Mapping sustainability initiatives across a region: an innovative survey approach.
Somerville, Margaret ; Green, Monica
The study on which this article is based is part of a larger
program of research about place-based sustainability education for the
Anthropocene, proposed to identify the current era of human-induced
changes to planetary processes. In using this term in response to the
intensification of global climate change (IPCC, 2007), social scientists
identify the need for new ways of thinking and knowing, and for
innovative forms of action. Formal, nonformal and informal education
have a potentially crucial role to play (Kagawa & Selby, 2010, p. 5)
but at present, however, 'there is little evidence of new concepts
of sustainability in Australian syllabuses' (Skamp, 2010, p. 10),
or indeed elsewhere (Nolet, 2009). Innovative local initiatives are
arising outside of formal education but they are isolated from each
other and absent from current theoretical formulations.
As teacher educator/researchers we became interested in the
increasing community activity in relation to sustainability initiatives
in our region, but the comparative absence in the schools in which our
students were placed for practicum. We assumed from our personal
experience that the community place-based sustainability initiatives
were educative, but we did not know. We wanted to find out how these
different initiatives and systems worked in relation to thinking
spatially and regionally.
We were also involved in two regional networks, one of which
generated the newly formed United Nations Regional Centre of Expertise
in Education for Sustainable Development. The purpose of the regional
centres of expertise (RCEs) is to connect local initiatives across a
region and then to a global network of regional linkages. Could this
framework potentially provide a way to move beyond the habitual erasure
of local, embodied, and place-based knowledge in Western education
systems? A system that builds up from a base of local knowledges
potentially maintains and fosters connection to local places. In order
to investigate the location, nature and type of sustainability
initiatives in our region, we developed a mapping survey in
collaboration with local sustainability and climate change networks.
A regional study of such initiatives potentially offers a
place-based analysis on a scale at which sustainability initiatives are
meaningful. This article summarises the qualitative analysis of the
pilot study in order to assess the usefulness of the approach for
thinking through some of the issues raised above. The immediate
practical aim of the study was to understand how to connect individual
local initiatives to each other across a region in order to gain greater
momentum for transformational change. A second aim was to consider how
to better link community place-based sustainability initiatives to
formal educational curricula and pedagogies. If the results of the
survey inform both of these aims then the innovative approach can be
assessed as worthwhile.
Research Literature in Sustainability and Mapping
As part of the study we considered the extensive body of
sustainability literature that highlights sustainability in formal,
informal and nonformal contexts, including schools and the broader
community. There appears to be widespread agreement that sustainability
represents an ideal that will be achieved when human-caused
environmental degradation has been reversed, along with overconsumption
and gross economic injustices that deprive future generations of the
ability to meet their needs (Nolet, 2009; Orr, 2009; Shiva, 1992;
Sterling, 2007; UNESCO, 2002, 2012). This notion was taken up in
Sterling's (2001) influential report, Sustainable Education:
Re-visioning Learning and Change, which advocated for sustainability as
a new paradigm 'that makes learning towards sustainable living an
explicit, central and integrating concept in education planning and
practice' (p. 83). More recently, others (Fawcett, Bell, &
Russell, 2002; Henderson & Tilbury, 2004; Onwueme & Borsari,
2007; Tilbury & Wortman, 2008), including Sterling (2012) promote
sustainability education for a reorientation Of society that equips
citizens with critical thinking and problem solving, participatory
decision-making and systemic thinking skills to address today's
complex sustainability issues.
Such extensive interpretations confirm sustainability as a broad
and ambiguous construct, which creates significant implication for how
it is interpreted, developed and implemented (Walshe, 2008). There are
very few empirical studies to support the implementation of
sustainability initiatives and those that do exist offer only very
limited empirical data (Somerville & Green, 2011). Despite these
challenges, community-based sustainability projects, local communities
and their schools are advancing broader community education and action
around issues of sustainability (Day Langhout, Rappaport, & Simmons,
2002; Flowers & Chodkiewicz, 2009; Stocker & Barnett, 1998;
Tilbury & Wortman, 2008; Uzzell, 1999; Walter, 2012; Zachariou &
Symeou, 2008). These actions that promote participation and partnerships
provide a critical platform for our own understanding of how education
for sustainability in local communities across a region is mobilised.
