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Green(ing) English: Voices Howling in the Wilderness?
By: Heather E. Bruce
Publication: English Journal
Date: August 5, 2011
Summary: Heather Bruce, director of the Montana Writing Project, discusses how writing instruction should include "an embrace of environmental and human peace" to raise new questions about humanity's role as a citizen of the ecological community.
Excerpt from Article
Yet in literature and language arts classes at the secondary level, where we do not hesitate to study the impact of ethical mores in human lives, where we do not hesitate to teach respect for life, we have fairly well ignored our impact on the natural world or our relationships with it. If we look at the major publications of our profession, we would never suspect that "the earth's life support systems were under stress. Indeed, [we] might never know that there was an earth at all" (Glotfelty xvi). Ecological literacy expert David W. Orr contends that "all education is environmental education" both by inclusion and exclusion (Ecological Literacy 90). By what is included or excluded, we teach students that they are "a part of or apart from" the natural world (12). The implicit environmental education, which English language arts students are receiving through exclusion, is that our ecological relationship with our habitat is either a matter of little importance or something only relevant to "science geeks."
Copyright © 2011 National Council of Teachers of English.
Reprinted with Permission.
Bruce, Heather. 2011. "Green(ing) English: Voices Howling in the Wilderness?" English Journal 100.3 (2011): pp. 12-16Download the Article
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