1. Introduction
The coexistence and balance between humans and nature have been greatly challenged by the consequences of rapid economic growth triggered by scientific and technological innovations. As a result, the concept of sustainability, along with sustainable development and sustainable development goals, has evoked great concern from scientists, environmentalists, world leaders, and many others. According to the available literature, awareness of sustainability-related issues began in the 70s and continued being the focus of conference themes and academic papers, and the slogan of many development plans and projects and environmental-related activities, in the decades that followed.
As the motivations behind sustainability are complex and diverse, it has been defined from many perspectives. In the general sense, sustainability is the ability to maintain a certain level of balanced and stable development without disturbing the harmony between the natural world and the man-made physical world. Literally, sustainability means a capacity to maintain some entity, outcome, or process over time [
1]. According to Stoddart et al. (2011) [
2], sustainability is the efficient and equitable distribution of resources intra-generationally and inter-generationally with the operation of socio-economic activities within the confines of a finite ecosystem. Similarly, UNESCO (2012) [
3] views sustainability as a paradigm for thinking about a future in which environmental, social, and economic considerations are balanced in the pursuit of development and improved quality of life. Accordingly, it is obvious that the term sustainability has always been focussed on establishing a healthy relationship between social, economic, and environmental concepts, and issues of the present and future. They have also concentrated on transforming the global society, environment, and economy to the state of sustainability together.
Coupled with sustainability, the concept of sustainable development (SD) has also become a buzzword in development discourse, and is now associated with different definitions, meanings, and interpretations [
4]. Among them, the most cited definition is the one proposed by the Brundtl and Commission report (1987): “Sustainable development is meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their needs [
5]”. As a whole, SD aims at achieving social and cultural progress which, coupled with environmental equilibrium and economic growth, is a core concept within global development policy and agenda. The academic literature represents the aforementioned elements related to sustainability as the three-pillar conception of sustainability or the ‘Triple Bottom Line’: social, economic, and environmental.
In making the connections between sustainability and SD, sustainability is often thought of as a long-term goal while sustainable development refers to the many processes and pathways to achieve it [
3]. Since education enables the young to fulfil their capabilities, it is a crucial investment for SD [
6], and Education for Sustainable Development (ESD) extends its scope to deal with the complex amalgamation of issues relevant to environment, society, and economy [
7] while paving the way for a more sustainable and just society for all. It encourages global changes in knowledge, skills, values, and attitudes while empowering and equipping current and future generations to meet their needs. Extending the landscape for SD further, the UN declared the period 2005–2014 as the United Nations Decade of Education for Sustainable Development (DESD) in 2002, emphasising the critical role of education in achieving sustainable development [
7]. Taking the process of attaining global sustainability another step forward, the UN declared 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in 2012 and education was given a crucial part because it is essential for progress on all goals [
8]. Particularly, Goal 4 focused on quality education that ensures inclusive and equitable quality education and promotes lifelong learning opportunities for all; it linked to almost all the SDGs in one way or another.
Young generations as well as adults spend large periods of their life on education (formal, non-formal, and informal settings). The role of educational institutions, regardless of the academic level, is crucial in meeting sustainable development goals as they host basic skill development, and promote values, behaviours, and lifestyles favourable to a sustainable future and society while developing future professionals as change agents, and facilitating the creation of spaces where ideas are expressed freely, paradigms are challenged, creativity is promoted, and new knowledge is acquired and generated [
9]. According to the UN (2007), “Academic institutions have the potential to generate a wave of positive change [
10], and in achieving SDGs, higher education institutions have played a responsible role by implementing and driving sustainable development initiatives within their institutions”. In this discussion of sustainable development, McGunagle and Zizka [
11] noted that Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) higher education programmes currently offer theoretical knowledge and industry-related competencies that seek to prepare graduates to become leaders capable of meeting 21st-century demands. Pahnke et al. [
8] also built up the connection between STEM and sustainability, and said that STEM disciplines are called upon to participate in the social process of searching, learning, and shaping solutions to global sustainability issues.
Supporting the same point, Dotson et al. [
12] suggested that access to quality education in STEM is linked to reduced poverty, higher economic growth, and more resilient democracies; these disciplines play an essential role in addressing many of the SDGs.
