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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Learning to survive amidst nested crises: can the coronavirus pandemic help us change educational practices to prepare for the impending eco-crisis?

Hannu L. T. HeikkinenStephen KemmisMervi KaukkoMervi KaukkoNick HaswellTomi Kiilakoski

subject

kriisitpractice architecturesHistoryoppiminenSevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)media_common.quotation_subjectecological crisismedicine.disease_causepandemiatEducationPandemicmedicineNarrativeyhteisöllinen oppiminenCoronavirusmedia_commonkestävä kehitysbusiness.industrykoulutusjärjestelmätCOVID-19EnlightenmentEnvironmental ethicsSocial learningekosysteemit (ekologia)sosiaalinen oppiminensocial learningEnvironmental education5141 Sociologyekokriisit516 Educational sciencesbusinessEcological crisis

description

The ongoing ecological crisis and the more recent Coronavirus crisis challenge the grand narrative of Enlightenment that human beings are ‘masters of nature’. For millennia, human social learning has allowed Homo sapiens to outpace most of our competitor creatures and live a comfortable life, but this competitive success has resulted in cataclysmic failure for the ecosystem. However, people’s unique ability to learn gives us hope that we can overcome the nested crises, or learn to live with them. What is required is not more knowledge, but instead, collective learning to change practices, institutionalized in educational processes. Drawing on the theory of practice architectures, this paper discusses how education can help to form a new generation of children, young people, and adults equipped for the new post-Corona world, and equipped to respond appropriately to the eco-crisis. This requires significant changes to existing arrangements of education systems. What is needed is new practice architectures–new conditions of possibility–under which human beings can learn to live sustainably within the community of life on Earth. acceptedVersion Peer reviewed

https://doi.org/10.1080/13504622.2021.1962809