Mapping as a Method
Given the limited empirical research on the mapping of
community-based sustainability initiatives we turned to the broader
research literature to understand the wider implications of
'mapping' as a research method. Throughout the empirical
literature, digital mapping methods have been used extensively in the
physical sciences, particularly for gauging current human-environmental
phenomena and for future projections. Such examples include the
investigation of global environmental issues (Idrizi, Meha, Nikolli,
& Kabashi, 2012), calculations on the global costs of fishing (Lam,
Sumalia, Dyck, Pauly, & Watson, 2011; Stewart et al., 2010) and
other food security issues (Matsumura et al., 2009), the preservation of
global forests (Potapov et al., 2008; Wulder, White, Magnussen, &
McDonald, 2007), as well as the effects of climate change and water
availability (McDonald et al., 2011). These and other studies that
mapped ecological sustainability via a process of global mapping(Sutton,
Anderson, Tuttle, & Morse, 2012) are of great interest to our work
as they each, in their own distinctive way, set out to develop new
methods for measuring anthropogenic environmental impact. Despite the
science-focused nature of the studies, each reflects mapping as an
inherently powerful visual tool with the capacity to predict and
understand current/future and local/global sustainability issues. Not
only are these studies helpful for valuing mapping as method, they have
assisted us in locating our own work within a broader body of work that
currently examines human/more than human world relations with
sustainability in mind.
Thinking Regionally
The main methodological innovation of our study was to develop a
survey using the conceptual framework of place to investigate
sustainability education. The conceptual framework of place was
operationalised using the concept of place as bio-region. A bioregion is
a distinct socio-ecological unit of analysis as an area of land and/or
water whose limits are defined by 'the geographical distribution of
biophysical attributes, ecological systems and human communities'
(Brunckhorst, 2000, p. 37). It is commonly used as the basis for theory
development in disciplines such as ecology and natural resource
management, but it is rarely used in education. Each bio-region has
distinctive eco-social characteristics which will determine the nature
of place-based sustainability issues and responses emerging within that
region. To examine the characteristics of any particular region, then,
is to begin to understand how the organisation of actions towards
sustainability is educative, and how those actions arise within
particular local place constellations. We illustrate the potential of
thinking regionally in taking up the concept of bio-region in relation
to the Gippsland region in Victoria, Australia.
Gippsland is a distinctive region in south-eastern Victoria,
Australia, which has, like all regions, a particular identity, and
identifiable sustainability and climate change challenges. The Gippsland
region is 41,538 square kilometres (slightly smaller than Denmark),
which represents 18% of the Victorian land mass. Most (60%) of the
region's population of 266,718 live in the major centres and
surrounding towns, with the remaining 40% of the population in small
villages and settlements (<500 people; State Government of Victoria,
2008). Divided into six local government areas, Gippsland is home to
some of Victoria's most diverse natural resources and biodiversity.
The region was the traditional home of the Aboriginal peoples of the
Gunnai/Kurnai language group whose knowledge of language and country is
important for eco-social sustainability today. Gunnai/Kurnai people
similarly divided the region into five clans areas corresponding to
north, south, east, west, and fire country, each having distinctive
eco-systems: Brayukaloong (west), Brabiraloong (north), Krowatungaloong
(east), Bratowaloong (south), and Tatungaloong (fire country) (Thorpe,
2011, p. 9).
Gippsland is also noteworthy, in the context of sustainability, as
the provider of 85% of the state's electricity through brown
coal-fired power generators. There is concern that the economic
viability of the region is threatened by a carbon-constrained future, a
concern that arises from the experience of the 1990s when the
privatisation and automation of the power industry saw the loss of 8,000
direct, and a further estimated 8,000 indirect, jobs in the region. A
once proud storyline of working class labour became a storyline of
poverty, with intergenerational unemployment, further pathologised by
representations of the region as the source of carbon emissions and
global warming. These intertwined social, environmental and economic
factors have given rise to a high level of community awareness, concern,
and willingness to take action in relation to climate change and other
issues of sustainability. The extent to which these actions are
educative and what they might mean in terms of a place-based
bio-regional approach to sustainability education is the focus of the
analysis that follows.
