to be the initiators and owners
of such change. The process is inherently flexible and integrative.
The role of the centre is facilitation
This approach is education
for sustainability, or more radically perhaps education
as sustainability.
Maintaining
a profile for rural Australia - keeping the song alive
...
we would do well to remember the Aboriginal axiom that all land has
a song which is the story of the people in that land.
If the song is lost that land becomes a barren waste without life
and without meaning.
Forrest 1990: 26
To be forgotten
by being out of sight and out of mind can be as great a
disaster for the environment and communities as the high profile problems
of salinity, blue-green algae or the invasion of carp in our rivers.
It is also important that rural people are not excluded from the sustainability
agenda by having it depoliticised and presented as a technical issue
to be dealt with by government experts.
The skills
and processes that children learn through their involvement in Special
forever give them a voice and enable them to make
authentic contributions to the sustainability of their communities and
local environments. Their writing, artwork and communication skills,
and an awareness of how to go about getting their voices heard, can
help to overcome the disempowerment that many rural and regional communities
currently feel. Special forever writing and other activities
not only keep the story of the MurrayDarling Basin alive; they
are significantly adding to it and are helping to maintain a profile
for the region.
The
power of changed perspectives
Changes
in perspective and priority, combined with relationship building in
a socially critical education process, can release enormous emotional,
cognitive and physical energy from children, teachers and other community
members to assist them to better deal with the crisis of sustainability
and participate in the transformation to a sustainable society.
By changing
perspectives and priorities to give students, teachers and community
members new experiences, the Special forever program is
emancipatory and transformative. Changing the vehicle for the discussion
of sustainability from science to English classes, for example, enabled
it to be discussed as a sociocultural issue and to be considered holistically,
rather than as a series of isolated technical problems. Significant
emotional and values issues relating to quality of life, the degradation
of natural and cultural resources, and the future can be explored. A
broadening of the audience for childrens work from the classroom
teacher to the local and Basin community, and sometimes the Australian
public, has resulted in increased creativity (Cooper in Andrew and Eastburn
1997: 24). A focus on the MurrayDarling Basin introduced children
to holistic or systemic thinking so that they are encouraged to consider
the impacts of various actions on a whole system and to consider issues
that occur on a scale which is larger than many countries. This is an
important step towards thinking globally (Cooper 1997). The emphasis
of Special forever on process and participation
rather than set content has facilitated dynamism and ownership.
It has made environmental education locally relevant and enabled it
to incorporate local knowledge as well as institutional knowledge.
Special
forever has provided new experiences in many familiar areas. Children
have written their own stories and produced their own images to create
their own culture and history of the MurrayDarling Basin, to complement
the work of professionals, and this has been legitimised through publication.
An inclusive approach to learning exposed a huge amount of hidden
talent within students and community members. The landscape itself
revealed interesting information after the children learned to read
it. Participative learning has tapped a rich resource of community members
who can assist both students and teachers, while themselves benefiting
from the experience. A shift from centrally-determined administrative
priorities for writing, to regional sociocultural child-centred priorities,
has resulted in non-interested writers suddenly becoming authors (Robinvale
Consolidated School, Victoria, 1993).
Special
forever has made what children have to say the priority
for writing. As suggested by Chris Harvey, the principal of Raukkan
Aboriginal School in South Australia, it is not necessary to use lots
of adjectives. You can actually write something factual
and something short and there is a chance that it will be published,
or at least be considered for publication
there is not really
any other avenue for kids to have their work published or be recognised
for it.
Inter-generational
equity insurance policy
Inter-generational
equity involves taking the welfare of future generations into account
in current policy decisions; it forces us to confront the future,
and the future implications of present actions (Ife 1995: 86).
However, Western society tends to discount possible future requirements
in favour of immediate needs and goals. Special forever
could be said to be providing participants with an intergenerational
equity insurance policy.
The program
contributes to the development of a holistic view of the MurrayDarling
Basin, encourages awareness of the significance of local natural and
cultural resources, and facilitates the development of literacy skills.
