Disciplinary Trends In Sustainability Education As Interpreted by STARS Gold Participants Makayla J. Bonney MS Candidate, Geography Southern Illinois University Overview • Background • Research Questions • Results • Using STARS as a research tool • Looking Forward • Question and Discussion Background • Liu, 2011: AASHE 2006-08 Sustainability Across Curriculum Leadership Workshop study • Literature both within and outside the discipline identifies geography as a “highly appropriate home for sustainability studies”, however, the geography community has not developed a lead role in sustainability education NCSE Findings • 2012 Census of Sustainability Education Programs (degrees, minors, certificates) Administrative Location Proportion Discipline/Field Proportion BA/Mgmt. 25% Enviro. Studies, Sci., Mgmt. 16% Multi-unit Program 38% ENGR/Tech 13% Department 25% Ag./Hort. 12% School/College 11% Architecture 10% Center/Institute 11% Natural Resources/Ecology 5% Other 15% Planning 5% Public Policy 4% Geography 3% Other (Anth., Chem., 7% Econ., Edu., Geosci., Law, Tourism) Background Research Questions: 1. How do Gold rated STARS participants approach sustainability education? • What roles does Geography have in sustainability education? 2. What is the applicability of STARS as a research tool? • What is Geography’s role? • Are Business, Environmental Science leading? Methodology • Focus: Gold rated institutions (n=48) • 18.4% of all STARS institutions • Minimum score to achieve Gold: 65 • Average score of dataset: 67.45 • Sustainability Focused Courses 1. Distribution of Sustainability Focused Courses in Institutions which offer Geography (n=23) 2. Distribution of Sustainability Focused Courses in all Gold Institutions Middlebury College Rating Score Gold 66.9 Education and Research 73.70% Co-Curricular Education 17.5 / 17.75 Curriculum 26.69 / 51.00 Research 25.80 / 27.00 Operations 50.23% Planning, Admin., Engagement 65.36% Innovation 4 pts. Curriculum Sustainability Focused Courses Course Total 32 757 Geography 3 (n), 9.3% Environmental Studies (Interdisc.) 6 (n), 18.6% ETC. Methodology Contd. • Course groupings by discipline • Business: includes Administration, Management, Leadership • Minority Studies: includes Africana Studies, Women’s Studies, Native American Studies • Architecture: Structural and Landscape • Engineering: Civil, Environmental, Structural • Biology: Ecology, Plant Biology, Microbiology • Other: University-specific program, outliers Results Institution Sustainability Curriculum # of Departments hosting majority Lead Department American University 17% INTL. Studies 2 Appalachian State U. 27% TECH 3 Ball State U. 1% ARCH 3 Middlebury College 24% ENVS 4 New Mexico State U. 29% AG 5 Northern Arizona U. 17% FORST 4 Oregon State U. 15% ECON 4 Portland State U. 2% PLAN 4 The U. of Arizona 15% GEOG 4 U. Colorado Boulder 9% ENVS 4 U. Iowa 8% GEOG 4 U. Denver 25% BUS & ADMIN 2 U. New Hampshire 19% NREM 3 U. Northern Iowa 18% UCOL 4 U. Wisconsin Stvns. Pnt. 23% NREM 2 Results Discipline/Field Average Proportion of Courses Architecture 16%* Earth Science (Unclassified) 11% Forestry 12% Fish and Wildlife 12% Geography 12% Global or Intl. Studies 16%* Natural Resource Environmental Management 28%* Planning 11% • Average discipline involvement across all schools Discipline Breakdown Comparison Average Role At Individual Schools; Frequency Across All Schools Other 4% SOCY 3% PLAN 11% PHIL 2% NREM 28% HIST 3% 73% HEALTH 3% 73% GOBL or INTL Studies 16% GOVT/Polisci 2% 80% GEOG 12% 80% FW 12% 20% FORST 12% 20% EARTH SCI (Unclassified) 11% 20% ENVS 9% 67% ENGR 8% 67% ECON 5% BUS 8% BIO 7% ARCH 16% ANTH 4% 40% 20% 0% 100% 60% 27% 47% 20% 27% % of Total Sustainability Curriculum Frequency for All Schools 93% 67% 87% 20% 73% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% Outliers Discipline/Field Average Proportion of Courses Architecture 16%* Global or Intl. Studies 16%* Natural Resource Environmental Management 28%* • Ball State University Architecture, 35% • American University Global Studies, 39% • University of Wisc. Stevens Point Nat. Resource Mgmt., 42% Using STARS Data As A Research Tool • Limitations • Reporting inconsistencies • Course sum inconsistencies • Dead links • Course department/discipline not listed • Solution: Calling institution’s STARS liaison • Data cleaning • Flagging feature (did not use) Limitations Contd.: Definition of “Sustainability Focused Course” Looking Forward: STARS 2.0 STARS 1.2 ER 6 • Sustainability focused courses: concentrate on the concept of sustainability including its social, economic, and environmental dimensions, or examine an issue or topic using sustainability as a lens STARS 2.0 AC 1 Increased Accountability Features • Sustainability courses: the Flagging primary feature and explicit focus is on sustainability and/or solving Entry spot-checking one or more major sustainability challenge (e.g. the course contributes toward achieving principles outlined in the Earth Charter). • Foundational courses • Application of sustainability within a field (usually interdisciplinary) • Courses providing skills/knowledge directly related to solving or understanding sustainability challenges Looking Forward • Next Step in Research: “Bulk up” Geography-offering schools data-set via phone calls, emails 2. Analyze remainder of Gold-rated institutions 1. Does departmental size, department influence at institution, department budget correlate to proportion of sustainability course offerings? Does institutional mission contribute to sustainability course offerings? What is the future for sustainability courses? What is the role of stakeholder demand? Questions and Discussion Makayla Bonney SIU Graduate Fellow MS Candidate, Geography makayla.bonney@gmail.com 309/331.3617 Background • National Geographic and Geography Education Standards • 1984: Five Themes of Geography • 1994: Geography Education National Standards Project • Two Perspectives of geography education: • Spatial and ecological • 2011-Present: Daniel Edelson, VP Education • Geoliteracy: required an understanding of: • Interactions: Human and natural systems • Implications: forward thinking, cost v. benefit • Interconnections: Place, systems thinking, global perspective