Showing posts with label place. Show all posts
Showing posts with label place. Show all posts

Thursday, December 16, 2021

Honoring bell hooks

 


Here is a passage from bell hooks' Appalachian Elegy: Poetry and Place

7.

again and again
she calls me
this wilderness within
urging me onward
be here
make a path
where the sound
of ancestors speaks
a language heard beyond the grave
this earth I stand on
belongs to the many dead
treasure I find here
is all gift
tender solace
holding back the future
the dead that will not let us forget
late ones
and even further back
the ancients
dreaming achieving
they will not let us forget
time is aboriginal eternal
they carry us back
take us through the sacred portal
that we may come again then again
into the always present



(hooks, 2012, p. 17)
 
 

Thursday, January 4, 2018

New Online Material: Land and Place as Principal Investigator: Turning the Research Spiral

Dr. Hauk collaborated with three other scholars to generate a briefing paper and slide presentation as part of the 14th Annual Research Symposium of the North American Association of Environmental Education on the topic of "Land and Place as Principal Investigator: Turning the Research Spiral." As a deepening of applying Gaian methods in research, this work explores the rich intersection of converging movements to invert human-centered research approaches. Co-authors included Mandy Leetch, Mandisa Wood, and Rachel Kippen.

The abstract:

Imagine a future in which land and place increasingly serve as co-researchers or principal investigators in environmental and sustainability education research. Land-based pedagogy, critical place inquiry, indigenous knowledge systems and indigenous ways of knowing, feminist materialisms, bioculturally responsive curriculum development, nature as teacher, terrapsychology, living systems ethical research considerations, and Gaian methods converge. These slides and briefing paper help explore questions of consent, data-gathering, authorship, and ethics through experiential, collaborative dialogue with examples, paradigms, and methods. Participants walk away with knowledge of effective practice and a resource bibliography to continue to innovate away from anthropocentric assumptions in environmental and sustainability education and towards more inclusive paradigms, methodologies, lenses, and frames for higher quality research.


The slides are available on Slideshare. 

The briefing paper is available online as a google doc.