In addition, an exploration of personal values, confidence in the use
of a variety of communication mediums, critical thinking skills and
improved self esteem are equipping the children with abilities to make
informed decisions and with voices to express them. With
these skills and knowledge, the children of the MurrayDarling
Basin are in a position to protect their own futures through a vernacular
version of bearing witness. Bearing witness is a form of
peaceful protest traditionally associated with the Quaker religion which
involves going to the scene of an objectional activity
and registering opposition to it simply by ones presence there
(Brown and May 1989: 8, cited in Phillips 1995: 10). Greenpeace, the
Australian Conservation Foundation and other environmental organisations
bear witness armed with cameras and tape recorders to send
messages to the wider community about the need for change in environmental
management (Phillips 1995: 10-11).
Learning
to deal with the crisis of sustainability
The
problem [sic] is not to teach skills in a galloping technology, but
to teach students to think and to give them the tools of thought so
that they can react to the myriad changes, including technological,
that will inevitably face them over the next decades.
Saul 1997: 69
The experience
of Special forever is designed to help children to begin
to contextualise situations and to look at alternative solutions to
problems so that they are not forced into the disempowering position
of having to react to agendas to which they have had no input; a situation
which appears to frequently result in a destructive polarisation of
communities. It helps them to appreciate diversity. The crisis of sustainability
requires a cooperative approach and individual reliance. Some of the
best preparation that children can have for the future is space
to explore their own values and their own places, and to have a community
audience to help build self-esteem to enable them to deal
with situations individually or cooperatively.
Self-reliance
and the ability to work as a team in a crisis were valued attributes
of traditional Australian bush culture. These attributes
also contributed to the ANZAC legend about the ability of ordinary Australian
soldiers to organise themselves in the absence of officers in France
and Belgium during World War I. These same attributes are required to
deal with the crisis of sustainability and to achieve a
sustainable future.
The coordinator
for the Albury region of New South Wales suggests that through Special
forever the children learn to deal with topics that they
may not have accessed before, getting away from the strict Science or
Social Studies type of things and into problem solving type activities,
which are related particularly to the environment in their area, or
across the Basin, or across the World (Miller 1997). Cooper (1997)
also suggests that the conceptual framework established by Special
forever for studying the MurrayDarling Basin helps children
to relate to world environmental issues:
now whenever we are talking about [relevant] things we relate them
to the MurrayDarling Basin. We can transfer that to the knowledge
of the rest of the world if you like, in terms of our resources and
sharing the resources even in terms of world peace, thinking
about others and the effects that our actions can have on other people.
The
power of community relationship building for extensive management
The large
scale of the Basin and the large number and diversity of participants
involved in Special forever necessitated the development
of an administrative structure to facilitate a collegial working relationship
to be developed and maintained at a distance. This involved
the identification and development of a network of advocate-experts
in communities throughout the region, ongoing consultation, and relationship
building and maintenance through various communication mediums:
A
network is by definition nonhierarchical. It is a web of connections
among equals. What holds it together is not force, obligation, material
incentive, or social contract, but rather shared values and the understanding
that some tasks can be accomplished together that could never be accomplished
separately.
One
role of local networks is to help re-establish the sense of community
and of relationship to place that has been largely lost since the
Industrial Revolution.
Meadows,
Meadows and Randers 1992:227
The management
model of Special forever demonstrates the efficiency of
a network approach based on relationship building and trust
for a large scale (extensive) program; as opposed to the traditional
(intensive) hierarchical industrial approach based on coercion. From
the equivalent of one funded position (originally with input from five
people) and a small budget for administration and publication costs
(a total of around eight cents per student per week), each year Special
forever reaches, supports and directly involves literally hundreds
of thousands of people throughout the million square kilometre MurrayDarling
Basin.
The learning
community established through the program is involved in quite complex
participative activities to contribute to sustainability, enhance self
esteem and build capacity. Twenty-five volunteer Regional Coordinators
provide support to more than 1,200 volunteer teachers who frequently
involve 35,000 students and tens of thousands of community members in
the project over several weeks each year. The original twenty five Special
forever administrative regions were based, as much as State borders
would allow, on approximate bio/cultural regions of the MDB. These were
arrived at in consultation with National Museum of Australia staff.
In addition,
each year volunteer professionals (journalists, writers, librarians,
teachers, PETA members) from the communities involved in Special
forever evaluate tens of thousands of pieces of childrens
work (every student who participates) at the school, region and Basin
level. At this time, the childrens work is generally also exposed
to a range of audiences (through school publications, displays, local
newspapers, radio, television) in their communities and regions and
some is selected for inclusion in an annual anthology of writing and
artwork from throughout the Basin. An authentic audience
is a key element in the success of this program. The published anthology
is sent to all contributors before the end of the year.
