A process for transition to sustainability: implementation.
Wooltorton, Sandra ; Palmer, Marilyn ; Steele, Fran 等
Introduction
This paper reports the outcomes of the second of three action
cycles of an action research project undertaken at the South West campus
of Edith Cowan University (ECU); a small, single faculty, regional
campus located in Bunbury, Western Australia. The first action cycle
comprised the planning phase, whereas this second cycle was the first
implementation phase of the research. An earlier paper (Wooltorton,
Palmer, Goodwin, & Paine, 2010) contextualised the project in the
literature, described the background of the project and presented the
findings of the first action cycle. That phase of the project identified
the importance of building a community of practice and the significance
of developing a learning stance for sustainability transition. It
highlighted the need to work to develop a local understanding of the
term sustainability; the necessity to engage with the local community
and the desire to relate more deeply with the local and built
environment. The significance of working in ways which incorporate
crossdiscipline perspectives was also identified. Whilst the outcome of
the first action cycle was the identification of the process and design
for the project, this current paper reports on the initial
implementation cycle.
The main intention of the project has been to reorient the
curriculum to sustainability across the seven program groups which make
up the faculty: Business, Computer Science, Creative Industries,
Education, Nursing, Social Work and Coastal Environmental Science/Surf
Science. Specifically, the goals of the research described here have
been to:
* Plan the reorientation of the faculty to sustainability in terms
of the content (curriculum) and processes of teaching and learning;
* Use Action Research as a methodology to achieve the necessary
ongoing learning and to frame the reports on the project findings; and
* Begin building the social sustainability framework.
Teaching, learning and research in the field of sustainability
education (1) have a history of more than a decade at the campus, which
has hosted a number of sustainability education research and development
projects. The campus is located in a region of Western Australia known
as Australia's only biodiversity hotspot and the university is the
custodian of 80 hectares of natural bushland. For these reasons, the
Faculty of Regional Professional Studies has been well placed to
undertake this research into transition to sustainability.
The key aims of this ongoing project are distinctively Australian
in that they are part of a nascent movement in Australia to create
social frameworks to anchor sustainability education programs. The
project is innovative in that our transformative approach is underpinned
by community development knowledge and principles (Ife & Tesoriero,
2006). Given the nature and location of our faculty we have had an
opportunity to trial sustainability reorientation using a community
resilience/community linking approach and in doing so build community
among the staff and students. The project has also been based on a
learning approach linked to sustainability initiatives in nongovernment
organisations, schools, community networks and government departments in
the town, region and nationwide (Wooltorton et al., 2010).
Australian Universities and Sustainability Education
Substantial research in the field of sustainability education has
been implemented in universities in international contexts (for example
Corcoran & Wals, 2004). There have been regular calls over the years
to radically transform higher education in particular universities (for
example Reason, 2002) and more generally in international contexts (for
example Fadeeva & Mochizuki, 2010) in order to more competently
address the sustainability education agenda. In relation to a double
learning challenge which he calls "paradigm" and
"provision" in higher education, three areas of concern for
each university are identified by Sterling (2004). These are firstly
that which already exists in relation to paradigm and provision;
secondly that which is implied by sustainability in relation to paradigm
and provision; and thirdly that which is required to shift both paradigm
and provision for sustainability outcomes (Sterling, 2004). This paper
addresses the third of Sterling's areas of concern. In the
remainder of this section, aspects of the contemporary Australian
university context for sustainability education are outlined, and some
other sustainability initiatives in the higher education setting are
introduced. Some of the issues pertinent to the current study are
highlighted.
In 2009, Living sustainably: The Australian Government's
National Action Plan for Education for Sustainability (NAP) (Department
of the Environment Water Heritage and the Arts, 2009) was released. The
NAP proposes a transformative approach to education, with the stated aim
of "achieving a culture of sustainability in which teaching and
learning for sustainability are reinforced by continuous improvement in
the sustainability of campus management" (Department of the
Environment Water Heritage and the Arts, 2009, p. 5). The NAP is part of
Australia's contribution to the UN Decade of Education for
Sustainable Development 2005--2014. UNESCO takes the view that: "We
have to learn our way out of current social and environmental problems
and learn to live sustainably" (UNESCO, nd) (our emphasis). The
intention of the NAP is to reorient all education systems, at all
levels, to sustainability through learning, which in most cases will
require transformation of practices and structures. The NAP bases
education for sustainability on a number of defined principles:
* Transformation and change;
* Education for all and lifelong learning;
* Systems thinking;
* Envisioning a better future;
* Critical thinking and reflection;
* Participation; and
* Partnerships for change (Department of the Environment Water
Heritage and the Arts, 2009, p. 9).