Methodology and (Evolving) Methods
Place-Based Sustainability Survey
Within the conceptual framework of place, a place-based survey was
developed in collaboration with the Gippsland Climate Change Network (1)
to identify the location, nature and type of sustainability initiatives
across the region. The survey asked participants whether they offer
sustainability education or activities, what forms they take, what are
their goals, how are they funded, whether they are ongoing programs or
one-off projects, and who is involved. Respondents were also asked to
write a paragraph describing their sustainability initiative in more
detail if they wished to volunteer for further in-depth participatory
ethnographic study. The survey was sent to formal, nonformal and
informal education providers through the Gippsland Education for
Sustainability and the Gippsland Climate Change networks. Formal
providers included early childhood centres, schools, adult and community
education centres. Nonformal providers included regional art galleries,
museums, heritage and cultural centres, and national parks
interpretative centres. Informal providers include groups such as field
naturalist clubs and Landcare (2) groups.
A total of approximately 200 surveys were distributed to schools
and community based organisations through community networks, government
school regional intranet email, and Catholic school regional
directories. Completed survey responses from the community sector were
received without prompting and one follow-up email was sent out after 6
weeks. In contrast, no school surveys were returned from the government
school intranet mail out during the first 6 weeks post survey
distribution. Contact with randomly selected Gippsland government
primary schools via telephone confirmed these schools had not noticed
the survey within the DEECD (government schools department) bulk email
distribution. In response to this, a number of schools were contacted
directly. This allowed us to talk with principals about the study and
email surveys directly to those who were interested in participating.
Despite the expressed interest and assurances of the schools we
contacted that they wished to complete the survey, there was a
continuing lack of survey response from the government school sector, so
we decided to vary our approach and make direct contact with more
schools. Conversations with school principals revealed the challenges of
extreme time pressure with increasing teaching responsibilities and
administrative tasks. As a result we decided to focus our efforts on
gaining an even geographical distribution of survey responses across the
six Gippsland shires through direct contact. Many of the schools
reported that they did not have any sustainability education in their
schools, but by the end of the data collection period we had received 52
returns (21 schools and 31 community/private organisations), which
enabled us to undertake data analysis. It seemed that direct contact
through established informal networks, or by establishing some degree of
relationship, was required to elicit a response.
In the process of implementing the survey we further developed the
place-based approach in order to gain a visual overview of the
geographical distribution of completed surveys across the six local
government areas of Gippsland. We did this by placing coloured pins on
the three maps representing government school, Catholic school, and
community sector responses that had provided evidence of sustainability
initiatives. In studying the maps we were able to ascertain how many
participants in a particular location had been contacted and to identify
the particular local area in which they were located. This enabled us to
target our direct contact to schools and community organisations in the
areas that had not been covered. These methodological maps provided a
detailed geographical overview of where we had gained positive responses
to the survey and therefore the distribution of sustainability
initiatives across the region.
Analysis of Survey Data
The process of data analysis was carried out in three phases. The
first phase provided a numerical summary of survey responses to the
different questions. The second phase involved a summary storyline
analysis of selected individual responses and in the third phase we
analysed the data using a collective storyline approach. Together the
three forms of analysis provided a comprehensive overview of the
responses to the survey questionnaire.
In focusing on the qualitative collective response, it is important
to note just one aspect Of the numerical analysis. In response to the
question about the goals of their sustainability initiatives almost all
respondents indicated education as one of their goals. This confirmed
our original assumption that the majority of sustainability initiatives
are educative in intent even if there is no explicit educational
purpose. In this sense the following themes that emerged from the
collective analysis are storylines of the nature of place-based
sustainability education.
Storyline Analysis
We identified emergent themes that cut across the diversity of
individual survey responses and then grouped responses under the
relevant categories. The following themes emerged to frame the storyline
analysis:
* Region-based spatial framework
* Place-based focus
* Philosophical foundations
* Scarcity of funding and resources
* Partnerships
* Innovative approaches to teaching and learning.
