Lost in translation? Tanzanian students’ views on sustainability and language, and the implications for the pledge to leave no one behind

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Standard

Lost in translation? Tanzanian students’ views on sustainability and language, and the implications for the pledge to leave no one behind. / Ulmer, Nico; Divine, Ntiokam; Wydra, Kerstin.
in: International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education, Jahrgang 24, Nr. 7, 13.11.2023, S. 1381-1397.

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{e697a238019246a4beac03e7f94a6d7e,
title = "Lost in translation? Tanzanian students{\textquoteright} views on sustainability and language, and the implications for the pledge to leave no one behind",
abstract = "Purpose: Less than eight years remain to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Numerous authors underlined the importance of language in achieving the SDGs; however, its role in the process remains overlooked. This paper aims to investigate the sustainability understanding among Tanzanian students and graduates, their translation approaches and the awareness of people living outside of universities regarding sustainability and the SDGs. The importance of including language in implementing the SDGs is highlighted, and further research regarding local languages to enhance sustainability awareness is suggested. Design/methodology/approach: This study builds upon an extensive review of the current language of instruction conundrum present in many African countries and embeds the SDGs in this complex situation. Using a Tanzanian University as a case study, a questionnaire was administered to Tanzanian students and graduates, and follow-up interviews were conducted. Findings: Findings suggest that Tanzanian higher education students and graduates are knowledgeable about both sustainability and the SDGs, with most of them integrating at least one goal into their respective research. However, in the interviews conducted, interviewees stated that in their experience, only a minority of people outside of universities are aware of both concepts. The findings indicate that the aim of target 4.7 and, ultimately, the pledge to leave no one behind remain void when African languages continue to be neglected. Research limitations/implications: A case study is characterized by a lack of generalizability. Findings from this study should, therefore, be transferred cautiously to other African countries and universities. Furthermore, university students and graduates represent highly educated participants, which does not allow deductions to other parts of society. Originality/value: The authors are not aware of other studies investigating the views of Tanzanian students and graduates regarding sustainability and language and how they handle emerging translation challenges in their research. Furthermore, to the best of the authors{\textquoteright} knowledge, this research is the first to highlight the importance of language in achieving target 4.7 of the SDGs and, ultimately, the pledge to leave no one behind. It, therefore, represents a valuable contribution to the scientific body of knowledge regarding education for sustainable development and language.",
keywords = "Africa, Education for sustainable development, Higher education, Sociolinguistics, Sustainable development goals, Sustainability education, Sustainability sciences, Communication",
author = "Nico Ulmer and Ntiokam Divine and Kerstin Wydra",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited.",
year = "2023",
month = nov,
day = "13",
doi = "10.1108/IJSHE-09-2022-0287",
language = "English",
volume = "24",
pages = "1381--1397",
journal = "International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education",
issn = "1467-6370",
publisher = "Emerald Publishing Limited",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Lost in translation? Tanzanian students’ views on sustainability and language, and the implications for the pledge to leave no one behind

AU - Ulmer, Nico

AU - Divine, Ntiokam

AU - Wydra, Kerstin

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited.

PY - 2023/11/13

Y1 - 2023/11/13

N2 - Purpose: Less than eight years remain to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Numerous authors underlined the importance of language in achieving the SDGs; however, its role in the process remains overlooked. This paper aims to investigate the sustainability understanding among Tanzanian students and graduates, their translation approaches and the awareness of people living outside of universities regarding sustainability and the SDGs. The importance of including language in implementing the SDGs is highlighted, and further research regarding local languages to enhance sustainability awareness is suggested. Design/methodology/approach: This study builds upon an extensive review of the current language of instruction conundrum present in many African countries and embeds the SDGs in this complex situation. Using a Tanzanian University as a case study, a questionnaire was administered to Tanzanian students and graduates, and follow-up interviews were conducted. Findings: Findings suggest that Tanzanian higher education students and graduates are knowledgeable about both sustainability and the SDGs, with most of them integrating at least one goal into their respective research. However, in the interviews conducted, interviewees stated that in their experience, only a minority of people outside of universities are aware of both concepts. The findings indicate that the aim of target 4.7 and, ultimately, the pledge to leave no one behind remain void when African languages continue to be neglected. Research limitations/implications: A case study is characterized by a lack of generalizability. Findings from this study should, therefore, be transferred cautiously to other African countries and universities. Furthermore, university students and graduates represent highly educated participants, which does not allow deductions to other parts of society. Originality/value: The authors are not aware of other studies investigating the views of Tanzanian students and graduates regarding sustainability and language and how they handle emerging translation challenges in their research. Furthermore, to the best of the authors’ knowledge, this research is the first to highlight the importance of language in achieving target 4.7 of the SDGs and, ultimately, the pledge to leave no one behind. It, therefore, represents a valuable contribution to the scientific body of knowledge regarding education for sustainable development and language.

