• Forest Tensions,  Materials

    The Beginnings

    We would like to propose that together we focus on the arts of slowing down, paying attention, and noticing. hat it might mean for us to support children to notice and slow down when we go to the forest. How might we invite children to slow down rather than “consume” everything they find/see in the forest? How do we invite children to focus, slow down, and notice? If a child picks up a stick, we might become curious about what it is about this particular stick (and not others). Can we stay with what children notice about this stick (and challenge them to think beyond) rather than moving on to…

  • Materials

    Charcoal

    We are inviting the children to engage in the arts of slowing down, paying attention and noticing. Because the children and educators are interested in visiting and sharing stories about the nearby forest, we want to extend what happens in the the forest into the classroom. For the past few months, we have been observing children’s engagement (even fascination) with sticks/branches/logs in the forest.  In order to connect to children’s interests, we are inviting children to explore charcoal and paper. It matters deeply what materials we invite into our classroom.  Paper and charcoal link us directly to forests – they start in forests… The sticks that children are fascinated with…

  • Fooding and Foraging,  Forest Tensions,  Markings,  Tracks & Tracings

    A Walk in the Forest with Educators

    We (educators, pedagogists, researchers) took a walk in the forest with the intention to pay attention, notice, engage in the presence of more-than-human others. We asked ourselves…. What and how do we notice when I walk in the presence of others – including non-humans? What relations do we notice? What logics do we notice and how might we follow these logics? Our Engagements… We noticed life, death, playfulness, garbage and plastics, patterns and textures, sounds (wind, squirrels, sticks and leaves under our feet, a plane flying above us), human-made and organic structures, levels and heights, animals (frogs and insects), a wide variety of trees and plants, strength and resiliency. The…

  • Fooding and Foraging,  Forest Tensions,  Markings,  Materials,  Tracks & Tracings

    Witnessing Ruins of Progress: Recuperating “Staying with the Trouble”

    Our pedagogy is guided by a devoted commitment to the aspiration of noticing and the active and ever shifting process of paying attention. We are committed to an aspiration, as opposed to a tangible goal or outcome, because it signals our willingness to engage with the only true constants our world offers us: uncertainty and mutability. In this extended moment of history, our world (the children’s world) is characterized by ecological and economic precarity, one that educational systems too often try to soothe by fostering illusions of stasis and stability. We are committed to bringing this essential instability of our surroundings to the surface of educational encounters with the children.…