Overarching Storyline: Region-Based Spatial Analysis
As previously noted, the Gippsland region is divided into six local
government areas. While they do not correspond directly to the division
into five clan areas of the Gunnai/Kurnai people, they do share some
similarities as eco-social units of analysis and the foci of place-based
sustainability education and governance. Considering the relationship
between local government areas and Gunnai/Kurnai clan divisions provided
important insights into the nature and potential of place-based
sustainability education initiatives as a bio-regional system.
Each of the shire councils that are responsible for these local
government areas has developed sustainability strategies in relation to
the particular characteristics of their locality. Latrobe City Shire,
for example, has a strong focus on climate change and the economic
implications of the transition to a low carbon emissions future in an
area whose main identity and economic base is brown coal fired power
generation. The Baw Baw Shire Council approach is about community
transition to a sustainable future in a locality characterised by small
farms, alternative food production and the most progressive,
wide-ranging, place-based sustainability initiatives. East Gippsland, a
large, isolated and sparsely populated area with a range of diverse
natural landscapes, has a strong focus on environmental sustainability.
While local councils potentially provide a basic eco-social unit as a
hub for sustainability education, they are poorly resourced for this
work and it is unclear from the survey whether their excellent
sustainability strategies can be translated into practice.
The eco-spatial sustainability thinking generated by this category
of region-based spatial analysis enabled the bringing together of
Australian Indigenous frameworks and non-indigenous spatial and
governance structures of local government. This then generated a new
overarching storyline within which the following thematic categories can
be analysed and interpreted.
Place-Based Focus for Sustainability Education
A place-based focus refers to sustainability education that is
grounded in the nature of the locality in which it occurs. Throughout
the surveys a number of outdoor places such as school grounds and
community gardens, wetlands, forests and creeks were identified as
critical sites for the delivery of place-based sustainability education.
For school children this meant collaborating in teams, and frequently
leaving the school itself to engage in activities in the field or
community. Local places provided the framework for projects that were
linked to local ecologies, biodiversity and sustainability.
More than half the schools in this study established food gardens
as part of teaching sustainability. One gardening teacher described how
students 'take records of different things that are happening [in
the garden], for example, egg production, the changing of the season
with fruit trees', characteristics determined by the weather,
seasons, rainfall and soil fertility of particular landscapes. Another
indicated how 'sensory engagement' in these everyday places
heightened children's awareness of 'what's happening
around them such as weather, song of birds, frogs'. Some schools
extended their gardening work into the public sphere to educate their
wider communities about sustainable gardening principles and practices,
as explained by the principal: 'We have had local organisations
come and view our garden as part of sustainable gardening workshops,
which have been organised throughout the year.' Such links
connected children to the groups that formed from the histories and
geographies of that particular location.
Direct links between community gardens and sustainability were also
highlighted in the survey data. Many community gardens operated as a
means that educate local people about growing food, reskilling people in
traditional food production, and linking communities to local food
systems. This trend was particularly prevalent in the more affluent West
Gippsland, which is closer to the city of Melbourne. Respondents
described how community gardens became hubs that 'encouraged people
how to grow produce organically ... to learn about design, organic pest
control, composting and biodiversity'. Community gardens have
become recognised as important places where people barter, share and
sell food.
The place-based approaches and pedagogies articulated in these
survey responses evidence sustainability education that grounded local
places at different levels and scales from school and community gardens
to forest protection, and advocating at a political level about the
significance of forests in the carbon cycle. They are connected to the
materiality of local landscapes and their historical and geographical
emergence as eco-social units. To consider these as parts of an
eco-social system of sustainability education within a region-based
approach enables the potential to leverage momentum towards
transformational change.
Philosophical Foundations
Many of the sustainability initiatives described by survey
respondents are underpinned by deep philosophical values. One school
explained the pedagogical meaning of their work:
To educate students in the understanding and conservation and the
importance of caring for our natural environment ... we want
students to understand global food issues such as poverty, food
security, food miles, ethical food, sustainable living and connect
these issues to the development of a school vegie garden.
