Module Specifications.
Current Academic Year 2024 - 2025
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Date posted: September 2024
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Description The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development articulates seventeen sustainable development goals (SDGs), that refer to inter-connected global challenges (including climate change, over- population, conflicts, inequalities and poverty) to be addressed as a matter of great urgency. The Education 2030 plan (UN General Assembly 2019) positions Education for Sustainable Development (ESD) as pivotal in enabling students to respond to these challenges. ESD is a vision of education that seeks to balance human and economic well-being with cultural traditions and respect for the Earth’s natural resources. It enables people to take informed decisions and responsible actions for environmental integrity, economic viability and a just society, for present and future generations. The Education 2030 plan also draws on the concept of global citizenship, with Global Citizenship Education (GCED) recognised as key to this agenda, developing the knowledge, skills and behaviours to contribute to a just and equitable world (UNESCO, 2013). Climate change is further recognised by UNESCO as “the defining issue of our time” and as such, demands the inclusion of climate change education (CCE) within educational systems, processes and curricula. With their own origins, synergies and contradictions, ESD, GCE and CCE are therefore positioned as educational responses to the global challenges, offering potential transformations of person, pedagogy and education systems (UNECE, 2013). This module will explore the many, varied and contested conceptual framings and agendas relating to education for sustainability. It will critically examine the possibilities and challenges presented by ambitious policies and agendas, such as Agenda 2030 and Education 2030, for education providers, educators and learners and consider evidence that illustrates the implementation of policy into practice across a range of education and work- related contexts. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Learning Outcomes 1. Articulate the origins of, key influences on, and tensions between various conceptual framings of education for sustainability, including but not limited to, Education about/for Sustainable Development, Global Citizenship Education and Climate Change Education. 2. Engage in debates on the power and privilege dynamics contributing to a range of global sustainability challenges, and implications thereof in educating for sustainability. 3. Map the evolution of education for sustainability policies, strategies, action plans and networks at national and international levels. 4. Analyse and appraise the translation of policies, strategies and/ or action plans on education for sustainability in their own professional context or work-based setting, and within the wider educational and societal context. 5. Critically reflect on the sustainability knowledge domains, competencies, dispositions and ethical-values bases that underpin sustainability-oriented ecologies of learning. 6. Investigate the applicability of innovative pedagogies, foregrounded within sustainability-oriented ecologies of learning, in their own professional/ work setting and within the wider educational context. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
All module information is indicative and subject to change. For further information,students are advised to refer to the University's Marks and Standards and Programme Specific Regulations at: http://www.dcu.ie/registry/examinations/index.shtml |
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Indicative Content and Learning Activities
Educating for sustainability in the AnthropoceneStudents will be introduced to and engage in discussions on the conceptual framings of education for sustainability, the schools of thought and disciplinary areas from which these emerged, as well as historical developments, issues and trends, and current debates in education for sustainability. Students will be presented with an overview of global sustainability challenges and corresponding mitigation strategies in areas including but not limited to: climate change, poverty, biodiversity, conflict resolution, gender and other inequalities, and well-being. Students will critically examine the framing of the Anthropocene and of the 17 Sustainable Development Goals articulated within the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.Sustainability Discourses on People, Power & PrivilegeStudents will engage with sustainability discourses that explore power and privilege issues (who gets what, and why?) contributing to global sustainability challenges (such as poverty, gender inequality, climate change), and will furthermore examine the implications of this for whole populations, and social stratifications thereof, as well as disadvantaged groups, ethnic groups, and women and girls.Sustainability Policy PositionsStudents will be introduced to key national and international policies, strategies, networks and action plans impacting on education for sustainability, including but not limited to the following: Agenda 2030/ SDGs; Education 2030 and its predecessors (Global Action Plan for ESD, Decade of ESD, Millennium Development Goals, Earth Charter, Agenda 21 – Chapter 36); Irish National Strategy on ESD (2015-2019) and ESD (2020+); Irish National Biodiversity Action Plan; Irish Climate Action & Low Carbon Development Bill 2020; An Taisce Green Schools initiatives; Irish Aid’s Global Citizenship Development Education Strategy 2021-2024; European policy developments vis-a-vis sustainability, such as the European Green Deal; Global Regional Centres of Expertise in ESD network; COP21 and its predecessors; and G20/ T20 Policy recommendations on ESD. Students will explore the translation of particular policies, strategies or action plans on sustainability within own professional or work contexts.Sustainability-oriented Ecologies of LearningStudents will learn about the knowledge domains, competencies, dispositions and ethical-values bases that underpin sustainability-oriented ecologies of learning (Wals, 2019) at different levels of education. This will include critical review of the eight sustainability competencies foregrounded by UNESCO (2017), which include: Systems thinking competency, Strategic thinking competency, Normative competency (Values Thinking), Anticipatory competency (Futures Thinking), Critical Thinking, Self- awareness competency and Integrated problem solving competency. It will further include review of the OCED’s Global Competence Framework (2019). Students will also learn about, interact with and deconstruct a range of sustainability-oriented ecologies of learning through which they will encounter pedagogic approaches and tools that have been designed to inspire and promote (re-)orientations toward sustainability. They will critically consider the applicability of innovative approaches, such as: affective pedagogies, disruptive pedagogies, action-oriented pedagogies, and challenge-based pedagogies, within their own professional practice or work setting. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Indicative Reading List
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Other Resources 65366, Report, Department of Education. (2022)., 2022, ESD to 2030: Second national strategy on education for sustainable development. Government of Ireland., https://www.gov.ie/en/publication/8c8bb-esd-to-2030-second-national-strategy-on-education-for-sustainable-development/, 65367, Plan, Department of the Environment, Climate and Communications. (2023, December 20)., 0, Climate Action Plan 2024. Government of Ireland., https://www.gov.ie/en/publication/79659-climate-action-plan-2024/, | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||