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March 22, 2011

Global issues 3: TOK and World Water Day 2011











As International Water Day 2011 arrives, I look forward to seeing what all my blog colleagues write.  On a topic for which there is far, far too much to say, what will they pick out?  In this blog, I’ve already treated International Water Day in my last two postings, indirectly – by avoiding the issue of water specifically and staying, as TOK does, on the level of general thinking skills and overall approaches to any issue.  It is exactly by doing so that TOK contributes most to understanding global issues: by supporting and strengthening the analytical skills that are taught also in other subjects, and by developing student awareness of how different areas of knowledge work to contribute to our overall understanding.   However, TOK does move much closer to the subject matter of a global issue in two other main ways.

For one thing, critical skills cannot be developed in a void.  The framework for identifying and analyzing perspectives that I suggested in my last blog posting is not of any value unless it is used to guide exploration of a specific topic.  It is meant to be applied. It would be useful in preparing the TOK presentation or in other thinking through the course, and also useful if TOK were to team up with other subjects within a school to treat a particular global issue.

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March 18, 2011

World Water Day: March 22nd

Filed under: Biology — Tags: , , — Stephen @ 8:37 pm

March 22nd is World Water day.



While the world’s population tripled in the 20th century, the use of renewable water resources has grown six-fold. Within the next fifty years, the world population will increase by another 40 to 50 %. This population growth – coupled with industrialization and urbanization – will result in an increasing demand for water and will have serious consequences on the environment.

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March 23, 2010

International Water Day: bottled water and “manufactured demand”

Filed under: TOK meets global citizenship — Tags: , , , , , — Eileen Dombrowski @ 4:28 am

Happy International Water Day!  This 8-minute video called “The Story of Bottled Water”, released for the occasion, is done by the same Annie Leonard who gave us “The Story of Stuff”.  It deals with “manufactured demand”, or the creation through advertising of a desire for something we don’t need.  (http://storyofstuff.org/bottledwater/)

Treating the creation of a market for bottle water, it deals in part with emotional response and in part with belief — the creation of belief, the implications for action of that belief, and the consequences of those actions.  Is the belief in the superiority of bottled water well justified?  No.  In many regions, the tap water is just as good as bottle water.  But so what?  Does it hurt if we buy bottled water and waste a bit of money?  The answer lies in the pollution created before and after drinking it, with the impact on the environment.  A consideration of bottled water could bring in many central TOK knowledge issues: what persuades us to believe the things we believe, whether our beliefs are true, what the implications might be of accepting them, and whether there is an ethical dimension to the actions we might take on their basis.

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