The intention of addressing these deeper levels of engagement and
understanding of sustainability requires students to connect the context
of their personal lives (local) to the national and universal
perspectives (global) that inform sustainability across the world. This
'belief in sustaining future communities' was the rationale
behind two (school) principals' descriptions of students'
volunteer work in the broader community. Some of the key goals for
another school whose senior students undertake community based work as
part of a school curriculum was to 'link young people with the
broader community; develop individual and group responsibility; nurture
self confidence and resilience; ingrain values of integrity, enterprise
and excellence and development of active citizenship'.
Religious schools and organisations tended towards a larger and
more philosophical vision of integrated sustainability practice. A
well-established Anglican not-for-profit private organisation, for
example, is currently developing philosophy and policy around long-term
organisation-wide sustainability practices incorporated in training and
recruitment. Employees (including clientele such as families/children)
receive explicit messages about the agency's commitment to
responsible environmental and social practices.
The philosophical dimension of sustainability initiatives enables
the inclusion of deeper and more existential questions and
considerations than the simply cognitive. For these respondents, the
knowledge, learning, language, and practices of sustainability are tied
to deeper philosophical questions of existence such as those asked in
Rautio's research in the rural north of Finland: 'What is a
good enough life?' and 'What makes our everyday life
beautiful' (Rautio, 2011)? These questions are fundamentally
ethical and aesthetic and concern our relationship with the fabric of
the earth and the morethan-human world.
Lack of Funding and Resources
The lack of funding and resources were significant themes across
the sectors. Despite the majority of respondents expressing a preference
for long-term enduring programs of sustainability education and action,
survey responses suggested that initiatives tended to be project- rather
than program-based due to funding and resource limitations.
Project-based funding tended to limit the possibilities and longevity of
sustainability initiatives due to the short-term and limited nature of
funding as suggested by one respondent: 'The group aims to be long
term but projects are very short term given it is nearly all coordinated
and delivered by volunteers. Outcomes are generally not assessed as the
group does not have resources to do this.' The issue of continued
funding for programs was problematic at all levels: comments such as
'funding is always an ongoing issue' and 'the funding
will run out' encapsulated a collective sentiment amongst many of
the respondents.
Local governments expressed their own reliance on project funds and
in-kind support from community, who in turn depend on the shire councils
in a perpetual cycle of underfunding. This is particularly the case for
Landcare projects that depend on reciprocal relationships with the
broader community and schools. Local governments are logical providers
of support for community-based sustainability education, but it appears
that they are not necessarily funded to do this. Community groups and
schools are heavily reliant on scarce human resources such as volunteers
and parents for labour and creative ideas. Our analysis suggests that
volunteers tend to prop up the majority of sustainability initiatives,
including the formal education sector.
The lack of funding and resources for sustainability initiatives
raises the question of how to support such activities in an enduring way
in a system with no more resources to give. In following the storyline
of eco-spatial regional thinking, resources need to be sourced and
allocated in local government areas. The work of looking after the
planet needs to be valued differently and the partnerships and
collaborations through which leverage can be gained towards momentum for
transformational change are critical in this work.
Partnerships
The majority of surveys made reference to the important role of
partnerships for the effective delivery and longevity of sustainability
education programs. Partnerships were essential for community-based
groups and schools operating with limited funds, and tended to cross all
dimensions of Gippsland communities. They were made up of collaborations
across schools, community volunteers, local governments, local business,
government departments, water and catchment management authorities,
universities, community banks, wetland centres, civic associations,
philanthropic foundations and trusts, conservation societies, museums,
health care providers, farming groups, rural women's groups, and
students and learners at all levels. Partnerships were especially
relevant to the more isolated communities such as East Gippsland where
groups deliberately sought strong enduring collaborations with existing
organisations.
