{"id":11570,"date":"2021-05-17T09:20:10","date_gmt":"2021-05-17T08:20:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.innovationnewsnetwork.com\/?p=11570"},"modified":"2021-05-18T09:54:52","modified_gmt":"2021-05-18T08:54:52","slug":"using-problem-solving-to-redefine-environmental-education","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.innovationnewsnetwork.com\/using-problem-solving-to-redefine-environmental-education\/11570\/","title":{"rendered":"Using problem solving to redefine environmental education"},"content":{"rendered":"
A renewed paradigm of education is emerging; a paradigm where students thrive instead of just learning. They become part of new experiences, communities, and cultures; they experience education by being part of it; they are taught to think outside of the classroom walls, putting aside tests and papers. This is a new way to educate.<\/p>\n
History tells us many, many things. At one moment, an industry or nation is at the pinnacle of success, only to later look around and wonder where it all went. From early formations in medieval times and into its current form, the university has undergone minimal change. Ideas such as the lecture, professor, provost, and commencement are 900 year old traditions we still practice. Things such as tenure and academic freedom, and now course modalities, have no meaning to those who pay tuition and bear the debt of student loans. The once revered centres of intellectual advancement are degenerating into stagnating halls of rhetoric. It has become increasingly more complex to teach less and less content each year.<\/p>\n
And this is occurring at a time when education is at a premium. The demand for highly skilled individuals solving ever increasing complex problems needs integrative and thoughtful solutions. As we look to access a more socioeconomically diverse population of students, the traditional campus setting becomes less effective. What we need is a porous boundary between the university and the communities we serve, meeting students where they are creating an interactive exchange of ideas. The educational system cannot continue to extract large sums of time and money only to return fact-based learning cloaked in traditional practices. We need education fully integrated into solving societal needs at ground level. Thinking must be critical, creative, empathetic, and framed in the proper perspective. Students need to experience their education, learn about people, their problems, where they live, and what they aspire to be. This is what the university needs to provide.<\/p>\n