Scholars, practitioners, and policymakers are counting on STEM education to lead towards global sustainability. In that process, higher educational institutions (HEI) have been recognised as centres of knowledge generation and skill development. They are also expected to make a concerted effort towards shifting the focus from mere learning to learning sustainably, which is known as lifelong learning. Moreover, HEIs play a significant role in inculcating in students the “values and skills that contribute to social progress and the advancement of knowledge” [
10]. Hence, universities require innovative sustainability pedagogical methods for preparing students to create a more sustainable world through rigorous analysis and innovative solutions [
13]. Traditional methods of lecture and assessment over-simplify complex issues and trade-offs into right or wrong answers; asking students to regenerate pre-packaged information presented by their teachers [
14] and emphasising an individual’s knowledge-based achievements will not produce positive results in terms of sustainability. Moreover, many research studies have shown that didactic, teacher-centred education results in reduced cognitive, behavioural, and socio-emotional outcomes. Therefore, educating for sustainability requires that students develop the skills to be change agents who grapple with real-world challenges through explorations that engage multiple ways of knowing and move beyond facts as the central form of knowledge [
14]. With respect to higher education and STEM education, a critical pedagogy including problem- or project-based learning, cooperative or collaborative learning, experimental learning, inquiry-based learning, case studies, and research-based learning, have been suggested as the most appropriate approaches by scholars. Hence, this article focuses on finding answers for the following research questions:
What is the role of STEM higher education in sustainability?
What kind of pedagogical strategies are used in STEM higher education to promote sustainability?
How do university academics perceive the sustainability concept in education?
What approaches are used usually to promote sustainability through teaching, especially during the pandemic?
Further, by answering the above questions, it aims to achieve the following objectives in relation to sustainability, higher education, STEM education, and learning pedagogies:
Review approaches taken to embed sustainability in learning, teaching, and assessments in STEM programmes.
Identify university academics’ views on promoting sustainability concept through higher education.
Investigate actions taken by universities to minimise the impact of the pandemic on the effectiveness of learning pedagogies used to integrate sustainability in STEM education.
The background literature mainly focuses on the most applicable academic research outcomes for the main topic of study under areas of STEM higher education. It discusses the academic literary evidence for the role of STEM education in sustainability, and what are the most significant STEM educational pedagogies promoting sustainability.
2. Role of STEM in Sustainability
In general, STEM education refers to the teaching and learning method that integrates the content and skills of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics while providing students with opportunities to become problem solvers, innovators, inventors, logical thinkers, and tech literates. Alternatively, students get a chance to apply knowledge within meaningful real-life related contexts because it supports independent thinking and responsible action. It also reinforces engagement with technological and societal changes while enabling students to become responsible individuals who adopt sustainable development in their locality and, by extension, the global context.
STEM education is the integration of four disciplines with two possibilities: input and output in education [
15]. The passage of content knowledge and development of skills in those disciplines function as the input. Conversely, STEM is also connected to economic competitiveness in the global market, and is required to fill output requests such as guaranteeing and maintaining energy and productivity needs [
16]. Furthermore, STEM has been identified for its potential to contribute to positive social change through sustainability, considering that sustainability issues are inherently interdisciplinary.
Smith and Watson [
17] used the Australian context to agree with the common perception that, for future prosperity, a substantial proportion of the global workforce needs to be educated in STEM disciplines. Further, investing in STEM education is key to productivity growth and higher living standards for our community, and it has been identified as the driving force for economic growth. Accordingly, applicability of STEM is the way forward for elevating sustainability in the universal perception. Hamilton and Thomas [
18] also recognised that sustainability and sustainability science are increasingly becoming an accepted part of the general lexicon of STEM disciplines. Confirming it further, Zizka [
19] said that STEM-related subjects are integral to sustainable development and for solving global sustainability issues in a meaningful and knowledge-based way.
In contrast to many favourable views on the relationship between STEM and sustainability, Davis [
20] argues that STEM’s contribution to sustainable development is limited. According to this argument, integrated and holistic approaches, rather than narrow STEM approaches, offer the best opportunities for successful and widespread ESD. It emphasises the need for rethinking STEM education as sustainability is fundamentally a human problem, not a science-and-technology problem. Further, the author supports the argument with Holbrook’s (2009) suggestion: “Education for SD has little to do with accumulating a body of scientific knowledge, and is far more aligned with the development of personal and social aptitudes leading to responsible citizenship (p. 44)”.
