G LO B A L E D U C AT I O N M O N I TO R I N G R E P O R T 2 0 1 6
SUMMARY
Education and sustainable
development: how they are linked
and why these links are important
Planet: environmental sustainability
I
ndividual and collective human actions have put immense strain on the planet and the life forms it supports. Since
humanity is clearly contributing to environmental degradation, rapid biodiversity loss and climate change, its
actions must also provide the solutions to these challenges.
Education can play a major part in the required transformation into more environmentally sustainable societies,
in concert with initiatives from government, civil society and the private sector. Education shapes values and
perspectives. It also contributes to the development of skills, concepts and tools that can be used to reduce or stop
unsustainable practices.
Education’s multifaceted role in sustainability is not always positive. It can contribute to unsustainable practices,
including overconsumption of resources, and exacerbate the loss of relatively sustainable indigenous knowledge and
ways of living. Education may need to be shaped and transformed to ensure its impact is positive.
HUMAN BEHAVIOUR HAS LED TO AN ENVIRONMENTAL CRISIS
Three of the most common understandings of how human behaviour leads to environmental degradation involve
demography, modern lifestyles and individual behaviour. The demographic explanation is that there are simply too
many people on the planet: the global population tripled between 1950 and 2015, and is expected to grow by another
billion to 8.5 billion by 2030. The modern lifestyles concept focuses on higher per capita resource consumption by
people in urban areas and wealthier countries. Countries where living standards have rapidly increased have seen
a near doubling of their ecological footprint in the past two decades. In 2012, most high income countries had an
unsustainable ecological footprint. The individual behaviour explanation sees individuals as both the source of
environmental problems and their potential solution through, for example, policies that encourage recycling, bicycle
use and fuel-efficient cars.
LEARNING IS ESSENTIAL TO OVERCOME THESE CHALLENGES
Education has a key role to play in addressing environmental challenges. Education, especially of girls and women,
is the most effective means of curtailing population growth, increasing women’s autonomy over fertility-related
decisions and the timing of pregnancies. Education can improve livelihoods by increasing earnings, and skilled people
are essential to the transformation of economies and food systems. Education can
influence individual and collective environmental behaviour through contemporary,
traditional and lifelong approaches to learning.
Analysis of 78 national
curricula show that 55%
use the term ‘ecology’
and 47% ‘environmental
education’
CONTEMPORARY APPROACH: LEARNING THROUGH SCHOOLING
Schools help students understand a given environmental problem, its consequences
and the types of action required to address it. Knowledge about the environment is
increasingly incorporated into formal school curricula. Analysis of 78 national curricula
shows that 55% use the term ‘ecology’ and 47% ‘environmental education’.
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