These principles were adopted by the Australian Research Institute
for Environment and Sustainability (ARIES) and incorporated into
"mainstreaming" which uses a complex systems approach to
holistic change within the university setting. Projects to mainstream
sustainability into pre-service teacher education, accountancy and MBA
programs have so far been conducted (Ferreira, Ryan, Davis, Cavanagh,
& Thomas, 2009; Steele, 2010; Thomas & Benn, 2009).
A whole-of-university approach to sustainability links research,
education and operational activities together and engages students in
these activities (Mcmillin & Dyball, 2009). For example, management
and operations staff might engage all staff and students in a process to
create a shared vision for the faculty (including the use of facilities
and grounds) that encourages critical reflection and an opportunity for
participation and dialogue. To support this and to overcome disciplines
operating as silos, it is suggested that an interdisciplinary approach
to planning and teaching the curriculum is needed (Paige, Lloyd, &
Chartres, 2008; Sherren, 2006). Further, it is advocated that graduate
attributes be developed that address the skills and competencies
required for partnership, participation and action as well as those that
enable graduates to critically enquire and think about problems and the
associated complexities for a more sustainable way of living (Barth,
Godemann, Rieckmann, & Stoltenberg, 2007; Fien, 2002; Sibbel, 2009).
It is also vital that students acquire the ability to work with people
from different cultures and backgrounds (Martins, Mata, & Costa,
2006).
A number of universities have implemented successful projects to
incorporate sustainability education. Five universities in Queensland
and four in NSW were involved in a project to mainstream education for
sustainability into pre-service teacher education (Ferreira et al.,
2009; Steele, 2010). A whole-of-university initiative at the Australian
National University (ANU) resulted in significant change on that campus
(Mcmillin & Dyball, 2009). Similarly, the Royal Melbourne Institute
of Technology (RMIT) undertook a project that sought to achieve lasting
change in organisational structure/operations and curriculum content.
The main aim of that project, Beyond Leather Patches (BELP) (Holdsworth,
Bekessy, Peliwe, Hayles, & Thomas, 2006) was to provide practical
guidelines for integrating the broad concepts of sustainability into a
wide range of university courses while also gaining a deeper
understanding of the methods needed to achieve curriculum and
institutional change. To achieve this, the project coordinators ran a
series of workshops that encouraged academics to take ownership of their
respective practices, undertook a course audit and surveyed staff about
their attitudes towards teaching sustainability (Holdsworth et al.,
2006; Lang, Thomas, & Wilson, 2006). Initial outcomes from the
project resulted in 16 courses being revised.
Another initiative, this time undertaken at the University of South
Australia (Paige et al., 2008), was the development of a
transdisciplinary unit incorporating science, mathematics and ecological
literacy for pre-service teacher education. Transdisciplinary was
defined as "interdisciplinary + participation" and required
going beyond the current content of each unit (Paige et al, 2008, p.
24). The authors note that it would have been much easier to do the
three units as separate subjects, but argue that delivering in this way
is important for the long term reorientation of teaching towards a
sustainable future. However reaching this level of integration of
content and theory was found to be stressful and time consuming. This is
not surprising; lack of time was also the most commonly cited reason for
non-participation in sustainability actions in the pre-service teacher
education study conducted by ARIES (Steele, 2010).
A number of issues confront many Australian universities and
directly impact on their sustainability education capacity. One is that
academic communities are expected to confront a shortage of academics
within the next decade (Hammond & Churchman, 2008). This is because
academic salaries fail to compete favourably with those in the private
sector, therefore many universities are failing to attract highly
qualified and suitable staff (Murray & Drollery, 2005). It is also
because of increased casualisation (Hammond, 2011, p. 11). Additionally,
high student-staff ratios (a result of increased student intakes in
times of declining permanent staff appointments) compound this problem
Australia-wide. Another issue is a perceived loss of opportunities for
creativity and autonomy for research (Hammond & Churchman, 2008).
This is explicated by Cooper & Poletti (2011) who argue that the
process of journal ranking stifles collegiality, threatens international
research networks and potentially erodes the socio-cultural role of
academic journals. The overall audit and quality context is a factor in
the decreasing capacity of academics to sustain academic life or nurture
a social dimension of sustainability (Hammond, 2011).