However, a sustainable future depends on a workforce of professionals knowledgeable about creating practices, processes, and infrastructure to optimise resource management, and a community informed about the ethics and influence of human activity on the integrated environmental, economic, and social aspects of sustainability [
21]. As proven by the academic literature, systematic STEM education is capable of producing individuals to fulfill workforce requirements, which ultimately contributes to sustainable development both locally and globally.
2.1. University Sector
It is a known fact that higher education institutions (HEIs) play a key role in fostering social transformations that are critical for facilitating the transition to a sustainable future. Shepherd [
22] defines higher education for sustainable development as “an approach to education aimed at responding to societal expectations to address environmental, social, cultural and economic issues that threaten sustainability of life on Earth”. Similarly, Leifler and Dahlin [
23] also confirm that higher education is instrumental in fostering the skills needed for graduates to become change agents for sustainable development. As recognised by scholars and policymakers, to best achieve the aims of the global sustainability agenda through education, there needs to be changes in educational policies, curriculum, and practices regardless of the academic level. Franco [
24] highlights this in several studies and confirms the importance of a major transformation in higher education that needs to occur across all disciplines and levels of study.
Transversely, STEM higher education has been perceived as the key to propelling a nation from (1) developing to developed, (2) a middle-income country to a high-income country, and (3) one with a semi-skilled workforce to that with a highly skilled workforce [
25]. In that case, as Zizka [
19] suggests, for addressing sustainability in STEM education, HEIs must change the way students are taught to promote and provoke a more sustainable mindset. HE institutions need to teach sustainability, live it, and believe in it. Admittedly, lasting culture change requires commitment from the top. In line with expected advancements in the 21st century, there is global awareness for a shift in HE for sustainable development. That has been intensified with the start of the UNESCO Decade of Education for Sustainable Development (2005–2014), and universities have taken several approaches to rethink and amend their academic activities leading to sustainability. Weiss et al. [
26] also noted the efforts of the UN to advance the implementation of ESD in HEIs in accordance with the strong impetus, support, and policy frameworks that have been put forth by the UN decade for ESD (2005–2014) as well as the subsequent (2015–2019) Global Action Programme (GPA) and, most recently, the SDGs.
2.2. Industrial Sector
Financial instability and economic inequity, threats to food safety and increased health risks, climate change, biodiversity loss, decline in consumable water resources, and depletion of fossil fuels and energy sources are some of the interrelated issues that the world is facing today. Dotson et al. [
12] supposed that access to quality education in STEM is linked to reduced poverty, economic growth, and more resilient democracies. In support of that, as mentioned in the literature, STEM competencies greatly impact each person’s ability to contribute to economic success nationally and globally. As indicated through many research studies, STEM graduates come with strong soft skills (enterprise skills) and are much more employable [
11]. Additionally, STEM has been recognised as the biggest asset to driving innovation and creativity. Moreover, a technology-and knowledge-driven economy needs workers trained in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics [
27]. Hence it is long believed that STEM disciplines play an essential role in addressing many of the global issues related to the industrial sector.
Rapid technological advancement is a major driver of economic growth today, and the reason for improved living standards across the globe. Digital technologies radically transform the structure of every organisation reshaping the roles of professions. This has immensely influenced the field of education, including teaching and learning. There are indications of a fourth industrial revolution that is to come hand in hand with the development of digital technologies. Consequently, the future requires workers to think creatively, work collaboratively, deepen their emotional IQ, and integrate technology into everything they do [
27]. STEM education has the potential to produce a workforce with a global mindset, critical thinking, problem-solving, and collaboration skill, which are highly required for sustainable development and central to innovation and a productive, adaptable workforce.
To prepare students for this technology-driven sustainability, the education system, especially higher education, should focus on developing skills required for sustainable development. Hence, HEFCE (2009) [
28] states that the “greatest contribution HE can make to sustainable development is enable students to acquire the skills and knowledge that allow them to make a lasting difference”. HEFCE (2009:21) further suggests that in order to do this, the higher education sector must develop curricula and pedagogy that provide students with the required skills.
