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Revisiting higher education's heartland: (Inter)disciplinary ways of knowing and doing for sustainability education

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posted on 2024-10-30, 16:32 authored by Kathryn Hegarty, Barbara De La Harpe
Sustainability education has at its heart an ethic of interdisciplinary research and teaching practice. This is because sustainability problems require integrated solutions, multiple perspectives, bodies of knowledge and skill sets. Given the imperative to address looming environmental challenges and the need for every graduate to be equipped to do so, how do we enable and support interdisciplinary approaches to sustainability education within our disciplines and professional programmes? It is increasingly apparent that organisational learning for change must be taken forward in the context of local disciplinary meanings and priorities; this is how academics know themselves and identify and value their research - and teaching - priorities. However, at the same time this may create tensions when disciplinary boundaries need to be crossed and disciplinary identities are challenged. This chapter will consider (inter)disciplinarity in engagements with organisational learning and change, and suggest a way forward in order to create 'bottom-up' and 'top-down' transformation in education for sustainability.

History

Start page

225

End page

237

Total pages

13

Outlet

Interdisciplinary Higher Education: Perspectives and Practicalities

Editors

Martin Davies, Marcia Devlin, Malcolm Tight

Publisher

Emerald Publishing

Place published

Bingley, United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2010 by Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Former Identifier

2006023191

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-07-09

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