Surveys indicated the significance of Landcare partnerships and
grants that generated opportunities for schools and communities to
collaborate on local habitat projects. The Koala Corridor project
exemplifies how schools and communities work in partnerships towards the
revegetation and preservation of local bushland. Such projects are
quintessentially local, as with the Strzelecki koala, a particular
species of koala that lives on a small variety of eucalyptus trees that
grow in the Strzelecki Ranges, a mountain range that borders West and
South Gippsland shires. To grow a koala corridor is to know the way
areas of bushland link to each other in a locality, the types of
eucalypts the koalas eat and their growing habits and conditions, the
sourcing of seeds to raise, and the seasons of planting and growth. This
kind of knowledge lives in local communities and partnerships with
community organisations are necessary for it to enter the curriculum and
pedagogies of school education.
Funding, resources and partnerships need to be considered together
in terms of new and alternative economies and new ways of organising
social and institutional structures of work and community.
Relationships, and the necessity of working together, like the
organisation of Indigenous kinship structures that are tied to country,
are crucial resources for a sustainable future. Sustainability education
in the formal sector will need to include both education and practice in
sustainability partnerships that bring the next generation into the
learning that is needed for planetary work.
Innovative Approaches to Teaching and Learning
Respondents identified a number of sustainability initiatives that
they considered innovative including:
* the development of local food networks and small farm workshops
* solar power to generate more than enough power for their own use
* sustainability festivals across many local shires
* 'follow your waste' tours, with 12 primary schools
teaching children about sustainability with recycling, reuse, recovery,
and composting
* a sustainable house day that attracted hundreds of people to
homes in the area
* community and Indigenous groups participating in land and
waterway management and restoration projects
* farms and schooling collaborations
* a Community Wetlands Day that involved local schools, field
naturalists and volunteers
* mapping inundation data with a range of stakeholders
* teaching community spirit through sharing excess produce
* Early Childhood conferences open to all Early Years'
professionals, families and the wider community, with an emphasis on
sustaining the workforce and sustainability.
The nature of the innovations listed above need to be
conceptualised within the whole trajectory of the new storyline of
country presented in this analysis. They can be imagined as local place
sites, with different activities, partners and stories connected to each
other across the region in a larger storyline of regional sustainability
action and education. Each of the innovations is a site for further
research to more deeply analyse the nature of the pedagogies that are
being developed in these alternative learning spaces. They typically
involve place- and community-based experiential approaches, including
experimentation with the latest sustainable technologies, as well as
enduring intimate relationships with local places and people. These
embodied approaches to sustainability are an important beginning point
to understanding the possibilities of a connected system. Further
in-depth study is being conducted to analyse the nature of the
curriculum and pedagogies to enable the integration of sustainability
into formal education.
Conclusion
Our preliminary observations suggested that the most exciting and
innovative sustainability education initiatives are emerging at
grassroots community level, but do not appear in the formal curriculum
of school education. These initiatives, however, seemed to be dispersed
and lack the momentum for transformational change. New networks are also
emerging, however, to address this fragmentation, including the
Gippsland Climate Change Network and the Gippsland Education for
Sustainability Network, with whom we collaborated to design and conduct
the survey. Part of the purpose and work of the networks is to
understand what is going on across the region, and therefore how to
better facilitate sustainability action and education. The place-based
survey was designed as an open-ended questionnaire to explore how to
access and analyse these diverse cross-sectoral activities and their
spatial relationship to the material landscapes of the region. The
development of preliminary visual mapping techniques proved useful and
could be extended using Google maps to further enhance connection
between disparate local initiatives in order to leverage greater
momentum for change.
The responses from local government sustainability officers drew
our attention to important strategic plans for sustainability developed
within each local government area that were quite different from each
other, depending on the sustainability challenges of each location.
Mapping the shape of local government areas revealed the
division of the region into similar scale eco-social units to the
division of country for Gunnai/Kurnai people who traditionally occupied
the region and continue to revitalise their culture and language there
today. This finding supported the usefulness of a regional approach to
framing a place-based system of sustainability education and action that
draws on Aboriginal eco-social structures and thinking.
While the characteristics of the Gippsland region are specific, the
process of mapping the intertwined socio-cultural, environmental and
economic issues is a generalisable one in relation to understanding how
education for sustainability works as a system across a region.
This place-based approach to mapping sustainability initiatives
offers a unique perspective on the crucial nature of developing
interrelated networks of regionally organised education for
sustainability. It brings together a systems approach that tends to be
abstract and highly conceptual with a place-based approach to provide
the crucial link to the materiality of local places in sustainability
education.
