Early Childhood in the Era of Post-humanism: Lending an Ear to Nature

Parents, or pre-school educators in early childhood education, focus on assisting children to attain the highest possible pre-numeracy and pre-literacy skills in an attempt to give children a better academic foundation. Children are presented with technology, for example, in the form of a tablet, th...

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Main Author: Eurika Jansen van Vuuren
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: OpenED Network 2023-03-01
Series:Journal of Curriculum Studies Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://curriculumstudies.org/index.php/CS/article/view/176
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author Eurika Jansen van Vuuren
author_facet Eurika Jansen van Vuuren
author_sort Eurika Jansen van Vuuren
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description Parents, or pre-school educators in early childhood education, focus on assisting children to attain the highest possible pre-numeracy and pre-literacy skills in an attempt to give children a better academic foundation. Children are presented with technology, for example, in the form of a tablet, that act as baby-sitters even before they can speak properly, and this has largely deafened them to the sounds of nature. Sounds of man and machine are the only ones most children will be exposed to, due to their living in cities with few natural spaces. Children are not taken into nature to experience it and get to know the sounds of the bio-network, of which they are an integral part. Rural children may have a better chance to get to know, respect and cherish nature, due to their context, but their guides - parents and/or communities - have sunken into their own disregard for their environment. It is only when children are taught to listen to and appreciate nature that they will be enabled to begin moving back to being ‘mensch’ where the focus, ironically, moves away from the human and focuses instead on creating an equilibrium between humanity and nature, rather than stripping the planet of its natural resources through harmful practices. This empirical research explored the literature to highlight the significance of listening as a mode of developing an appreciation of and caring for nature. Attuning children of the post-humanist era to their natural environment through listening will encourage them to understand their function as part of nature, and assist in the restoration of the planet.
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spelling doaj.art-ef2eac2d3e694368bfa26c4c718657fc2023-03-23T12:54:34ZengOpenED NetworkJournal of Curriculum Studies Research2690-27882023-03-015110.46303/jcsr.2023.13Early Childhood in the Era of Post-humanism: Lending an Ear to NatureEurika Jansen van Vuuren0Faculty of Education, University of Mpumalanga, Siyabuswa, South AfricaParents, or pre-school educators in early childhood education, focus on assisting children to attain the highest possible pre-numeracy and pre-literacy skills in an attempt to give children a better academic foundation. Children are presented with technology, for example, in the form of a tablet, that act as baby-sitters even before they can speak properly, and this has largely deafened them to the sounds of nature. Sounds of man and machine are the only ones most children will be exposed to, due to their living in cities with few natural spaces. Children are not taken into nature to experience it and get to know the sounds of the bio-network, of which they are an integral part. Rural children may have a better chance to get to know, respect and cherish nature, due to their context, but their guides - parents and/or communities - have sunken into their own disregard for their environment. It is only when children are taught to listen to and appreciate nature that they will be enabled to begin moving back to being ‘mensch’ where the focus, ironically, moves away from the human and focuses instead on creating an equilibrium between humanity and nature, rather than stripping the planet of its natural resources through harmful practices. This empirical research explored the literature to highlight the significance of listening as a mode of developing an appreciation of and caring for nature. Attuning children of the post-humanist era to their natural environment through listening will encourage them to understand their function as part of nature, and assist in the restoration of the planet. https://curriculumstudies.org/index.php/CS/article/view/176anthropoceneearly childhoodindigenous knowledgenaturenonhumanposthumanism
spellingShingle Eurika Jansen van Vuuren
Early Childhood in the Era of Post-humanism: Lending an Ear to Nature
Journal of Curriculum Studies Research
anthropocene
early childhood
indigenous knowledge
nature
nonhuman
posthumanism
title Early Childhood in the Era of Post-humanism: Lending an Ear to Nature
title_full Early Childhood in the Era of Post-humanism: Lending an Ear to Nature
title_fullStr Early Childhood in the Era of Post-humanism: Lending an Ear to Nature
title_full_unstemmed Early Childhood in the Era of Post-humanism: Lending an Ear to Nature
title_short Early Childhood in the Era of Post-humanism: Lending an Ear to Nature
title_sort early childhood in the era of post humanism lending an ear to nature
topic anthropocene
early childhood
indigenous knowledge
nature
nonhuman
posthumanism
url https://curriculumstudies.org/index.php/CS/article/view/176
work_keys_str_mv AT eurikajansenvanvuuren earlychildhoodintheeraofposthumanismlendinganeartonature