2.3. Curricular Changes and Integration of Sustainability
Over the last 20 years, scholars, activists, and others have noted that through the research they conduct, the engagement they experience with the broader community, and the operations they oversee, colleges and universities can serve as test sites and models for sustainable practices and societies [
29]. Therefore, in the journey to sustainability, education should not restrict itself to just giving students information, but also provide them with an experience that brings opportunities to work collaboratively, appreciate multiple perspectives, be reflective, think critically and creatively, and act constructively [
30]. According to AASHE [
29], the existing curriculum in higher education has not been developed to examine how we can shape a sustainable world. Much of the curriculum has been developed to provide students with an increasingly narrow understanding of disciplines, professions, and jobs, and is focused on specific knowledge and skills employed in a given area. Consequently, to promote the change needed in society, HEIs themselves will need to change even quicker than society as a whole through attitudes enabling the integration of sustainability, regulations, standards, and faculty goals [
23]. Alternatively, sustainability issues are complex, and vary locally and globally at different degrees. To ensure a more sustainable future, higher education will have to provide college and university graduates with the skills, background, knowledge, and mental habits that prepare them to meet challenges in the future [
29]. As a result, education for sustainability has become part of mainstream higher education policy in many countries. It encompasses various aspects, including knowledge of environmental, economic, and other social issues of sustainability; nurturing of ethos and values; and the adoption of participatory teaching and learning methods. Significantly, in the UK, progress has been largely confined to curriculum content changes [
31,
32] relating to cognition and knowledge. Its authorities have failed to deliver on other ideas, understandings, values, behaviours, and skills that are widely recognised as important to prepare graduates for future challenges. Hence, the need for more profound learning experiences that can equip graduates to make “informed decisions in their home, community and working lives” is being stressed upon. It is obvious that HE providers need to identify appropriate content and forms of teaching–learning to achieve sustainability-focussed learning outcomes along with proper assessment that can enhance sustainability skills and literacy in graduates.
An interdisciplinary, holistic, values-driven, and locally relevant curriculum integrated with sustainability concepts is highly recommended in higher education. Integrating sustainability into college and university curricula is challenging, but studies have shown a variety of attempts in this regard. According to the report “Embedding Sustainable Development in the Curriculum”, sustainability concepts have been fully integrated into some university courses. In the process of integrating ESD in HEIs, Weiss [
26] identified two levels: micro and macro. At the micro level, integration is performed through teaching and learning in courses, while at the macro level, it is carried out through programmes and curricula.
Curriculum change processes are complex and vary remarkably, from institute to institute, programme to programme, sometimes even from discipline to discipline. They may even change in terms of their breadth, depth, and influences [
26]. In addition to that, cluster analysis results of the study have revealed two distinct implementation phases: ESD can be implemented from the bottom-up, from the top-down, or both, and the impetus can stem from manifold external or internal stakeholders. Other than that, six distinct implementation patterns—(1) collaborative paradigm change, (2) bottom-up, evolving institutional change, (3) top-down, mandated institutional change, (4) externally driven initiatives, (5) isolated initiatives, and (6) limited institutional change—have also examined in the same study.
Leifler and Dahlin [
23] specifically focussed on the views of Mulder (2017) regarding the integration of sustainability in engineering curricula, and as they have stated, generally the integration process follows one of two approaches, namely:
- (1)
Focussing on analytical approaches of the impacts of technology such as life-cycle assessments of products.
- (2)
Trying to achieve a positive system transformation through management and innovation related to technology and social change.
Taylor [
21] specifically focussed on the possibility of integrating mathematics with sustainability. According to Taylor, sustainability can be addressed at all levels of the mathematics curriculum. Quantitative reasoning skills (logic, mathematics, and statistics) are also at the core of understanding and interpreting many sustainability concepts, and are required for making sustainability-related decisions. Further, it is essential in so many academic disciplines—not just the sciences, engineering, and economics, but also in history, linguistics, art, and media studies. Therefore, there are ample opportunities for introducing sustainability examples in math courses, from algebra and geometry to calculus and statistics, and even in advanced graduate-level courses. And the writer confirms the argument further by saying that quantitative reasoning in mathematics and sustainability have emerged as two similar, important, and mutually supportive themes that are critical for the individuals’ personal, professional, and public lives [
21].
