The Wiley Handbook of Sustainability in Higher Education Learning and Teaching
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The Wiley Handbook of Sustainability in Higher Education Learning and Teaching

Kelum A. A. Gamage, Nanda Gunawardhana, Kelum A. A. Gamage, Nanda Gunawardhana

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eBook - ePub

The Wiley Handbook of Sustainability in Higher Education Learning and Teaching

Kelum A. A. Gamage, Nanda Gunawardhana, Kelum A. A. Gamage, Nanda Gunawardhana

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About This Book

A comprehensive resource for higher education professionals interested in sustainability pedagogy

In The Wiley Handbook of Sustainability in Higher Education Learning and Teaching, a team of distinguished researchers delivers an insightful reference for higher education professionals seeking to embed sustainability in learning and teaching. The book offers a way for higher education institutions to implement sustainability goals in their curricula and provides comprehensive guidance to educators, researchers and practitioners.

The authors discuss recent developments in technological innovations, best practices, lessons learned, current challenges, and reflections in the area of sustainability teaching in higher education. They also examine the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on sustainability education. With contributors from a variety of disciplines, including engineering, medicine, urban design, business, environmental science, and social science, the book considers the embedding of sustainability in regenerative learning ecologies, living laboratories, and transgressive forms of learning. It also includes:

  • A thorough introduction to activist learning for sustainability and outcome-based education towards achieving sustainable goals in higher education
  • Comprehensive explorations of factors that hinder the implementation of sustainability initiatives in higher education institutions
  • Practical discussions of developing stakeholder agency in higher education sustainability initiatives
  • In-depth examinations of global trends and country-specific initiatives in sustainability teaching

Perfect for education developers seeking to incorporate sustainability, The Wiley Handbook of Sustainability in Higher Education Learning and Teaching is also ideal for academics, researchers, policymakers, and accreditation personnel working in the area of sustainability.

