New York Times writer Nicholas Kristof's Sunday column this week proposes mandatory study abroad for every US college student. I like the idea. But that's like asking them to learn Spanish or Chinese before they've mastered English. Why go abroad when most students aren't even familiar with their native territory? By this I don't mean US cities or even regional cultures. By territory, I mean the land: the biological systems, geophysical forms, water, air, the pace of change, cycles, migration, predation, all the interconnected elements that underlie functioning life on this continent. I'm talking about earth literacy: getting a weather forecast by looking up, not app.
I suggest there is one more outcome: a
sense of connectedness and interdependence. This is what
differentiates an engineer who has been to Africa from an engineer
who has never been outside the lab when both are designing a portable
water purification system. Which one will be more successful,
ultimately, and why?
Such experiences are readily available
at every economic level: you can pay or be paid – or volunteer.
Various state and federal Youth Conservation Corps and the non-profit
Student Conservation Association offer paid and volunteer experiences
on public lands. Traditional summer
camps, YMCA camps, scouting organizations, community teen
centers and school outing clubs often have programs or pathways that
develop wilderness skills and earth literacy. And in many families,
hunting and fishing trips are forays into extended wilderness
experiences.
Imagine this: a student from Maine
sees cactus for the first time in the Buenos Aires National
Wildlife Refuge in southern Arizona, while a kid from Nogales,
Arizona builds water-bars on trails in the Shenandoah
National Park. An art student from Brooklyn designs
interpretive material for the Appalachian Trail and then hikes the 88
mile section through New York, while a student from Ohio goes to a
canoe tripping camp in Ontario and cooks and eats a lake trout he caught. What do these
young people share? They have seen the night sky uncorrupted by
light; they have had to find, treat and conserve water; they have
learned which plants and animals can be food, and which can sting or
poison. They have learned to read the weather and where to find
shelter. They have followed a map, moved under their own power,
entertained themselves without electronics, and left no trace. They
have smelled the earth, listened to night animals, and stopped in awe
at the beauty before them.
Earth
literate often means self-literate too. What if every college
student who went abroad was already earth literate? What incredible
depth this would bring to Kristof's proposal. I'm all for it.