Another constraint to building sustainability is establishing a
shared meaning for the term so that mutual comprehension is possible
when it is in common use among people working together. The problem of
the meaning of the term sustainability has been alluded to earlier in
this paper and will only be briefly outlined here. Internationally much
work has been completed around pillars of sustainability to frame the
transdimensional nature of the concept. Whilst they have been variously
named by different authors for a variety of reasons, the biophysical,
economic, social and political systems in conjunction with the
inter-related principles of conservation, peace and equity, appropriate
development and democracy (UNESCO, 2002, p. 8) provide an outline for
beginning learners.
In terms of the Australian literature, Sherren (2007) found some
agreement about a knowledge base for sustainability but more in the area
of ecology than in the political, social and economic aspects of
sustainability. Reid and Petocz (2006) found that university lecturers
had varying and often narrow understandings of the term. Many held naive
views such as "keeping something going" or recycling paper
(Reid & Petocz, 2006, p. 120). Fuller (2010) argues that the word
has become cliched and urgently needs sharpening for students to
understand that major changes to the ways we live and design buildings
are needed. Accordingly he uses principles originally devised by Palmer,
Cooper & van der Vorst (1997) comprising environment, participation,
equity and futurity. Wals and Jickling (2002) suggest that talk around
the meaning of sustainability can bring together disparate groups,
creating dissonance and generating learning. It is this approach which
has informed the current study.
Methodology
Action research, a strategy to link theory and practice using a
cyclical process of planning, implementation, description and evaluation
(Carr & Kemmis, 1986), has diverse applications (for example Grundy,
1995; Reason, 1988; Tripp, 2005). Action research is a way of
researching collaboratively. For Grundy (1995), action research is about
involvement (participation and collaboration) and the improvement of
practices. Such improvement targets three areas: "improvement in
practices; improvement in the situation in which practice is occurring;
improvement in understanding both the practice and situation" (p.
9).
At the end of the first action cycle for this project, the
researchers planned to establish a series of nested projects within a
paradigm of transformative human inquiry (Heron, 1996) to progress the
goal of finding out what works in transitioning the curriculum towards
sustainability. The projects that were introduced, or continued from the
first action cycle, were an art project; a student sustainability group;
linkage to an emerging Transition Town (Hopkins, 2008) project ; a
series of program-based focus groups and one faculty-wide reflective
meeting. These projects aimed to build relationships amongst, and
between, students and staff and between the campus and the local
township.
The aim of the focus groups with staff from each of the seven
programs was to collect data about their understanding of sustainability
for their discipline area, and their thoughts on what might bring about
a reorientation toward sustainability in their curriculum. As
anticipated, each program had different understandings about the meaning
and application of the concept of sustainability; meanings attributed to
sustainability are influenced by the ways of working within that
knowledge field. Thus debate continued as to whether multiple meanings
of sustainability could be held at the same time, or whether the
priority of the project should be to define the meaning more precisely.
Despite time limitations brought about by workload demands, 27
academic staff (68% of the program based academic staff) participated in
the focus groups. Two meetings were held with each of the larger
programs to allow more time for discussion and one meeting was held with
each of the smaller programs. At each meeting a presentation was given
to the groups detailing the aims and background of the project and
illustrating sustainability through the four interconnected dimensions
(or pillars of sustainability education): the biophysical, economic,
social and political (UNESCO, 2002 p. 8). The presenters juxtaposed sustainability as an organising principle with economic growth (Trainer,
1989). Sustainability constructs acceptable to each program emerged from
the group discussions, such as preventative health (nursing) and social
justice (social work). By leaving the definition of sustainability open,
staff could be creative when translating sustainability as an organising
principle into their curriculum.
In terms of analysis of the primary data, notes from all meetings
were coded and uploaded into QSR NVivo 8. Further analysis generated key
categories and themes (Miles & Huberman, 1994). Once the initial
categories were developed, all academic and senior staff were invited to
reflect on the emerging themes. In brief, the function of the
methodology was to facilitate the process, and as the next section
shows, this eventuated.
Findings
From the outset, the researchers intended to use processes
conducive to sustainability transition, and as far as possible, to work
inside the paradigm that they wished to bring into fruition. Themes that
emerged from the data were:
* Teaching between and across disciplines (transdisciplinary
practice);
* Discourse;
* Communication strategies;
* Networking; and
* Shared and disparate meanings of sustainability.