Parallel to that, Susilwati [
33] established the relationship between science and sustainability. It was stressed that education leading to the sustainability of resources and the environment certainly needs to be integrated into science subjects. According to the views of science, it reflects a holistic problem in real life. Natural science can be studied from several angles, namely as a body of knowledge, a way of thinking, a way of investigation, and its relation to technology and society.
Hamilton and Thomas [
18] also propose a concise set of five learning objectives for sustainability education that can be included in almost any course while not sacrificing appropriate content.
Teach in context: Include sustainability-oriented content and introduce “global realities”.
Include real-life place-based examples.
Emphasise “designing the future”. Teach the tools of complexity, systems thinking, and design thinking.
Explicitly recognise the ethical and affective (moods, feelings, attitudes, etc.) aspects of the issues raised.
Teach specific skills that empower students to become catalysts and leaders of change.
As they said, integrating sustainability education is possible if it can be incorporated into what is already being taught. However, there is no universal consensus on what specific sustainability-related competencies should be included in a curriculum or how is it to be performed, or when and where. To well establish sustainable education in the curriculum, it would require a remarkable modification in the way subjects are taught and learnt. To that end, more flexible pedagogical approaches combined with practical and applied learning opportunities are essential.
3. Learning Pedagogies in Embedding Sustainability in STEM
Broadly, pedagogy is referred to the whole learning process, which includes the learning environment, the learning community or the teacher and the students, and the assessment or reflection on the teaching–learning process. Westbrook et al. [
34] viewed pedagogy itself as a contested term. According to Bernstein’s [
35] definition, pedagogy is “a sustained process whereby somebody(s) acquires new forms or develops existing forms of conduct, knowledge, practice, and criteria from somebody(s) or something deemed to be an appropriate provider and evaluator”. In particular, it can be defined as the relationship between theories and practices used for educating somebody regardless of the academic level. Hence, for both school and university education, novel and innovative pedagogical methods are required to enable students to participate successfully in the sustainability process.
Sustainability issues affect personal, professional and social life. To build competence in sustainability and promote sustainable change, Redman [
14] acknowledged the importance of integrating three critically significant elements: educational pedagogy, behavioural change, and sustainability competencies. Hence, pedagogical approaches are given a pivotal place in sustainability-focused education. This has resulted in a variety of creative and critical pedagogies. Redman [
14] focused on a study performed on the effect of pedagogical approaches on sustainability courses, and found that multi-methodological, experiential, and active learning approaches improved students’ system thinking skills and provided a cognitive understanding of sustainability. Redman [
14] advocates three interconnected pedagogical methods—real-world learning, critical problem-solving, and experiential learning—considering their significance to cognitive understanding and skill-building for sustainability. Moreover, Leifler and Dahlin [
23] make references to several studies, stating that in both research and teaching, successful sustainability initiatives are characterised by strong inter-disciplinary activities, even ones transgressing disciplinary boundaries to reach solutions out of reach of any one discipline. Continuing the conversation on pedagogy for sustainable education, Sprain and Timpson [
13] refer to several studies and state: “We realise that there are other approaches to teaching sustainability, including interdisciplinary student projects, field experiences, team-teaching with scholars from different disciplines, and games”. Hence, to build up a positive vision of the sustainable world that aims to create together, it is crucial to promote creativity, the ability to come up with innovative solutions, responsibility, respect for the work at hand and other participants, and many other competencies through education. Teaching–learning processes containing creative and critical pedagogies can be assumed as the vehicles to reach the expected destinations. Specifically, teaching and learning methods for implementing STEM education as part of an interdisciplinary curriculum vary widely. They include project-based learning, problem-based learning, inquiry-based learning, and technology-based learning, each of which can be used differently depending on the classroom situation [
36]. The pedagogies used and cited in empirical research studies related to STEM higher education and sustainability are discussed below.
Case studies have been identified as a productive pedagogical approach to teaching for and about sustainability by scholars. Sprain and Timpso [
13] suggest that this pedagogical tool has interdisciplinary and even trans-disciplinary applications, and appears well suited to imply sustainability-directed STEM higher education. Furthermore, as a part of sustainability pedagogy, the case study approach can be used across disciplines (ecology, sociology, education, agricultural sciences, business, communication, etc.) at multiple levels, including in courses that are not explicitly about sustainability, environmental concerns, or even science. Schoolman et al. [
37] also confirmed the appropriateness of the case study approach and said that they can be used in cross-listed or interdisciplinary courses that focus on the intersection of multiple disciplines, including courses on sustainability science, which is often envisioned as an interdisciplinary field.
