TEACHING THE ANTHROPOCENE: A NEW PARADIGM FOR GEOSCIENCE EDUCATION
The essence of the Anthropocene, is in fact, that business as usual is wholly unacceptable. New paradigms for communicating geoscience to our teachers, students and the public are essential if business as usual outcomes are to be avoided. To further this goal, over the last four years, I have been developing a “Human Impacts” course and accompanying website, that uses the Anthropocene as its organizing principle. The course integrates geoscience with demographic change, environmental science and the ethical and intergenerational consequences attending anthropogenic modification of our planet.
The course has been designed for non-science majors required to meet university-wide gen-ed science requirements, but can easily be "dialed up” or “down" for high school or geoscience/environmental science majors. There is a rapidly growing body of literature describing the telecoupled nature of the Anthropocene, characterized by globally connected socioeconomic and environmental systems, where choices made by individuals in one location have profound ramifications in distant places. I believe students leaving the university need a course encompassing the essential aspects of planetary change, which extend well beyond climate change. In order to do so, we must reorient our geoscience education instruction to reflect the reality of the Anthropocene. In 2000, Nobel laureate Paul Crutzen first suggested we were living in the Anthropocene; in 2011 he and Christian Schwagerl called for teaching students about this profound change. We cannot wait another decade to begin this task: it is now time to “teach the Anthropocene.”