Conceptualised within this framework, it is possible to identify
the contributions of formal, nonformal and informal sustainability
actions and education. The innovative place-based pedagogies of
nonformal and informal provision are understood as educative even though
not articulated in the same way as formal education. The nature of their
place-based sustainability education enables insight into their
potential for enriching formal education. They typically involve place-
and community-based experiential pedagogies shaped within and by the
communities and places in which they arise. Strong and enduring
approaches were underpinned by deeper philosophical questions around the
existential meanings of sustainability action and education. Further
research is required to articulate the nature of these local, embodied
community pedagogies of sustainability and their important contribution
to the possibilities of an interconnected system.
The overriding storyline of education for sustainability considered
as a cross-sectoral system is the extreme lack of funding and resources
in all parts of the system. While local government has excellent
place-based sustainability strategic plans, they rely on community
volunteers to carry out their projects. Sustainability initiatives are
indeed emerging at grassroots community level, but they in turn rely on
minimal, short-term, project-based funding and volunteers.
Interestingly, we found a similar story in the school system where the
rare exemplars of integrated sustainability education relied on
partnerships, volunteer support and the dedication of particular
visionary teachers to contribute over and above their normal teaching
work. Formal education structures, however, are enduring and an
important site for the embedding of sustainability education.
Within this extreme resource-constrained system there were some
outstanding examples of creatively overcoming the constraints of a
capitalist economic system that can only value growth and material
wealth. The importance of partnerships, networks, and community emerged
as key responses to building capacity for sustainability education
considered as a regional system. This emphasised the component of
learning how to do partnerships and form community as an integral part
of sustainability education. Community grassroots sustainability
initiatives are a crucial site of this learning and innovation. They are
not only doing the work of undertaking sustainability education and
forming community, but they are necessary to support the integration of
sustainability into formal education. Finally, we identified that as the
most significant resource in the system is human capacity, then the
provision of professional learning for educators who work within all
sectors of formal, nonformal and informal education is fundamental to
the support of regional systems of sustainability education.
doi10.1017/aee.2013.1
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Margaret Somerville (1) & Monica Green (2)
(1) Centre for Educational Research at the University of Western
Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
(2) Faculty of Education (Gippsland campus), Monash University,
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Address for correspondence: Margaret Somerville, Centre for
Educational Research at the University of Western Sydney, Sydney,
Australia. Email: Margaret.Somerville@ uws.edu.au
Notes
(1) The Gippsland Climate Change Network Inc. (GCCN) is an
incorporated not-forprofit network of approximately 50 diverse member
organisations across government departments and agencies, private
businesses, community groups and other organisations, covering the six
local government areas across the greater Gippsland region.
(2) Landcare is an Australian grass roots movement that harnesses
individuals and groups under the ethic of caring for private and public
land. The movement has a broad focus on sustainable management of
Australia's natural resource assets and covers coastal, urban,
rural and remote Australian landscapes.
Author Biographies
Margaret Somerville is Professor of Education and Director of the
Centre for Educational Research at the University of Western Sydney. She
has a long history of empirical research in place-based education and
decolonising methodologies using creative and alternative approaches.
Her latest book, arising from her long-term collaboration with
Indigenous artists in the Murray-Darling Basin, Water in a Dry Land:
Learning Through Art and Story, is published in Routledge's
Innovative Ethnography Series in 2013. Most recently her work seeks to
understand the systems, pedagogies and learning processes that will lead
to transformational change for planetary sustainability.
Dr Monica Green is a Lecturer at Monash University in the Faculty
of Education (Gippsland campus). Her current research is centrally
focused on pedagogies and curriculum that support education for
sustainability, including climate change and the preservation of local
places and communities. As a researcher she is interested in the
pedagogical potential of everyday places such as school grounds and
nearby locations that nurture children's emotional, social,
physical and ecological development through embodied learning. Her
research has examined the significance of 'place' and
place-oriented curriculum as a framework for guiding teaching and
learning in unique and local contexts.