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Rewilding Education calls for a radical, system-wide reinvention of education as an adaptable ecosystem; less predictable and measurable, but far more suitable for shaping the adults of tomorrow. By encouraging us to transform how we think about education in what is left of the twenty-first century, Hilary Cremin connects directly with educators, parents, young people and policymakers to share a vision for healthy education settings and societies that nurture both human flourishing and sustainable ecosystems. Full of ideas about what rewilding might look like when applied to education, Hilary Cremin evidences how education has been, and can be, successfully rewilded in schools and classrooms, including case studies from unexpected places like Kerala in India, where literacy rates exceed those in the United States. By combining academic research, poetry and examples from around the world, the book will inspire the next generation of educators, decision-makers and families to take practical steps towards the education our children need and deserve.
Hilary Cremin is a Professor in Education Peace and Conflict and Head of the Faculty of Education at the University of Cambridge, UK. Hilary has also published Positive Peace in Schools: Tackling Conflict and Creating a Culture of Peace in the Classroom (2017, Routledge) and Debates in Citizenship Education (2012, Routledge) amongst others. Hilary has worked in the public, private and voluntary sector as a schoolteacher, educational consultant, project coordinator and academic.
Introduction Part One: What's wrong with schools? Chapter One: In the death throes of modernity? Chapter Two: Tunnel vision and neglect of the climate emergency Chapter Three: Making us ill Chapter Four: Reproducing inequality Part Two: Rewilding education Chapter Five: Why rewilding? Chapter Six: Valuing wisdom Chapter Seven: Nature as teacher Chapter Eight: Health, engagement, practical wisdom and an arts-based mindset Chapter Nine: Education for peace, justice and inclusion Conclusion Rewilding Education: Letters to my readers