Apart from that, Sprain and Timpson [
13] highlight Seager et al.’s (2011) argument that case-based approaches are particularly well suited to teaching about sustainability and building capacity to address the challenge of tackling wicked sustainability problems. Further, it is acceptable that case studies can be used to build the capacities (systems thinking, anticipatory, normative, strategic, and interpersonal competencies) necessary to address problems of sustainability even in classes not explicitly focused on sustainability. More broadly, case-based approaches can be used as an educational tool to help students explore contemporary sustainability challenges.
3.1. Inquiry-Based, Problem-Based, and Project-Based Learning
Within the concept of STEM Education, inquiry, project and problem-based learning are used to scientifically inquire about natural phenomena or problems or to introduce new concepts to the student during the teaching–learning process. Most specifically, these approaches address children’s inquisitiveness and thirst for exploration, their desire to get to the bottom of things and ask questions, while encouraging them to find answers for current issues with understanding. Common inquiry/problem/project-based STEM Education is built on constructivist theories of learning, and has long been applied in STEM, giving opportunities to explore ‘hands on’, experiment, ask questions, and develop responses based on reasoning. In addition to solving problems, students build a proper understanding of the phenomena of the natural world (‘minds on’) through in-depth study issues just as scientists do.
Martín-Garin et al. [
38] recognised problem-based learning (PBL) as the most highly developed methodology in the university environment, where students work independently to explore a problem. In addition, Redman [
14] says that problem-based learning centres on a complex problem that does not have a single correct solution. The critical thinking and problem-solving process should be student-led, experiential, and collaborative in order to emphasise that there is more than one correct point of view when exploring problems. The ultimate objective in PBL is not to solve the problem but to discuss how to solve the problem [
38]. Considering the advantages of PBL, scholars have focussed on these approaches as effective teaching approaches to address the student community.
3.2. Real-World Learning
Redman [
14] emphasised the applicability of real-world learning in the pedagogy for sustainability and mentioned, referring to several empirical studies, that “real-world explorations incorporate authentic investigations with complex goals and provide opportunities for problem-solving while involving students’ beliefs and values”. In contrast, Brundiers et al. [
39] highlighted real-world learning opportunities that help students increase their understanding of sustainability problems (knowledge), and complement their methodological competence in applying problem-solving approaches (strategic competence cluster). They also allow students to gain hands-on experience in how to link knowledge to action for sustainability (practical competence cluster). Students learn to develop sustainability strategies and programmes in the actual context of existing processes, politics, or tradition. Moreover, real-world learning opportunities allow students to recognise and engage in different forms of collaboration at different degrees of intensity (collaborative competence cluster). Similarly, by providing assignments that focus on solving real sustainability issues, educators can engage students and help institutions turn towards more sustainable behavioural and policy norms. It also enables students to apply theory to practice, and builds interpersonal skills for engagement with stakeholders, both of which are critical for sustainability (Redman, 2019).
On the ground of all above, Brundiers et al. [
39] suggested that through real-world learning experiences, students can apply their classroom learning to study the sustainability issue and engage with people in the community. Four methods for providing real-world learning experiences to students are: (1) bringing the real world into classrooms, (2) visiting the real world, (3) simulating the real world, and (4) engaging with the real world. Project- and problem-based learning, service learning, and internships expose students to corresponding real-world settings in communities, businesses, and governments, and have a common focus on real-world problems. Brundiers et al. [
39] suggested these as effective in providing sustainability education since they seem to be a suitable way for students to develop key competencies in sustainability.
In addition to the above-mentioned approaches, Dotson et al. [
12] termed co-learning framework and peer-led learning as two ways that ignite the aim to improve sustainability and scalability of STEM coursework in communities where this type of education is absent. Co-learning, also known as critical pedagogy, or experimental, cooperative, and/or collaborative learning, is a form of active, dynamic learning where students and teachers create a collaborative learning environment, in contrast with traditional passive teaching formats. Improved critical thinking, enhanced communication skills, improved socio-cultural awareness for both teachers and students, and a significant boost in student performance have been identified as the benefits of this approach.
