[Coral-List] On Science Communication about Coral Reefs
tomascik at novuscom.net
tomascik at novuscom.net
Fri Jun 22 15:20:36 UTC 2018
Hi Peter,
Thank you for all that food for thought that you have posted on your
blog. Few nights ago I attended a lecture by Iain Stewart at the
Resources for Future Generations 2018 conference that was held here in
Vancouver. His lecture Between a Rock and a Hard Place addresses
some of the communication issues that we are dealing with here and
that you touched upon. That lecture is not on line yet, but I found a
version of it from his talk in February at another event. For those of
you who are interested in this topic please have a look at the
following link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mh31EoUIkZs
Cheers,
Tomas
Quoting Peter Sale <sale at uwindsor.ca>:
> Arianna,
> You may be surprised, but as an academic, engaged my whole life in
> formal education I agree with you. I?m not certain that everyone
> has to experience a coral reef in order to appreciate what we are
> doing to them, but I am sure everyone has to experience the natural
> world directly in one way or other, in order to have any empathy for
> or appreciation of it. Our society is progressively moving people
> away from any direct engagement with nature. I advocate for
> children eating dirt and climbing trees. Snorkeling on a reef would
> be great but most people never get that opportunity.
>
> Regrettably, even in ecology and other environmental sciences,
> direct field experience is being greatly reduced in many
> universities for reasons of cost & convenience, and because field
> work is considered so old-fashioned by those who want all
> environmental questions answered by some genetic test.
>
> Peter Sale
>
> From: arianna bucci <ariannabucci at yahoo.it>
> Sent: Monday, June 18, 2018 3:45 PM
> To: coral-list at coral.aoml.noaa.gov; Peter Sale <sale at uwindsor.ca>
> Subject: Re: [Coral-List] On Science Communication about Coral Reefs
>
> Dear Peter,
>
> I could not agree more about your analysis. But in my personal
> opinion as an ex-researcher in marine bio, and a current educator in
> non-formal education and teacher (of marine bio), I think you (and
> the scientific community) are missing a fundamental thing: you
> cannot care about something you do not love, you cannot love
> something you don't know, and, most important here, you cannot know
> something you don't experience. And when I say experience, I mean
> it. Formal education is being traditionally highly focussed on the
> intellectual understanding of phenomena, and less on the whole
> experiential effects that, as humans/animals/living beings, they
> cause on us. We are dangerously getting apart from natural
> experiences.
>
>
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