Note: For now, this blog is a serialization of a book titled Field Trips for All of Us: Transformative Adventures for Children and Their Adults. This is the first installment. It will probably end up as the preface in the book.
Dear Adults Caring for School-age Children,
The ecophobic culture of the Global North and its drive to dominate has pushed our ecosystems, social systems, and climate out of balance with dire consequences, including extreme weather, soil depletion, supply chain issues, mass extinctions, and tears in our social fabric. The best thing we can do to prepare our children for an uncertain future, emotionally and practically, is to help them develop ecophilia, a love of ecosystems, and to help them be ecological. Being ecological includes:Â
Being aware of our interdependence with our fellow travelers and our shared home.
Understanding the traditional and modern views of how ecological, technological, and social systems function.
Knowing the contributors and relationships within our local eco-, social, and technological systems.
Acting ecologically by forming caring mutually beneficial relationships with ourselves, others, and Mother Earth, including minimizing harm and contributing to and obtaining value from our human communities and ecosystem at home and in the wilderness.
I originally wrote these field trips for adults who care for children (including their inner child). We now believe they may be useful for any adult who wants to learn how to better care for themselves, others, and our shared ecosystems.
The central idea here is that we all create this dance of life together as contributors to Earth. While it is our responsibility to take care of the environment we were born into, the field trips in this book are designed to help us care more for ourselves, each other, and the rest of the natural world. These field trips are for all of us because we’re all in this together. I’ve selected and written these field trips to help children and their adults increase our own, our communities, and the well-being of our planet. This kind of mutual care is what I mean by being ecological. If you are interested in deepening your children’s and your relationship with the Earth while engaging in projects that will increase the well-being of your outdoor spaces and improve your personal, community, and planetary well-being, this blog is for you.
While some learning sequences make more sense than others, there are usually many paths to the same destination. Most natural processes also do some wandering, and learning is no exception. My favorite field trips with children include wandering through actual forests and a forest of ideas, making sense of what we’re experiencing. I’m always ready to modify or postpone a plan and go with what emerges from the intersection of children’s needs, wants, and interests; big ideas I want them to understand; and what is happening in the outside world.
Guiding and nurturing children should never feel like pulling teeth (or weeds). So, I recommend you use the order of the field trips in this blog as a guide, and feel free to read and do them with your children in any way that suits you!
If you landed on this blog because you imagined it contains magical wiz-bang field trips, please consider trying one or two of the more humble field trips presented here. Who knows, you may like them.Â
Much Love,
Peter Kindfield, Ph.D. & Nic Rodriguez-Moody
Glad I stumbled upon your Substack. I'm looking forward to reading all your posts and adding more tools and ideas to my toolkit. I am about to begin my 3rd year facilitating nature classes for homeschoolers on the 3 acres I steward.