Organizational Approaches to the Facilitation of Education for Sustainability: An Interpretive Case Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
Phase | Data source | Analytical approach |
---|---|---|
1. Observational participation (September 2008) | Executive Meeting/AGM, Berne, Switzerland, September, 2008 (ENSI Executive Committee, Secretariat, Critical Friends and Project/Country Managers in attendance). | Identification of key organizational documents, key informants and preliminary analytical themes. |
2. Document analysis (September 2008 to August 2013) | ENSI constitution, strategic plans, meeting minutes, newsletters, project proposals, evaluation reports and research articles. | Qualitative content analysis utilizing NVivo to establish the operating contexts of ENSI including organizational governance structures and program delivery processes across geographical, organizational, and cultural dimensions [19]. |
3. Key informant interviews (conducted via Skype) (February 2012 to April 2012) | Nine of ENSI’s organizational leaders (Executive, Country Coordinators, and Critical Friends) including those based in Europe and Australia. | Deductive thematic analysis using eight themes derived from phase 2, namely: (1) accountability to stakeholders; (2) network development; (3) roles in EfS facilitation; (4) governance structure; (5) network democracy; (6) relevance to participants; (7) complexity of the learning network; and (8) scalability. Data was coded using NVivo and relationships between codes were validated using Leximancer. |
4. Survey (May 2013 to August 2013) | Online survey questionnaire of organizations representing over 60 countries and 1000’s of members. The survey recipients were identified as facilitators of EfS at a leadership and/or project manager level through their roles as members and/or affiliates of the ENSI and FEE DGNs. 13 organizations provided responses to the survey. | The survey extended and deepened insights generated in the first three phases and focused on the approaches to facilitating EfS at multiple scales applied by DGNs at an organizational level. |
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Developing a Community of Practice
Potential DGN Role | Rank * |
---|---|
Establishing a community of practice | 1 |
Creating learning networks | 2 |
Linking theory with practice | 3 |
Educating others in EfS faciliation | 4 |
Providing structure through Administration | 5 |
Advancing the body of knowledge for EfS | 6 |
3.2. Planning for Phased Organizational Development
I think…ENSI…has changed so dramatically in the three phases. The first phase was cutting edge, action research…you know leading in that area. The second stage was (where) we tried to influence policy and sort of up-scale the good practice; and, the third one was just a group of people coming together and sharing resources.[44]
ENSI Wave of Development | Characteristics |
---|---|
The First Wave: Establishment (1986–1988) |
|
The Second Wave: Consolidation (1989–1994) |
|
The Third Wave: Expansion (1995–2004) |
|
The Fourth Wave: The Decade (2005–2014) |
|
ENSI had to follow a clear strategy by following clear research questions which arise through the years in environmental education.[45]
3.3. Structured Decentralization Using a Strategy-Node-Program Framework
ENSI got all of that right. It’s a global organization that works through the regions at a local level…as well as the change in this area at a very practical level. It is about supporting a true regional outlay but on a global level. It’s a fantastic example of a decentralized network.[44]
3.4. Linking Research to Practice
…the policy of education, the practice of education, the teacher in the school and the research … to be a kind of bridge between the realities that in many cases don’t work together.[63]
… the strategy was to always have an ear into the real national programs and then to reflect what exactly the open questions are. And, then to bring these open questions into the network of researchers and government authorities to find out what are the most important questions we have to deal with today.[45]
The biggest challenge of ESD (Environmentally Sustainable Development) is to transform ambitious theories into practice. There is huge need to help practitioners to develop practices, theoretically well-established practices, which fit into the reality of everyday educational practice.(Survey Question 2, Respondent #8)
3.5. Ensuring Relevance through Contextualized Approaches
… they [ENSI] reinvent themselves…they refocus key priorities and they always make sure they are linking relevance to, for example, government policy.[44]
Role | Rank * |
---|---|
Relevance to the stakeholders that both deliver and experience the facilitation of EfSD to ensure the attraction and retention of organization members and project participants. | 1 |
Accountability to key stakeholders including, but not limited to, project/organization funders, research participants, and organizational staff. | 2 |
Democratic organization whereby all members have a say. | 3 |
Monitoring and evaluation systems in place to evaluate meeting EfSD facilitation goals and objectives. | 4 |
3.6. Monitoring and Evaluation of Processes and Outcomes
I think the networks that have been strategic have done very well and strategic means rethinking, reviewing, engaging, constantly rethinking what you need to do better, but also what you need to do different.[44]
4. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References and Notes
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Duggan, M.S.; Smith, T.F.; Thomsen, D.C. Organizational Approaches to the Facilitation of Education for Sustainability: An Interpretive Case Study. Sustainability 2015, 7, 7011-7030. https://doi.org/10.3390/su7067011
Duggan MS, Smith TF, Thomsen DC. Organizational Approaches to the Facilitation of Education for Sustainability: An Interpretive Case Study. Sustainability. 2015; 7(6):7011-7030. https://doi.org/10.3390/su7067011
Chicago/Turabian StyleDuggan, Michael S., Timothy F. Smith, and Dana C. Thomsen. 2015. "Organizational Approaches to the Facilitation of Education for Sustainability: An Interpretive Case Study" Sustainability 7, no. 6: 7011-7030. https://doi.org/10.3390/su7067011
APA StyleDuggan, M. S., Smith, T. F., & Thomsen, D. C. (2015). Organizational Approaches to the Facilitation of Education for Sustainability: An Interpretive Case Study. Sustainability, 7(6), 7011-7030. https://doi.org/10.3390/su7067011