In addition, Petrun Sayers et al. [
40] prioritised cognitive maps as a STEM-based sustainability education evaluation tool. Importantly, cognitive mapping plays an interesting role in the field of sustainability because the tool can effectively capture the field’s interdisciplinary nature. It has also proven to be a tool for building and examining understanding of additional STEM and sustainability concepts. Mathematical modelling has also been tested as an effective pedagogical strategy in STEM projects to enrich students’ competencies regarding sustainability in higher education [
36]. Mathematical modelling describes a set of comprehensive processes used to transform real-life problem situations into mathematical models, draw mathematical conclusions, and then apply those conclusions back to the real world.
Dawe et al. [
41] categorised pedagogical applications commonly used for teaching sustainability in Embedding ESD into Higher Education: Final Report for the Higher Education Academy, teaching methods employed in the delivery of sustainability.
Conventional methods: lectures, seminars and tutorials
The personal: role models
Re-connecting to reality: real-life and real-time interpretation, field trips, environmental audits, the use of role-playing, a year abroad; and development of case-studies
Holistic thinking
As a whole, the above discussed pedagogical approaches appear to be student-centred and capable of offering a holistic education catering to the needs of education for sustainable development.
4. Materials and Methods
This research article has followed a qualitative approach that is mainly based on two types of data, taken from systematic document analysis and interviews with university academics. Literature for the analysis of the documents was exclusively retrieved from online databases. Predetermined selection criteria were applied during the database search in order to keep the number of articles reasonable, and to ensure the quality of the sources. The search was restricted to peer-reviewed journal articles, conference papers, and reports in full text. There were no restrictions on the year of publication or the geographical regions considered, and the selection of documents followed text titles, abstracts, and whole texts that appeared in databases of Google Scholar, J-store, Tandfonline, Elsevier, and recognised institutional websites (e.g., UNESCO).
In the selection process, both empirical and theoretical studies were included regardless of the research method followed. The comprehensive search resources were completed based on a wide range of key terms and phrases, including “Sustainability and Education for Sustainable development, STEM higher education, Learning pedagogies for sustainability learning, and STEM-related learning pedagogies”. Similar terms that are often used interchangeably in the literature were also used. As the search action resulted in a limited number of appropriate and accessible sources, the reference section of the recovered texts were studied for more relevant texts. As a whole, the original samples came up to 235 documents and their abstracts, and the contents were examined in detail. This led to the removal of duplicates and articles with directly unrelated content, and the original samples were reduced to 57 articles. Finally, the content of the selected resources was studied and analysed.
As the other source of data, discussions with 12 select university academics from the Science, Engineering, Mathematics, Agriculture, Information and Communication fields were conducted. In the selection, their preferences to participate in the discussion were considered. The interview was a semi-structured interview, and the interviewer used a set of predetermined questions related to the cause of the study. The respondents were allowed to express their views on the implementation of education for sustainable development, pedagogical approaches, and how current educational practices focussing on education for sustainability have been impacted by the pandemic situation. Interview transcripts were made, and responses were analysed narratively and reported according to the question order in the interview schedule. Then the required data were organised into two main sections to answer the research questions.
6. Conclusions
Science and technological advancements have raised the living standards of people enormously, and this, in turn, has resulted in many global issues. In such a scenario, transforming mere development into sustainable development became a matter of universal concern. Simultaneously, education started being recognised as the means for building a future with balanced economical, ecological, and social sustainability.
Accordingly, it is important to develop learning environments that encourage students to acquire knowledge and skills while developing the right attitude. According to Mulder [
56], sustainability demands a specific kind of learning. Some authors call for a deep change in society to achieve a sustainable society. “Sustainable development is not just a matter of acquiring some extra knowledge. Attitude is also important. Moreover, it is often necessary to change social structures”, they say.
