Identifying Key Issues of Education for Sustainable Development
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Looking at education as a critical implementation tool for SD;
- Reorienting education systems towards commitments of Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and Education for All (EFA);
- Networking and interaction among stakeholders in ESD;
- Developing approaches for the assessment of progress in ESD.
- “Reorienting education and learning so that everyone has the opportunity to acquire the knowledge, skills, values, and attitudes that empower him/her to contribute to a sustainable future.
- Strengthening education and learning in all agendas, programs, and activities that promote sustainable development.”
2. Methods
3. Key Issues of Education for Sustainable Development
- Curricula, collaboration and outreach, operations, and research were considered by almost all initiatives;
- Trans-disciplinarity, the collaboration of universities, and ‘educate the educators’ were considered by about half of the declarations;
- On-campus experience, assessment and reporting, and the institutional framework are cited by a small number of the initiatives, only.
- ESD scope: SD and ESD definitions, education at all the levels (primary-tertiary), life-long, formal, non-formal and informal education, teaching and learning, ESD key milestones, ESD competencies, quality education, and weak and strong sustainability
- ESD policy: vision, mission, peace, justice, and non-violence, democracy, rule of law, strong institutions, public awareness and participation, power and influence distribution, sustainable communities, cities, countries, and regions, and population control (towards zero-growth);
- ESD cooperation: empowering and mobilizing youth and aged people, intergenerational cooperation, cooperation between stakeholders (institutions, companies, communities, etc.), and partnerships;
- Environmental pillar: climate change, adaptation, and mitigation, pollution prevention and zero waste, life cycle approaches, biodiversity, disaster risk reduction, and the six Lisbon principles (responsibility, scale-matching, precaution, adaptive management, full cost allocation, and participation);
- Social pillar: human rights, hunger and poverty eradication, security, clean water and sanitation, health and well-being, reduced non-equalities (gender, income, living standard ones), decent work, social responsibility, quality education, cultural diversity, sustainable urbanization, and sustainable life styles;
- Economic pillar: resources (raw materials, energy, water, air, land) and their efficiency, circular economy, affordable and clean energy, sustainable consumption and production, research and development (R&D), innovations and entrepreneurship of all stakeholders, and economic de-growth;
- ESD methodologies: participatory teaching and learning, student-centered teaching, critical, interdisciplinary, and systems thinking, creativity, and imagining future scenarios (envisioning);
- Transformative teaching, learning, and training: a holistic approach, digital literacy, infrastructure and environments, developing case studies;
- Building capacity for educators and trainers at all levels, media, developing pedagogies, ESD tools, literature, project reports and presentations (PowerPoints, videos, etc.), and financing of projects;
- ESD metrics: indicators and indices, sustainability accounting, and reporting;
- ESDdocuments: international agreements, declarations from Agenda 21 to 2030 Agenda for SD;
- ESDinstitutions: UN (UNESCO, UNCED, UNEP, UNECE), EEA/EPA, global and regional associations (IAU, CA), national institutions, and NGOs.
4. Discussion of Key Issues
4.1. ESD Scope
4.2. ESD Policy
4.3. ESD Cooperation
4.4. Environmental Pillar
- Further GDP growth in most countries is not acceptable as we have not enough resources (raw materials are limited, especially critical raw materials may cause great problems in future; also materials for solar panels, batteries and energy accumulators are scarce and expensive);
- Carbon capture and storage may be difficult and expensive, and underground storage can be dangerous;
- Hydropower plants with dams and reservoirs, windmills causing noise and radiation as well as nuclear power plants with accidents, radioactive nuclear waste, and nuclear weapons are raising many environmental concerns and oppositions;
- Population growth is too high, especially in the least developed big countries in Africa and Asia — education is the best way to reduce population growth;
- Increasing employment and higher wages are increasing resource usage, GHGs emissions, and pollution;
- People are ready to accept efficiencies improvements but they are not favorably disposed to de-growth, GDP reduction, revolutions in mobility, food structure, habits and lifestyles.
4.5. Social Pillar
- Decreasing the growing inequalities between 1 % of rich individuals and the 99 % majority;
- Exploitation with the rise of precariat on one hand, and plutocracy and oligarchy on the other one;
- The predominant influence of multinational corporations over policy, jurisdiction, and democracy;
- Avoidance of taxation for common good by using different types of tax havens;
- The harmful influence of neoliberalism on social market economy, social security, and social justice;
- Massive human migrations because of wars and climate changes, and the growth of terrorism;
- Nationalism and populism as an unwanted response to these problems.