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Information

Year
2022
ISBN
9781119852834

1
Sustainable Development: Embedding Sustainability in Higher Education

Kelum A. A. Gamage and Erandika K. de Silva

1.1 Introduction

The concept of “sustainable development” has become far‐reaching due to the major breakthrough in efforts toward the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development adopted by the United Nations (UN) General Assembly in 2015. Following the UN Conference on Sustainable Development held in Rio de Janeiro in 2012, a global framework was developed to “redirect humanity towards a sustainable path.” This global framework is the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development that is centered around 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) that branched out from the previous Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) agenda.
The SDGs describe major development challenges faced by humans universally. Consequently, SDGs are considered “challenges for humanity” giving them a sense of urgency in both international and national agendas. UN SDGs emerged with the aim of securing “a sustainable, peaceful, prosperous and equitable life on earth for everyone now and in the future” (UNESCO 2017). As SDGs cover global challenges that need to be overcome for the survival of humanity, they establish “environmental limits and set critical thresholds for the use of natural resources” (UNESCO 2017).
Poverty and associated challenges such as the lack of access to education, healthcare and sanitation, employment opportunities, and social protection are detrimental to human lives and human dignity. UN SDGs are based on the basic premise, that ending poverty, requires strategies that develop economies. Economic development, therefore, is understood and realized alongside a range of social needs that include education, health, social protection, and employment opportunities simultaneously with climate change and environmental protection. Inequality, unsustainable consumption patterns, weak institutional capacity and environmental degradation are identified as the key systemic barriers to sustainable development.
For the realization of the long‐term goals put forward as SDGs, the active involvement of governments, the private sector, civil society, and all of humanity is needed. Governments are expected to establish national frameworks, policies, and measures for the implementation of the 2030 Agenda that focuses on 17 SDGs, where Quality Education (SDG 4) is understood as ensuring “inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all.”
In 1987, the UN's World Commission for Environment and Development (WCED) published the report “Our Common Future,” also known as the “Brundtland Report” in honor of the chair of the Commission, former Norwegian Prime Minister Gro Harlem Brundtland. The publication of the report was a milestone in raising international awareness, calling for action, and creating discourse on the importance of sustainable development and global partnerships. This makes the Brundtland Commission an indispensable forerunner in sustainability discourse. Therefore, this book adopts the Brundtland Commission's definition that sustainable development “meets the needs of the present generation without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs” (Brundtland Report 1987, p. 8). The Commission concludes that two concepts are embedded in this overarching concept of sustainability. The first is the concept of needs, that is the essential needs of the poverty‐stricken populations that demand the priority of intervention networks; the second is the idea of limitations imposed on the environment's ability to meet present and future needs due to the state of technology and social organization (Brundtland Report 1987).
Very often, sustainability is understood as having three dimensions: environmental, social, and economic. Kagawa (2007), Dvoƙáková and Zborková (2014), and Venkataraman (2009) are prominent scholars who contributed to the sustainability discourse by envisioning sustainability as a three‐dimensional endeavor. Efforts to achieve sustainability of these three dimensions collectively is understood as sustainability. For instance, environmental sustainability is achieved through efforts to conserve and enhance the natural resource base through sustainable consumption patterns. Social sustainability includes efforts to promote equity, diversity, and social justice. At the same time as environmental and social sustainability, economic sustainability is achieved through efforts to reduce poverty and promote fair trade. Garcia et al. (2017) state that the term “sustainable development” originates from the three dimensions, namely the environmental, economic, and sociocultural. On that ground, they emphasize the importance of “extensive collaboration among diverse partners” to implement a holistic approach to sustainability goals. They maintain that all three pillars of sustainable development need to be served to attain the transition to a sustainable society. Sustainability education, too, must therefore address these three dimensions to equip individuals with the knowledge, skills, and attitudes to make informed decisions in shaping sustainable futures. Earlier policy statements on sustainable transformations through education include environmental education (EE) in 1977, the introduction of education for sustainable development (ESD) during the Earth Summit in Rio in 1992, the announcement of the Decade for ESD in 2002 during the World Summit on Sustainable Development, the launch of the Global Action Programme (GAP) for ESD in 2014, and the Incheon Declaration (Education 2030: Toward Inclusive and Equitable Quality Education and Lifelong Learning for All). EE is the earliest form of ESD that is notable for its emphasis on public environmental concern and finding solutions for environmental issues. EE and ESD approaches to sustainability have certain overlaps as they are founded on the idea of conserving natural resources for the benefit of present and future generations. These overlaps have made them intrinsically connected. Even though EE emerged before ESD, it is understood today as part of ESD. In 2009, a UNESCO analysis identified that EE–ESD relationships can be understood in three ways: EE and ESD as equals; EE as a part of ESD; and ESD and EE as distinct. However, both EE and ESD are identified as crucial approaches to sustainable development (UNESCO 2009; Pavlova 2012).
Sustainable development requires thinkers with the knowledge, skills, values, and attitudes that empower them to contribute to social, environmental, and economic sustainability. This becomes possible only through education. However, ESD does not mean education that focuses on economic growth alone. Economic growth‐oriented education also runs the risk of an increase in unsustainable consumption patterns that upset the ecological balance by depleting natural resources. On the contrary, the approach of ESD is believed to enable lifelong learning and empowers learners to make informed decisions and carry out responsible actions for environmental integrity, economic success, and a just society for present and future generations. Garcia et al. (2017) state that ESD requires participatory teaching and learning methods. They claim that such teaching and learning methods motivate and empower learners to move beyond acquiring knowledge, and change their behavior to take action for sustainable development.
The purpose of ESD is to empower every individual to be responsible and accountable for their actions for the benefit of the present and future generations. Reflecting on their actions and their social, cultural, economic, and environmental implications from a local and a global perspective helps individuals transform their own actions. Addressing learning content and outcomes, pedagogy, and the learning environment, ESD provides holistic and transformational education. UNESCO understands ESD as transformational education through four major pillars: (i) learning content; (ii) pedagogy and learning environment; (iii) learning outcomes; and (iv) social transformations. As transformational learning content, UNESCO understands the integration of pressing issues, such as climate change, poverty, biodiversity, disaster risk reduction (DRR), and sustainable consumption and production (SCP), into the curriculum. Apart from integrating such content into the curriculum, ESD focuses on interactive, learner‐centered teaching and settings. This enables a smooth shift from teaching to learning and demands an action‐oriented, transformative pedagogy that accommodates self‐directed learning, participation and collaboration, problem‐orientation, inter‐ and transdisciplinarity, and the linking of formal and informal learning (UNESCO 2017). Such transformational pedagogy and learning environments are conducive to exploratory, action‐oriented transformative learning in a learner and also demand the rethinking of both physical and virtual learning environment to inspire learners to take action for sustainability. The third pillar, learning outcomes, encapsulates stimulating learning and promoting core competencies such as “critical and systemic thinking, collaborative decision‐making and taking responsibility for future generations.” The final pillar that supports ESD is societal transformation that is expected to “empower learners to transform themselves and society they live in.” Enabling a transition to greener economies and societies, equipping learners with skills for greener jobs, and encouraging people to have sustainable lifestyles are some examples of societal transformation (UNESCO 2017).
The SDG on education recognizes ESD as part of Target 4.7 together with global citizenship education (GCED), which UNESCO promotes as a complementary approach. Moreover, realization of the SDG on education is crucial to the realization of the 16 other SDGs. ESD presents its learning objectives as specific cognitive, socioemotional, and behavioral learning outcomes. In short, ESD aims at equipping all individuals with the knowledge and competencies required to bring about transformation and thereby contribute to achieving SDGs. It demands the embedding of non‐fo...

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