Shownotes
In this reflective solo episode, Marina explores how the changing seasons, our ancestral roots, and the social history of education help us question what learning really means today.
We journey from postwar Britain to the present classroom, asking how we can reimagine education as something alive, relational, and grounded in nature.
Topics include:
- Gratitude for autumn, the changing light, and small comforts that sustain us.
- Reflection on the natural cycle of endings and beginnings and what it teaches us about renewal.
- The symbolism of the elder and birch trees as reminders of wisdom, letting go, and new growth.
- Honouring ancestors and recognising what we’ve inherited through culture and family.
- The importance of doing inner work that leads to outer change in our communities and classrooms.
- Revisiting postwar Britain to understand how education emerged as a social contract for fairness and democracy.
- The 1944 Butler Act and its vision for universal education and rebuilding society after the war.
- Remembering that education is a system, while learning is an organic, lifelong process that transforms who we are.
- The tension between authority and shared power in schools and what that means for children’s voices.
- A call to reimagine education as something rooted in wellbeing, curiosity, and connection to the living world.
Shownotes:
https://theoutdoorteacher.com/podcasts/episode-74-what-is-education-for-now
Music by Geoff Robb: www.geoffrobb.com
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