It was apparent from the data that the ways the programs are linked
have shaped the faculty's transition to sustainability. Within an
overarching construct of transdisciplinary practice as defined by Paige
et al. (2008) above, the other themes are outlined below, illustrated
with extracts from the notes made at the program focus groups.
Discourse
A number of groups spoke about the importance of discourse in
creating interdisciplinary ways of working. However, two meanings of
discourse were evident and these reflect the way this term is used in
different fields:
* Authentic dialogue (Habermasian); or
* "Permission to speak" (Foucaultian).
Participants highlighted the fundamental importance of authentic
dialogue in order to bring about the desired outcome of sharing teaching
and research.
The problem of discourse was discussed in depth, including the
problem of interpretations of meanings by disciplinary groups and
therefore often contradictory assumptions by conversants with different
backgrounds. Conversations underpinned by this problem have happened on
campus in recent times, causing a rapid cessation of the conversation
without the opportunity to explore and carefully investigate the
construction of shared understandings. In other words, cross-program
engagement can immediately halt without recognising the importance of
clarifying these assumptions. (Researcher notes, focus group 1)
Increased opportunities for discourse (as authentic dialogue)
involving clarification of meaning were called for. There was
considerable discussion about the form this discourse should take:
Take an approach to inter-program collaboration that focuses on
mutual respect, critical inquiry and respectful argument. (Participant,
reflective meeting)
It was regarded as necessary to increase the dialogue between
groups regarding the transition to sustainability project and one
participant queried the rationale for conducting the focus groups
within, rather than across, program teams.
There has been an ongoing question about whether the dialogue in
meetings has been fully authentic, with one participant noting
"elephants in the room" during the conversations. This comment
related to an issue of staff reorganisation which took place during the
action cycle and resulted in several redundancies. The idea that
sustainability is linked to decision-making had been made prior to the
staff reorganisation:
Things would be more sustainable if the people involved in a work
area make the decisions around it. The concept of subsidiarity relates
to the idea that the people who do the work make decisions around it.
Taking this idea to education institutions, the biggest groups involved,
the teachers and students, have the least say in what they do. So--in
our system the bigger the group, the less say they have about their
workplace! (Participant, focus group 2)
Another participant suggested another way of looking at the notion
of discourse:
There was discussion about warrants for participation, and the
issue of representation. For whom are we speaking? The importance of all
materials being public was raised. (Name) spoke about the work by
Charles Fox and Hugh Miller on warrants for participation. (Researcher
notes, reflective meeting)
The idea to work with Fox and Miller's (1995) ideas about
warrants for participation in discourse has been taken on board by the
project team, and has been considered more fully in action cycle three.
During the reflective meeting open to all staff, one participant
commented that she felt uncomfortable with the term "power",
but was able to accept it when it was reframed as the capacity to bring
about change through cooperative relationships. In that context, power
related to having the capacity to control the content of units taught on
the campus. The current situation in this faculty is that many units are
owned by the larger faculties in Perth, and staff members are required
to negotiate any changes to the unit outlines. Some staff felt this to
be an impediment to change toward sustainability. Others felt that
change could be made if dialogue was maintained with the parent campus
and any formal policies and procedures about changing content adhered
to. This view seems to suggest some faith in the idea of discourse as
"authentic dialogue", which Hammond (2011) finds is an
integral quality of social sustainability.
Communication
Although discourse is closely related to the theme of
communication, here communication refers to the means by which
interconnectedness can be achieved; the technologies of communication.
Generally on the campus where this study took place there are few
whole-of-staff meetings, conferences or retreats, yet people want to see
real things happen:
Staff wish to improve campus-wide communication, for example
consultation with staff about vital decisions impacting upon resource
allocation, cultural fixtures and staff working conditions. It is
important for wellbeing that people feel valued and included.
(Researcher notes, focus group 1)
One focus group also highlighted the importance of culturally
sensitive communication for both staff and students. Another sub-theme
to emerge was that of the importance of celebrating successes; for
example, to provide a regular newsletter or an event at the end of
semester that would showcase what had been achieved.
Networking
Related to the theme of communication are the concepts of networks
and networking. As networks become bigger and more complex,
communication can become a problem. Inter-group networks, community
networks, and wider academic networks were all identified as important.
