“…How the students experienced and acted upon non-human others, as well as how they represented, acknowledged, and respected them, is closely related to potentials for reduction of inequalities between all beings. We might speak of radical ethics, parallel to how Blanchard and Nix (2019) address "radical pedagogy": when students are challenged to identify ethical questions regarding 'marginalized others.´ Being able to identify marginalized others and to start treating them more ethically, depends on teachers abilities to "create possibilities for students to connect more ethically with 'otherness' when investigating diversity, human rights and civil society-as the research encounter is highly contextual and continually in negotiation" (Blanchard and Nix, 2019, p. 67). In our context, the marginalized others were ants, horses, trees, water, and clay.…”