One of the most frequent activities we present at schools, in workshops, and conferences (Zoe even mentions it in her first TEDx talk, The World Becomes What You Teach)
is our activity True Price.
We share it so often because it's the
keystone humane activity: It has the capacity to address all the issues
that we talk about in humane education; it asks core questions about how
we create a better world, and it does so through the particulars of
everyday items we can relate to; it can be used by any educator for
almost any age; it can be adapted and customized for numerous
situations; and it can serve as a single activity, as a course, as a
theme for an entire year of school, or even as the underlying focus for
the whole curriculum.
True Price Questions
At
its most basic, True Price asks us to examine a product, such as a
bottle of water, a fast food cheeseburger, or a T-shirt, and ask a
series of questions.
1. Is the item a want or a need?
The
point of this question isn't to make us feel judged about what we
consider a want or need, but to help us unpack what is truly vital to
our well-being and happiness. We might also have different criteria for
whether certain kinds of objects are a need. For example, some people
may consider products like a car, a computer, and a cell phone
indispensable. And the way we'd categorize those items might be different from
the way we'd categorize an item of clothing.
2. What are the effects, both positive and negative, on you, other people, animals, and the environment?
This
question helps us think deeply, broadly, and critically about all the
various impacts of a product throughout its entire lifecycle.
3. What systems support, promote & perpetuate this item?
This
is a complicated question because our systems are very complex and
there are so many underlying systems involved in the production,
distribution, use, and disposal of the products we use. We can change
our personal choices, but we also need to address the underlying systems
involved.
4. What would be an alternative, or a change to a system, that would do more good and less harm?
When we can make choices that do more good and less harm (MOGO choices), that's great. But, many times there is no
such choice available. There may be no MOGO cell phone, car, or health
care plan, for example. So, it's important that we look at what changes
in systems would help do more good & less harm and would also lead to humane
and sustainable items becoming ubiquitous.
A True Price Example
IHE
faculty led this activity at our recent residency for our graduate students. Here are the
responses from one group of students, who briefly explored the impacts
of soda in a plastic bottle.
1. Is it a want or a need?
It's a want.
2a. What are the positive effects?
caffeine
kick; pleasure; jobs; the company does philanthropy; you could
repurpose the plastic bottle for building material (e.g., creating a light source).
2b. What are some of the negative effects?
obesity
& other negative health effects; plastic is a carcinogen; plastic
waste; pollution; the amount of oil used; oil spills that kill animals
& destroy habitat; animals consume plastic; habitat destruction,
etc.
3. What systems support, promote & perpetuate this item?
economy, cultural, peer pressure, marketing/ads, multinational corporations, globalization
4. What would be an alternative or a change to a system, that would do more good and less harm?
personally: tap water from a reusable glass;
systemically:
create a healthier recipe? bring more work back to the U.S.? more
corporate responsibility? incentives to phase out unhealthy drinks &
the use of disposable plastics?
Questions After the Activity:
After
doing the True Price activity at residency, students explored the
seemingly contradictory facts that there's so much we don't know about
the products and services we use; and, we also have a belief that we
"know" a lot of facts and information, but that "knowledge" hasn't
actually come from a deep investigation of, say, research in
peer-reviewed journals. We've claimed these beliefs and this knowledge
based on what we've heard or read about what others have heard or read.
True Price, then, forces us to look deeper and more critically at not
just the impacts of these products on people, animals, and the planet,
but also at our own beliefs and assumptions about what we think we know.
True
Price can be used at home, in classrooms, and even at work, as each of
us examines the consequences of our decisions and systems and seeks
creative solutions that benefit all.
~ Marsha
Like our blog? Please share it with others, comment, and/or subscribe to our RSS feed.

No comments:
Post a Comment