In response to a question about what makes sustainability education, one
focus group participant responded:
We maintain and sustain relationships with schools. We maintain the
work environment. We focus on relationships with each other, with
schools and students, with other campuses of ECU. That is, as education
is about relationships, so is our program. (Participant, focus group 4)
Similarly:
(Name) also spoke about Cooper Ramos' (2009) work on being
adaptive. In a nutshell, this work claims that in day to day work we pay
attention to the fast variables that change, instead of the slow
variables that are strategic and long term. It seems that this is the
place that this sustainability project needs to aim for. Fast variables
are such things as curriculum framework, Operational Excellence and
workloads formula. Slow variables are the community-based variables
where we spend our time and care. (Researcher notes, reflective meeting)
In short, resilient community relationships manifesting themselves
as functioning networks, are seen as one significant aspect of
sustainability, in particular the need to maintain these over the longer
term despite short term problems with workloads, restructuring and
contestation around decision making. As well as documenting the need for
such networks, the process of undertaking the research project actually
contributed to the creation of networks. For example the art project was
seen as providing an opportunity for staff to chat together in informal
settings and discuss their individual meanings of sustainability.
Similarly community networks were being developed through collaboration
with a community-based sustainability education project which is
modelled on the international transition town movement (Hopkins, 2008).
Likewise, wider academic networks were being developed through
sustainability education conference attendance by staff who would not
normally attend these events.
Shared Meanings of Sustainability
Developing a shared meaning of sustainability for pragmatic
conversational purposes appears to be a critical component of
transitioning the curriculum towards it. This section highlights the
meanings of sustainability that were shared, and their potential to aid
authentic dialogue in the future.
Traditionally work-life balance has not been seen as a major
component of sustainability practice, as it has belonged in the realm of
management and productivity negotiations. However, data from this
project suggest that it should be part of our sustainability agenda, as
this is seen as a survival issue for staff. A major study in an
Australian university by Hammond (2011, pp. 116, 172) makes this link
very clearly. Several of the focus groups defined sustainability in
terms of their day-to-day survival as academics. For example, one
participant noted that "burnout is palpably not a sustainable
practice". This aspect of sustainability elicited the greatest
passion. Conversely it was also the motivator of ingenuity.
Real flexibility is required; for example this program has survived
due to continual changing of the course and creating new units whilst
redistributing key concepts and content. This is quite evolutionary, the
need to move in response to different forces/motivations for change.
(Participant, focus group 3)
Tight funding was also a motivator for recycling and reusing
practice teaching materials in one program which had the added benefit
of reducing waste. However, the loss of students because of online
provision of units taught centrally from Perth was a threat to the
survival of some programs. Thus funding restrictions can simultaneously
encourage sustainability (by promoting thrift) and discourage
sustainability by promoting disillusionment and burnout when work is
centralised as a cost saving initiative. The latter is also referred to
in Hammond (2011).
Importantly in this study, the process used to discuss the meaning
of the term sustainability not only enabled the articulation of a local
understanding, but importantly, it was an integral part of the
transformative learning process. Simply providing definitions and moving
on would not have allowed the meaning making which is now shared. Even
so, the discussions with various groups highlighted the distinct
emphasis given by diverse disciplines represented by the different
programs on the campus.
While this variety of meanings can easily be accommodated within
definitions such as the four pillars UNESCO (2002) it can present a
difficulty when transdisciplinary activities are the goal. In fact,
there was disagreement about whether we needed to find a shared
definition, with science and business related programs favouring a
decisive outcome, and those in humanities being more comfortable with a
diffuse outcome. The interpretations appear to reflect the underlying
epistemological differences between programs. These epistemologies may
be tacit rather than explicit and are not addressed in the dialogues,
making authentic conversations more difficult. That is, to reach shared
meanings may require a very far ranging discussion. However the point of
this work is the discussion itself as a process for sustainability
transition rather than the outcome.
Such disparity is illustrated in the table of meanings derived from
the program focus groups and categorised according to their relationship
to the four pillars (Table 1). It is envisaged that in the next action
cycle, this table will act as a tool to encourage dialogue about the
meanings of sustainability within and across programs. In particular it
is envisaged that the table will assist teaching staff to think through
how they can reorient their curriculum towards sustainability.