This process
illustrates the capacity and energy within communities throughout the
MurrayDarling Basin when a relevant strategy is put in place to
release it. It demonstrates that programs involving volunteers can operate
to tight timetables, get through a huge amount of work, and add enormous
value ($1.3 m. pa); providing that there is effective relationship-building
and maintenance, that the project is locally relevant (useful),
and it captures the imagination. The creative space given to individual
teachers involved in Special forever has frequently resulted
in outcomes far greater and more creative than could have been anticipated
or prescribed. These successes are shared by the Special forever
learning community which raises standards throughout the region.
Reading the Land a bioregional management, learning
and marketing program
The
landscape is a repository of our culture, as well as a natural resource.
McCann 1992
The Special
forever program was to have been complemented by a second regional
environmental learning capacity realisation program called Reading
the Land as part of an integrated, generation-long program to
work towards a sustainable MurrayDarling Basin. It was an asset-based
regional visioning program designed to involve the majority of community
members throughout the MurrayDarling Basin in activities that
would enable them to actively participate in the transformation to a
sustainable society. This was to involve community members in taking
stock, celebrating, mapping, illustrating and harnessing the natural,
cultural and human resources of their district through participatory
learning activities. Artists and scientists were to be involved to assist
in the process. Residents would then showcase/ market their region to
other Australians and possibly to people in other parts of the world.
Reading
the Land was designed to broadly address the following:
- the
apparent general lack of preparedness of individuals and communities
in the MDB to deal with the crisis of sustainability(Orr
1992);
- the
request from MDB residents to become more ecologically-informed and
therefore more effective partners in the government-community partnership
on which the MDB Initiative is built;
- the
indication that localism (identity and appreciation of local assets)
is a crucial compliment to globalism; and
- the
increasing calls from researchers for the need to view the sustainability
issue from a sociocultural perspective in order to work towards solutions.
The emphasis on technical fixes to symptoms has been repeatedly
demonstrated to be inadequate.
It was
proposed that the program would focus on bioregions and would involve
a close association with local government, industry, community/ service
groups and non-government organisations, in addition to relevant state
and commonwealth departments. Bioregions are areas with common geographic
characteristics such as watersheds, soils, climate, native plants and
animals, and common human cultural practices:
Bioregionalism
can play an invaluable educational role in underscoring the importance
of ecological relationships asking where everything comes from
and where everything goes, learning to become respectful neighbours
with local flora and fauna. This orientation is crucial to the critical
evaluation of existing development decisions.
Eckersley 1992: 35
The combination
of asset-based community capacity realisation and the use of bioregions
as resources management and marketing units would help residents to
understand the metabolism (inputs/ outputs) of their regions,
and especially of urban centres, to assist them to make more ecologically-informed
decisions.
Like Special
forever, the flexibility of the interpretation of reading
the landscape is its greatest strength. The many ways to read
the landscape would enable the project to be adopted by any community
and ensure local relevance and local ownership. The opportunity for
communities to put their own stamp on the project would
ensure varied and exciting outcomes.
Reading
the Landscape has the potential to identify common ground
to facilitate reconciliation between people and the environment; between
urban and rural dwellers; between scientific and local knowledge; between
government and community; and between Western and Aboriginal cultures.
Unfortunately, apparent technocratic insecurity at the time of its proposal
prevented the implementation of this potentially highly constructive
and emancipatory bioregional program.
Conclusion
- preparing children for a finite and globally interconnected world
I
think it is just a wonderful situation that you can link the MurrayDarling
Basin with a literacy function
Here are two things that have
come together superbly and I think that integration is something that
has been an interesting experiment. We dont do it enough in
teaching. We tend to look at things in isolation and never bring two
different spheres together.
Lisle, 1997
Special
forever is a case study of the potential for actively involving
large numbers of people over huge geographical areas in finding ways
to work towards ESD in their own communities through the exploration
of non-traditional perspectives. It is a living program with new approaches
from teachers, children and community members welcomed and constantly
flowing through and enriching it, like a stream with many tributaries.
It involves children in the discovery of their local environments and
resources, and how they fit into larger systems. It helps to address
the dilemma of a centrally-developed curriculum not always being locally
relevant (real) in rural areas, which alienates and disadvantages
many students. The program helps to address Fenshams (1978:68)
concern that the:
central organisation and direction of curriculum tends very much to
isolate school from community, to institutionalise ideas, and to inhibit
the identification of education with the realities of local environmental
situations.