AB - Purpose: Less than eight years remain to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Numerous authors underlined the importance of language in achieving the SDGs; however, its role in the process remains overlooked. This paper aims to investigate the sustainability understanding among Tanzanian students and graduates, their translation approaches and the awareness of people living outside of universities regarding sustainability and the SDGs. The importance of including language in implementing the SDGs is highlighted, and further research regarding local languages to enhance sustainability awareness is suggested. Design/methodology/approach: This study builds upon an extensive review of the current language of instruction conundrum present in many African countries and embeds the SDGs in this complex situation. Using a Tanzanian University as a case study, a questionnaire was administered to Tanzanian students and graduates, and follow-up interviews were conducted. Findings: Findings suggest that Tanzanian higher education students and graduates are knowledgeable about both sustainability and the SDGs, with most of them integrating at least one goal into their respective research. However, in the interviews conducted, interviewees stated that in their experience, only a minority of people outside of universities are aware of both concepts. The findings indicate that the aim of target 4.7 and, ultimately, the pledge to leave no one behind remain void when African languages continue to be neglected. Research limitations/implications: A case study is characterized by a lack of generalizability. Findings from this study should, therefore, be transferred cautiously to other African countries and universities. Furthermore, university students and graduates represent highly educated participants, which does not allow deductions to other parts of society. Originality/value: The authors are not aware of other studies investigating the views of Tanzanian students and graduates regarding sustainability and language and how they handle emerging translation challenges in their research. Furthermore, to the best of the authors’ knowledge, this research is the first to highlight the importance of language in achieving target 4.7 of the SDGs and, ultimately, the pledge to leave no one behind. It, therefore, represents a valuable contribution to the scientific body of knowledge regarding education for sustainable development and language.

KW - Africa

KW - Education for sustainable development

KW - Higher education

KW - Sociolinguistics

KW - Sustainable development goals

KW - Sustainability education

KW - Sustainability sciences, Communication

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85147498240&partnerID=8YFLogxK

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/80a18471-55d4-3a74-ab3b-87ce608fd964/

U2 - 10.1108/IJSHE-09-2022-0287

DO - 10.1108/IJSHE-09-2022-0287

M3 - Journal articles

AN - SCOPUS:85147498240

VL - 24

SP - 1381

EP - 1397

JO - International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education

JF - International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education

SN - 1467-6370

IS - 7

ER -

DOI

Zuletzt angesehen

Aktivitäten

  1. Raumvorstellung(en) in schriftlichen und realraumbasierten Settings - Ergebnisse einer quantitativen Studie mit Grundschulkindern der vierten Klasse
  2. Educating through pricing? Linking Sustainable Products' availability and pricing in schools and the development of sustainable consumer competence
  3. Die Einstellungen, Überzeugungen und Reflexionskompetenz von angehenden Englischlehrkräften: Eine Lerngelegenheit zum inklusiven Englischunterricht
  4. Wissenstransfer interdisziplinär – Netzwerkarbeit in der inklusionsorientierten Lehrer_innenbildung. Betrachtungen am Beispiel des Projektes DoProfil
  5. Eemian and early weichselian vegetation and uranium/thorium and thermoluminescence age determinations from sections in Northeast Lower-Saxony, Germany
  6. Contrasting pragmatic choices in responding to thanks in Ireland, England and Canada (New Apporaches to Irish English (Corpus) Pragmatics - 2019, Dortmund)
  7. North America's Pacific coastal rainforest under climate change: Deriving recommendations for conservation management from spatial modeling approaches
  8. Transdisziplinäre Entwicklungsteams in der LehrerInnenbildung - Verbindung von Akteuren aus dem Kontext (schul-)pädagogischer und hochschulischer Bedingungen
  9. Linguistically Responsive Teaching in Teacher Education – Innovative Approaches to Analyzing and Improving Pre-service Teachers’ Beliefs about Multilingualism
  10. 'Nationale Kinder- und Jugendliteratur im Prozess der Modernisierung und Internationalisierung - am Beispiel der Bundesrepublik Deutschland und der Türkei' 1995
  11. NEPS. Wissenschaftliche Begutachtung mathematischer Testaufgaben für Schülerinnen und Schüler im Rahmen des BMBF-Forschungsprojekts NEPS: Nationales Bildungspanel.
  12. Nachhaltigen Konsum fördern in Bildungseinrichtungen: Jugendmilieus, transdisziplinäre Interventionsentwicklung und die Veränderung (hoch)schulischer Konsumkultur
  13. Feedback im Kontext digitaler Medien – Über die Wirksamkeit einer Lehr-Lern-Plattform in Einzellernsettings sowie dessen Nutzung und Wahrnehmung durch Schüler*innen
  14. Policy Paper 2011 „Integration in Baden-Württemberg –Gemeinsam mit den Eltern für neue Bildungschancen“ in Trägerschaft des Vereins Netzwerke für Bildungspartner e.V.

