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Tag: humanistic language teaching

Earth Day: When the Ocean Speaks Back

Posted on April 21, 2026April 21, 2026 By Jay Leonard Schwartz
Earth Day: When the Ocean Speaks Back

Earth Day, the Anthropocene, and the Language Classroom:
Bringing Environmental Responsibility into the Conversation

ELTIVSTA.COM, EARTH DAY, TESOL

Each year Earth Day encourages reflection on the condition of the planet we share—and what we have done to it. In recent decades, scientists and historians have increasingly used the term Anthropocene to describe our present moment, a proposed geological era in which human activity has become a dominant force shaping the Earth’s climate, oceans, and ecosystems more so for the worse.

The idea is unsettling.

For most of human history, nature molded civilization. Yet today, civilization increasingly deforms nature. Forests disappear in decades rather than in centuries. Glaciers that took thousands of years to form are melting within a generation. Oceans that once seemed vast enough to absorb anything are now showing unmistakable signs of stress, as well as our refuse.

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All Dogs Must Wear Pants: When the Ridiculous Becomes Communicative

Posted on April 3, 2026April 4, 2026 By Jay Leonard Schwartz
All Dogs Must Wear Pants: When the Ridiculous Becomes Communicative
An Absurd Suggestion from the Constituents
CLT, SEL, ELT Vista, eltvista.com

Imagine presenting the following situation to a class.

A newly formed political party has invited suggestions from its local constituents about laws that might improve the community. Party members must review the proposals and decide which ones should become official policy. Among the suggestions submitted is the following:

All dogs must wear pants in public.

Students are members of the political party. Their task is to discuss the proposal and decide whether the party should officially propose the law.

To reach a decision, they might discuss questions such as:

  • Why would someone propose this law?
  • Who might benefit from it?
  • What problems could it create?
  • Would it apply to all animals?

The premise is obviously ridiculous. Yet the interaction that follows often becomes surprisingly lively. Students debate practicality, fairness, ethics, modesty, enforcement, and even fashion. They interrupt one another with alternative ideas. They defend positions and challenge arguments. They comment on how ludicrous the whole thing is because animals are not people, etc.

The scenario is absurd. The communication, however, is real.

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