Conclusion and Future Directions
This paper describes the methodology and findings for the second
action cycle of a project that has been designed to research the process
used for the transition of curriculum, teaching and learning to
sustainability at a small, regional university campus. The process has
the potential to produce a robust social sustainability focus. Our
project is distinctively Australian in that it is part of an emerging
trend in Australia to create social frameworks which act as pillars for
sustainability education action projects. This movement is already quite
marked in teacher education (Ferreira, Ryan, Davis, Cavanagh, &
Thomas, 2009; Hammond, 2011; Hammond & Churchman, 2008) and is
becoming evident in other university contexts
(Holdsworth et al., 2006; Wooltorton et al., 2010).
In our project sustainability has been used as an explicit
organising principle, and the action research activities have formed the
transition process. In this way, learning and change has been
facilitated through reflection on practice with learning as the main
intention. The original approach was to leave the definition of
sustainability open and this was effective in allowing important aspects
of sustainability to be included or emerge. In relation to development
of a shared meaning, our study affirms that broadly defining
sustainability is a strength if used carefully to foster involvement in
dialogue, as contended by Wals and Jickling (2002). While not all
participants approved of the original approach--to not foreclose on
meaning--particularly as ideas continually shifted, the ongoing
discussions around sustainability and the notion of a sustainable future
have formed the heart of the project. Conversations were rich and deep,
and revealed the first views of an emergent transdisciplinary way of
working, together with creative ways that would lead us into action
cycle three. High levels of "systemicity" characterise more
sustainable educational institutions, which feature qualities such as
"internal connection, relatedness and coherence" and less
tightly defined programs and courses (Sterling, 2004, p. 62). This
compares to systematic management and organisation typical of
non-sustainable institutions which emphasise hierarchical control, firm
rules, clearly defined structures and a degree of inflexibility
(Sterling, 2004, p. 62). Thus referring to Sterling's (2004) work,
a creative, more sustainable culture of learning was produced by the
action research. Within this structure, transdisciplinary research
approaches were explored and utilised as the normal disciplinary
structures and boundaries did not apply.
Other findings to emerge were the constraints associated with the
issue of authentic dialogue; issues around power and authorisation; and
problems of site communication and maintaining effective networks. We
found that each of these can work together in ways that enhance and/or
hinder sustainability transition. Our findings also support those
already found in the literature which reveal a poor work-life balance as
a key constraint to participation in sustainability transition projects
and this is certainly a barrier in social sustainability acquisition
(Hammond, 2011). Specifically a lack of time limits authentic dialogue
that would enable collaborative ways of working within the university
work environment (Steele, 2010; Hammond & Churchman, 2008). Data in
our study suggested that issues around lack of time and inappropriate
life-work balance constrained the potential of staff to work in
transdisciplinary ways. Reason (2002, p. 3) writes:
In very simple terms I want to articulate a dreadful warning: we
cannot go on the way we have been doing based on the way we have been
thinking. And I want to offer a challenge, an expression of hope for a
way forward based on a participatory ethos. I want to explore how a
worldview based on the experience of ourselves as participants in the
processes of life on earth might provide a more fruitful perspective.
The challenge put forward by Reason (2002) also motivates the
authors of this paper. Sterling (2004) comments that the usual way of
thinking about sustainability in higher education is to integrate it
into the education schema of the university, that is, to add to an
already overcrowded curriculum. He argues that instead, sustainability
education implies an epistemological shift in higher education and in
society which is what he means when he calls for systemic
transformation. Within Australia, the realm of social
sustainability--where we position this current study--is a newly
emerging field. The journey of change is just beginning, however the
metaphoric terrain to be traversed is clear and encouraging outcomes are
already visible.
Afterword
At the time of writing, the researchers had just completed the
project's third action cycle which had focused on connecting the
university with the local community, particularly schools and
environmental organisations. Accordingly, a number of interconnected
sustainability education projects along the lines of the international
transition movement (Hopkins, 2008) now link the university with its
wider community. A focus on process for transition is being maintained.
Acknowledgements
The authors wish to sincerely thank the referees and in particular,
Dr Amy Cutter-McKenzie for their very thoughtful comments on an earlier
draft of this paper. We also wish to thank Richard Swan of HotRock
(www.thehotrock.org.au) for his ongoing support of this project.
