The Implications of Higher Education for Sustainable Development
A special issue of Sustainability (ISSN 2071-1050). This special issue belongs to the section "Sustainable Education and Approaches".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (15 February 2023) | Viewed by 11161
Special Issue Editors
Interests: structural engineering; seismic hazard; continuum mechanics; geomechanics and groundwater; AI and higher education innovation; HE for sustainable development
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: fiber reinforced concrete; sustainability and durability of concrete structures; STEM; higher education; BIM; digitalization
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: construction; circular economy; energy efficiency
Interests: engineering materials; higher education; sustainability in construction; sustainable development
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
The term sustainability appeared as a global concern in 1987—Brundtland Report, by the World Commission on Environment and Development (WCED). Increasing attention as been focused upon on its scope which has been open for debate since then, through successive orientations and progressive interest each time by more stakeholders. The term development is far older than the former; it refers, in the sustainability context, to the progress of both all humankind and the whole person. Many scientific advances and practical applications focusing on sustainable development have emerged in recent decades, so Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) are now at the center of research. The strategies that we pursue will determine the future of our species in terms of human rights and well-being, social impact, and global benefits, attempting to shape “the future we want” (UNESCO, 2004). Such strategies stem from various factors, such as policies, alliances, entrepreneurship, corporations, business, science, technology, and innovation, among others. However, they require education, knowledge, mind shift, and conscious concern on the global threats, challenges, and transformations that need addressing. No wonder there are surprising global misconceptions about core sustainable development and SDG (https://www.gapminder.org/). In this regard, aggregate education—human capital—improves a country’s ability to innovate and enables ‘technological progress’ and sustained growth (Lindahl and Krueger, 2001). Thus, higher education (HE) is a keystone for achieving SDG (specifically UN Goal 4, Quality education) given its impact on society and the environment. Indeed, the university's contribution to society has been labeled the Third Mission. According to M. Roser and E. Ortiz-Espina (https://ourworldindata.org/), education correlates with prosocial behavior, there is a causal link between education and democratization, and HE attainment fosters a collective sense of civic duty. HE is called to be a driver of those changes by fostering knowledge and competences on sustainable development, connecting them with pedagogical approaches, and expanding the original concepts and professional applications through competences that graduates must reach, regardless of their studied academic program. It seems timely to explore actions that lead to meaningful learning and a review of the university performance rankings concerning sustainable development. STEM vocations, as well as alliances among institutions, are cornerstones to boost transformational changes. Indeed, alliances among universities (e.g., EELISA), HE institutions, enterprises, and corporations can promote training programs and new contributions to world-changing minds and initiatives toward a safer, healthier, and fairer society that masters global challenges with affordable and sustainable solutions.
This Special Issue “Implications of HE for sustainable development” aims at collecting high-quality works about implementations, experiences, and new trends that qualify HE as a driver to sustainable development from a multidisciplinary perspective: economic, social, environmental, personal. The topics of interest encompass the inclusion of teaching approaches, transversal competencies, practices, assessment tools, and future pathways towards competencies in education for sustainable development in all curricula; the efforts and alliances to accomplish the SDG, as well as the new scenario foregrounded by the impact of COVID-19 on the social, ethical, environmental and economic gap.
Prof. Dr. Juan Carlos Mosquera Feijoo
Prof. Dr. Marcos García Alberti
Prof. Dr. Justo García Navarro
Prof. Dr. Fernando Suárez Guerra
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- higher education
- educational innovation
- transversal competences
- socially oriented education
- sustainability mind-shift
- challenge-based learning
- Eelisa
- service-learning
- education for sustainable development (ESD)
- sustainable digitalization
- sustainable development goals (SDG)
- sustainable entrepreneurship
- university rankings
- circular economy
- Sustainable Development Indicators
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