Publikationen

  1. Comparing apples with oranges? An approach to link TIMSS and the National Educational Panel Study in Germany via equipercentile and IRT methods
  2. Effects of introspective vs. extraspective instruction in scaling of hedonic properties of flavouring ingredients by Chinese and German subjects
  3. Mythos Afrikasöldner. Modernisierung, mann-männliches Begehren und männliche Subjektbildung in der deutschsprachigen Literatur des 20. Jahrhunderts
  4. Digitized planning processes in the revitalization of buildings by an interdisciplinary project study empirical work with students in argentina
  5. Universal screening for latent and active tuberculosis (TB) in asylum seeking children, Bochum and hamburg, Germany, September 2015 to November 2016
  6. Determinants and consequences of corporate social responsibility decoupling—Status quo and limitations of recent empirical quantitative research
  7. Translating interventions to improve competence, motivation, and support of heating professionals to increase energy efficiency in Swiss buildings
  8. Führt die Neuordnung der Berufsaufsicht und externen Qualitätskontrolle der Wirtschaftsprüfer nach dem APAReG zu einer erhöhten Prüfungsqualität?
  9. Wyzwania edukacji na rzecz zrównoważonego rozwoju w konflikcie między praktycznością warunkami strukturalnymi a transferem konceptualnej kompleksowości
  10. Temperature and palaeolake evolution during a Middle Pleistocene interglacial–glacial transition at the Palaeolithic locality of Schöningen, Germany
  11. Learning processes for interpersonal competence development in project-based sustainability courses – insights from a comparative international study
  12. Abbauverhalten von klinikspezifischen Abwasserinhaltsstoffen und deren Beeinflussung des Bakterienwachstums im Closed-Bottle-Test: Desinfektionsmittel.
  13. Policy as normative influence? On the relationship between parental leave policy and social norms in gender division of childcare across 48 countries
  14. Netzwerkbasierte Betrachtung von ko-konstruktiven Interaktionsprozessen im Unterricht – Ein Ansatz zur Beschreibung und Analyse von Angebot und Nutzung
  15. Inklusionsorientierte Lehrkräftebildung an der Leuphana Universität Lüneburg - Entwicklung und Implementation von Basisqualifikation und Profilstudium
  16. Climate reporting quality following the recommendations of the task force on climate-related financial disclosures: A Focus on the German capital market
  17. A cross-sectional study of university students' pocket money variance and its relationship with digital health literacy and subjective well-being in Ghana
  18. B7-H1 restricts neuroantigen-specific T cell responses and confines inflammatory CNS damage: implications for the lesion pathogenesis of multiple sclerosis.
  19. Kinder, Küche, Krise der Reproduktion. Ein Mailwechsel über Konstellationen von Sorge-, Lohn- und Schreibarbeit in Romanen von Caroline Muhr bis Anke Stelling
  20. Impacts of offshore wind farms on sediment structure and the water column during construction, and changes in bottom topography during the operation phase
  21. §1 Einführung: Das Verwaltungsrecht der Europäischen Union als Gegenstand rechtswissenschaftlicher Forschung - Entwicklungslinien, Prinzipien und Perspektiven
  22. Development of a cell culture system for studying effects of native and photochemically transformed gaseous compounds using an air/liquid culture technique
  23. Simultaneous Determination of 11 Sulfonamides by HPLC–UV and Application for Fast Screening of Their Aerobic Elimination and Biodegradation in a Simple Test
  24. Function-, incentive- and expense-related compensation of supervisory boards and audit committees - Empirical Evidence in the German DAX 30, MDAX, SDAX and TecDAX
  25. The role of expert feedback in the development of pre-service teachers’ professional vision of classroom management in an online blended learning environment
  26. Bildungsbiographische Aspekte von Qualifikationsaneignungen und -verwendungen im Erwerbsleben von Frauen im Berufsbereich personenbezogener Dienstleistungen
  27. A strategy for an initial assessment of the ecotoxicological effects of transformation products of pesticides in aquatic systems following a tiered approach
  28. Single mothers figuring out their future family life – understanding family development after separation and divorce drawing upon the concept of configuration
  29. The right to liberty and security according to article 5 of the European Convention on Human Rights and facing threats to public safety and national security