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Sunday, 5 February 2017

7. Education: providing a safe place to fail



“What is the purpose of education?”

This is the question posed by my ‘Agroecology’ professor in our first lecture of the semester. The lectures are given in a small classroom and there are only 15 people taking the course so it is a perfect environment for discussion. He opened the floor to debate and everyone in the class launched straight into ripping apart our current education system. Unsurprisingly we all began to vent our anger about the heavy focus on exams, coursework and the pressures of getting a good grade… at any cost. We have all endured the annual stress of revision season. We have all sat in airless rooms for days and stared at textbooks that we no longer have any desire to read. We have all got to a point of despair where we don’t care how much we understand the content we are learning, we don’t care if we agree with it, we don’t care if we forget it all 5 minutes after handing in our paper. All we care about is squishing it into our brains just enough to enable us to bang out a good exam and get a good mark.



But … what if the cost of getting a good grade is your education?

Arguably our outcome-focused mindsets cost us a whole skillset. Our educational reward system is stifling our ability to think, to question, to be curious and to take academic risks. Often these skills don’t noticeably improve our grade outcomes, so why bother? There’s only so much time in a day, and we all have other time commitments outside of our studies…. sports, hobbies, friends and family. Noone has time to do everything. We have to prioritize the things that are most important to us and no one has time to become an expert on every interesting topic they have ever come across. But being inquisitive is not the same as becoming an expert. It is about learning to question, learning to think critically and learning to be interested. However, this learning process does take time. It requires time spent thinking and discussing. Furthermore, taking ‘academic risks’ is …  well risky. Why push the boundaries when staying nicely within them can get you 10/10?

So the next question our professor posed was – how would we improve the education system?

This we found a lot harder to answer. There was a definite pause before anyone said anything. It’s easy to criticize the current educational system but designing a better one is a bit trickier. Ultimately our society requires assessment and without fundamentally altering its underlying structure we are not going to change that. So how do we assess people in a way that rewards critical thinking, curiosity and risk? In other words, how do we assess the process of thinking rather than just the outcome? We have to somehow eliminate the constant fear of failure before people will have the courage to push boundaries. As my professor so eloquently put it: education should be about “providing people with a safe place to fail”. He argued that the role of a teacher is to create an environment in which his students feel like they can experiment with ideas without jeopardizing their grade.


So how do you create a safe place to fail? Is failure not an integral part of assessment?

My class was then tasked with creating our own syllabus and coming up with our own assessment methods. For the first time ever I was asked specifically what I wanted to learn and how I wanted to be assessed, something that really took me by surprise.

Agroecology is “the study of ecological processes applied to agricultural production systems”. For our syllabus we decided to look at how to integrate plant and animals together into farm systems. Wendel Berry, a writer, farmer and environmental activist, highlighted the idea that by separating plant production from animal production, we created two problems from one solution.

“Once plants and animals were raised together on the same farm — which therefore neither produced unmanageable surpluses of manure, to be wasted and to pollute the water supply, nor depended on such quantities of commercial fertilizer. The genius of America farm experts is very well demonstrated here: they can take a solution and divide it neatly into two problems.

Berry, W., 1996. The Unsettling of America: Culture & Agriculture 3rd ed., Sierra Club Books. p. 62

Outside of class each person has to design an integrated plant animal system that includes 3 trophic levels and that could be applied to the UBC farm. During class we can discuss whatever topics relating to ‘agroecology’ that we want.

In terms of assessment methods, there was a unanimous decision to veto all exams. We then decided on four different, equally weighted, methods:

1.     Class discussion – the quality of your contributions to class debate.
2.     Review presentations – three 5-minute presentations: one for each of the three trophic levels of your integrated plant-animal farm system. These will be assessed by both the professor and my peers for clarity, understanding, insight and novelty.
3.     Critical thinking assessments – three writing assignments relating to broad topic areas (not specific titles), with no word limit and assessed in a similar way
4.     Final project proposal – a final write up of our integrated system proposal for the farm again with no word limit, no specific title and no particular structural requirements.

So far I have done one presentation, one writing assignment and lots of class discussion.  For the first time in forever, I have felt like I have had the space to think, to engage and to get excited about all sorts of things that I want to learn about. I enjoy spending three hours every Tuesday and Thursday sitting and discussing whatever topic comes to light that day. The debate can veer off in whatever direction we choose, there is no set syllabus that we have to cover. The fact that my class contribution is continually assessed has surprisingly not made me nervous to open my mouth, but instead has given me an incentive to stay engaged and think more critically. I feel as though I am improving my process of thought, not just my outcome.