In the way forward to sustainability, empowering present and future generations with STEM knowledge and skills is recognised as essential. Therefore, there is a requirement for high-quality STEM education through which students experience innovative pedagogical strategies, interactive learner-centred teaching, and learning environments, to meet the requirements of ESD. Traditional teacher-centred teaching and learning methods limit opportunities for experiential learning, critical thinking, reflective reasoning, and involvement in solving complex problems and growing into a responsible citizen. Hence, Pahnke et al. [
8] proposed that STEM experience should promote inquiry-based learning and scientific thinking, and encourage interactive, learner-centred teaching that enables exploratory, action-oriented, reflective, and transformative learning. Notably, the need for learner-centred innovative approaches for sustainability-oriented higher education has emerged from the literature and from discussions with academics.
To achieve the goals of education for sustainability, it is obligatory to implement an appropriate pedagogy in the teaching–learning process. In the sense of pedagogy for sustainability, it is mainly problem/project-based learning, real-world or experiential learning, case studies, and e-learning that can develop outcomes in the form of changes in individual behaviour towards sustainability goals. They enhance the domains of knowledge, skills, and attitudes expected in ESD. However, when analysing pedagogical approaches and their suitability to teaching/learning SD, the traditional lecture method is still in practice. Seatter and Ceulemans [
9] confirmed it further, highlighting that current sustainability teaching in higher education pedagogy lacks the sustenance to facilitate sustainability thinking and behaviour, and often is stymied by a transmissive and lecture-driven delivery. Hence, there is consensus about the need to move from the traditional way to an alternative one so as to allow students to achieve SD competencies in both cognitive (knowledge and understanding) and meta-cognitive (skills and abilities and attitudes) domains. However, all pedagogical methods will not be suitable for every subject, target group, and culture they are going to be implemented on. Therefore, the pedagogy needs to be selected suitably. Susilwati et al. [
33] suggested a pedagogy for sustainable development that consisted of four components, which are (1) system thinking and understanding of interconnectedness, (2) long-term, foresighted reasoning, and strategizing, (3) stakeholder engagement and group collaboration, and (4) action orientation and change agent skills.
Attaining sustainability is a long-term process, and education is a pivotal factor in it. It also depends on the collective participation of all the individuals involved, especially teachers and students. Segalàs et al. [
57] found that students perceived sustainability as mainly related to technology, and saw little relevance in social and attitudinal aspects. Seatter and Ceulemans [
9] also saw that challenges to teaching sustainable development in higher education could mean that students—as future citizens—are left without insight, commitment, or any sense of their position with regard to meaningful beliefs and actions on sustainability. Hence, to achieve education for sustainability, the development of a proper curriculum that has the potential to enhance skills for sustainability is a necessity. Another important requirement for meaningful sustainability curriculum transformation is the involvement of academics. According to Zamora-Polo and Martín [
52], academics are very important and relevant in the whole teaching–learning process because they organise the teaching activity, and programme the learning plan that students need to take to achieve success. Barth [
16] pointed out that lack of training and different academic backgrounds may also become barriers. Other than that, lack of knowledge of SD and interdisciplinary competence, lack of interest and understanding, and limitations placed on research and further studies are also in the line. On the other hand, as Zamora-Polo and Martín [
52] stated, activities promoting sustainability have traditionally not been valued in teachers’ curricula. In that case, motivating for attitudinal change, showing readiness to work across disciplinary boundaries, and providing the required facilities, besides training and funding, are required to overcome the issue. On the whole, individual and collective actions bring about the transformation in higher education, promoting learning for sustainable development. Therefore, teachers, education policymakers, and administrators should go for timely reforms in every context.
The establishment of education for sustainability is hindered by many major and minor factors, with geographical, political, and socio-economical inequalities at the forefront. Most significantly, with the pandemic, education has moved to virtual mode, specifically impacting developing countries due to their lack of resource availability, readiness, and other factors. Thus, more efforts are needed to reduce differences around the world. Additionally, there has been high recognition of science, technology and instrumental knowledge to the detriment of human development and related aspects such as ethics, values, and social knowledge. Transforming education is the biggest deciding factor for transforming societal systems, and as the means for meaningful development, the requirement for sustainability education needs to be addressed with the re-orientation of STEM education in combination with other areas such as sociology and humanities. On the whole, to create a more sustainable world, individuals need to equip themselves with the requisite knowledge, skills, values, and attitudes that will empower them to contribute to sustainable development, and that can be achieved only through the collaborative effort of all participants.