Special
forever reconnects school, community and the local environment,
and prepares children to deal with the crisis of sustainability.
It also provides a new perspective on the role of teachers. It is an
educational process to help prepare children for life in the post-industrial,
global information era. A recent report by the Human Rights and Equal
Opportunities Commission (July 2000) identified Special forever
as a significant model to contribute to improved rural and remote education
throughout Australia:
When
we listen to someones story
it builds trust and leads
to people saying more about their ideas and passions. Without conversation
there is no trust; without trust there is no expression of passion;
without this there is no change
Stewart 1998: 25
Summary
of Outcomes
- Confirmation
of the significance of middle childhood (7-12 years) as a key period
for environmental learning. It supports findings from throughout the
Western world which indicate that middle childhood is a critical
period in the development of the self and in the individuals
relationship to the natural world (Sobel 1993: 52).
- Confirmation
that primary schools identify or are at the centre of most communities,
and therefore the strategic importance of involving them in programs
which must achieve complete geographic coverage.
- Confirmation
of the inadequacy in the traditional (logical) use of
science as the main vehicle for environmental education. Due to its
exclusive nature, science depoliticises issues and prevents the community
dialogue and the presentation of the big picture necessary
to make informed decisions to successfully address the sustainability
problem. People can generally only react to a scientific
approach, they cannot respond to it by using their own
knowledge base. However, the experience of Special forever
frequently generated a greater interest in science because the dialogic
approach helped the students, teachers and community members to appreciate
the place of science in their everyday lives.
- Establishment
of the significance of sharing personal experiences as an effective
way to establish ecologically- sensitive relationships to place and
to build/ realise the capacities of large numbers of people over a
huge geographic area to deal with the crisis of sustainability
and contribute to a sustainable future.
- The
establishment of the potential contribution of the Special forever
program to intergenerational equity by providing children, the future
custodians of the MDB, with the ability to bear witness
against actual or potential environmentally damaging activities. It
is an intergenerational insurance policy for future generations
of MurrayDarling Basin residents.
- Confirmation
of the effectiveness of relationship-based education strategies consisting
of networks of advocateexperts located within communities to
reach and involve (release the energy and local knowledge of) a large,
extensive and diverse audience.
- Confirmation
of the power of changed perspectives for solving institutional problems.
The success of using primary school English classes as the main vehicle
for environmental education.
- Confirmation
of the power of changed perspectives for solving logistical problems.
By using an ecological rather than an industrial education model it
was possible to:
fit environmental education into a crowded school curriculum
by discussing environmental/sustainability issues in English classes;
involve busy teachers in another voluntary activity
by helping to solve some of their problems by providing creative
space, quality support, and an innovative, effective environmental-literacy
program that children enjoyed;
identify and involve advocate-experts located within communities;
minimise out-of-community administration and maximise community
control;
maximise value for money; and
establish a dynamic (living), inclusive and locally relevant
program nurtured by input from participants (students, teachers
and community members), outsideexperts, and the rich
but often overlooked resources of every community.
- Confirmation
of the power of changed perspectives to improve learning. By making
learning inclusive and locally relevant, sharing personal experiences
with authentic audiences, and placing what children have to say before
technical perfection, it is possible to:
improve literacy participation and standards;
achieve greater appreciation of local natural, cultural and
human resources;
achieve greater appreciation of diversity;
raise self-esteem;
encourage critical thinking and creativity;
contribute to self-awareness help individuals to find
their place in society and the world.
- Confirmation
of the effectiveness of participative learning processes the
importance of using the intelligence of the people who make
up society (Saul 1999) for the establishment of ecologically-sensitive
relationships to place, and for community capacity realisation on
a large scale.
- Evidence
of improved morale by teachers, students and community members through
the emancipatory experience of involvement in Special forever.
- Confirmation
that sustainability is ultimately a sociocultural issue should
this area [MDB] be permitted to deteriorate any further, every Australian
will suffer because of the severe impact on our quality of life
(Connolly 1983) but there is an overwhelming imbalance of resources
in favour of the technical and administrative aspects in the MurrayDarling
Basin Initiative. The elevation of the sustainability issue from the
technical domain into the area of power, culture and social relationships
will enable it to be discussed and critiqued to find solutions.
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