- “Striving for the good life for all. This includes deceleration, time welfare, and conviviality.
- A reduction of production and consumption in the global North, and liberation from the one-sided Western paradigm of development. This could allow for a self-determined path of social organization in the global South.
- An extension of democratic decision-making to allow for real political participation.
- Social changes and an orientation towards sufficiency instead of purely technological changes and improvements in efficiency in order to solve ecological problems. It is believed to be historically proven that decoupling economic growth from resource use is not possible.
- The creation of open, connected, and localized economies.”
4.6. Economic Pillar
- Increase in the efficiency of consumption due to technological improvements (eco-design, sustainable production, eco-innovation, etc.), and due to more efficient use of resources (3R — reduce-reuse-recycle, zero waste, etc.) what is called weak sustainable consumption (SC).
- Changes in consumption patterns (habits, behaviors, and lifestyles) and reduction in consumption levels (de-growth) in developed countries requiring changes in infrastructures what is called strong SC.
4.7. ESD Methodologies
4.8. Transformative Teaching, Learning, and Training
- Establishing a shared vision for a course.
- Providing modelling and mastery experiences.
- Intellectually challenging and encouraging students.
- Personalizing attention and feedback.
- Creating experiential lessons.
- Promoting pre-flection and reflection.
- “The teacher is conceptualized as an instructor of the relevant material and also as a change agent who guides students through the transformational process.
- In his or her role as the change agent, the teacher works to decrease students’ perceived barriers to success while increasing their self-efficacy for change.
- Teaching shall center on the use of self-change projects but requires previous mastery of the course concepts via other teaching methods.
- Students are viewed as being capable of mastering the course content and achieving the targeted changes.”
4.9. Building Capacity
- Understanding how new pedagogies could be applied in their subject;
- Linking ESD pedagogies with the special literacies (science, reading, and mathematics) they teach;
- Reframing what quality learning outcomes might look like with ESD;
- Engaging with students in different ways regarding the learning relationship;
- Digesting new sustainability thinking and practice in their industry/profession;
- Learning more about how to achieve education change in their workplace.
4.10. ESD Metrics
4.11. ESD Documents
- Education for Sustainable Development Toolkit [12];
- Teachers’ Guide for Education for Sustainable Development in the Caribbean [69];
- The Competences in ESD (Learning for the Future Competences) [29];
- Sustainable development in higher education [70];
- ESD and Quality Management and Enhancement Framework [71];
- Shaping the Future We Want, UN Decade of ESD, Final Report [6];
- Transformative Teaching: Changing Today’s Classrooms [72];
- Building Capacity in Higher Education Topic Guide [73];
- Education and the SDGs, Educate a Child [74];
- Transformative Teachers; Teacher Leadership and Learning in a Connected World [75];
- Education for Sustainable Development. Learning Objectives [9];
- Consultation on Further and Higher Education and the SDGs [76];
- Issues and trends in Education for Sustainable Development [5].
4.12. ESD Institutions
- UNESCO, United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization; its platform has links to ESD definition, the work going on, resources (including key publications, Overview of the International Frameworks on ESD, and Higher Education Sustainability Initiative, HESI), and the future of ESD.
- UNEP, United Nations Environment Program platform is including: Education for Sustainable Consumption, Sustainability communications: A Toolkit for Marketing and Advertising Courses, Shaping the Future We Want — UN Decade of Education for Sustainable Development (DESD, Final report), The International Training Program on ESD in Higher Education (ITP ESD-HE), Environmental Education for SDGs, etc.
- UNECE, The United Nations Economic Commission for Europe has published the evaluation report on the implementation of the UNECE Strategy for ESD 2005–2015, Empowering Educators, Competences for ESD and other contributions.
5. Conclusions and Outlook
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Glavič, P. Identifying Key Issues of Education for Sustainable Development. Sustainability 2020, 12, 6500. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12166500
Glavič P. Identifying Key Issues of Education for Sustainable Development. Sustainability. 2020; 12(16):6500. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12166500
Chicago/Turabian StyleGlavič, Peter. 2020. "Identifying Key Issues of Education for Sustainable Development" Sustainability 12, no. 16: 6500. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12166500
APA StyleGlavič, P. (2020). Identifying Key Issues of Education for Sustainable Development. Sustainability, 12(16), 6500. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12166500