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Endnote
(1.) In the literature the terms environmental education (EE),
education for sustainability (EfS) and sustainability education--and a
mixture of these terms such as environmental education for
sustainability--are often used interchangeably for a similar range of
meanings (Cutter-McKenzie, 2011, p. 350). In this paper the term we use
for all of these purposes is sustainability education. By this we refer
to the array of knowledge, skills, understandings, activities and
practices used to learn, demonstrate or acquire qualities and attributes
of sustainability. The word sustainability itself is deeply contested
from a range of perspectives. However suffice to say that in
sustainability education contexts it tends to be based on a critique of
contemporary western capitalism and is generally understood as a process
for transitioning toward practices consistent with an overarching
philosophy of ecological and social justice (for example see
Cutter-McKenzie, 2011, p. 351-353).
Sandra Wooltorton ([dagger]), Marilyn Palmer & Fran Steele
Edith Cowan University
([dagger]) Address for correspondence: A/Professor Sandra
Wooltorton, Edith Cowan University, PO Box 1712, Bunbury, WA 6231,
Australia. Email: s.wooltorton@ecu.edu.au
Author Biographies
Sandra Wooltorton is an Associate Professor of Education at Edith
Cowan University's Bunbury Campus. She completed her doctorate in
2004 in sustainability education, and has maintained a strong interest
and research focus on sustainability studies since then, with a
particular emphasis on sustainability transition.
Marilyn Palmer is a social worker who teaches in the social work
program at Edith Cowan University on the Bunbury Campus. She completed
her doctorate in 2005, researching informal, community-based responses
to domestic violence. Her doctoral research was premised on the idea
that contemporary state supported responses to domestic violence are
unsustainable given the precarious nature of Western economies. Thus, if
the state abrogates its responsibilities to respond to domestic
violence, what informal responses are possible and effective? Marilyn
teaches in the areas of sociology, gender and community development. Her
other research interests are education for sustainability and disaster
response and recovery.
Fran Steele trained in biochemistry, working with CSIRO for ten
years before becoming a science teacher in NSW schools. She then moved
into research in science education and science teacher education,
investigating the teaching of genetic technologies, boys education and
constructivist approaches to learning. Her PhD research examined the
creation of knowledge networks in secondary schools. Recently she has
authored a report for the Australian Research Institute for Education
for Sustainability relating to mainstreaming Education for
Sustainability in pre-service teacher education.
Table 1: Faculty context: Linking the pillars of sustainability to
meanings discussed within the Faculty program workshops
Program Biophysical systems--life Economic systems--
support systems for all continuing means of
life livelihood for people
Business Minimise the impact on Development and growth to
the environment for meet people's needs
business continuity without comprising the
needs of future
generations
Computing E-waste; power use in Analyse systems of data;
computing workloads
Creative Writing and the We embed the concept of
Industries environment industry into study of
the creative arts through
workplace integrated
learning and community
engagement
Education Incorporates easily into Sustainability is
most subject areas; integrated; unsustainable
ecological literacy and workloads limit
science literacy opportunities; natural,
social and economic
systems interrelate
Nursing Preventative health; Sustainability of a rural
management of medical health workforce;
waste; recycling sustainability of work
practices
Social Work Human rights--access to Equitable distribution of
necessities of life; wealth
impact of climate change;
disaster response.
Coastal Coastal care; Ongoing viability of the
Environmental overfishing; global program; tourism; surfing
Science warming; coral bleaching population; the surfing
(Surf Science) industry
Program Social-Cultural--ways for Political systems--
people to live together through which power is
peacefully, equitably & exercised fairly &
with respect for human democratically to make
rights & dignity decisions about all
systems
Business Increasing recognition of Sustainability includes
the dimensions of leadership for the
corporate social greater good
responsibility and the
need to serve all
stakeholders
Computing Potential in technology
for social change;
equality of access to
information
Creative Creative Industries units The course fosters
Industries assume "poly-ethnic critical thinking skills
thinking" regarding in students which enable
culture & community. them to understand the
Local artists & culture world through
perspectives other than
their own
Education Cooperative learning Active and informed
strategies; creative, citizenship is the
critical and reflexive overarching goal;
thinking strategies; democracy is a core
systems thinking value; we create our
future collaboratively
and individually
Nursing Teaching within ethics
unit, ie. respect for
life
Social Work Professional ethics Improving understanding
around human rights and of participatory
social justice. Online democracy
delivery to improve
access
Coastal Breaking down silos at Surfing for the future;
Environmental ECU; improving marine science education;
Science opportunities for knowledge is power
(Surf Science) networking on campus;
surf harmony--tolerance
and respect in the
lineup.