Higher Education for Sustainable Consumption: Concept and Results of a Transdisciplinary Project Course

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Higher Education for Sustainable Consumption : Concept and Results of a Transdisciplinary Project Course. / Fischer, Daniel; Rieckmann, Marco.

In: Journal of Sustainability Education, Vol. 1, No. 2, 09.05.2010, p. 296–306.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesEducation

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@article{5d5ccda97322406890c9448b128899fe,
title = "Higher Education for Sustainable Consumption: Concept and Results of a Transdisciplinary Project Course",
abstract = "We introduce the notion of sustainable consumption as a transdisciplinary challenge to higher education through the presentation of a concept seminar designed as a response to this challenge. The seminar aimed to equip students with the skills and competencies needed to design informal learning settings in close collaboration with campus service-providers (e.g. coffee shops, canteen, campus vegetable stall, bike repair shop) with the goal ofincorporating sustainability principles into students{\textquoteright} experience while obtaining or consuming those services. The student projects were informed and guided by the didactic first phase of the seminar where transdisciplinary collaboration for sustainable development, informal learning theories, consumer competence models and project management were covered.Results of the project course comprise (a) self-reported competence increase in designing and providing settings for sustainable learning on side of the participating students, (b) highly visible imprints of sustainable consumption on the entire campus and (c) an increased awareness of the principles and objectives of sustainable consumption for the participating service-provider partners.",
keywords = "Sustainability education",
author = "Daniel Fischer and Marco Rieckmann",
year = "2010",
month = may,
day = "9",
language = "English",
volume = "1",
pages = "296–306",
journal = "Journal of Sustainability Education",
issn = "2151-7452",
publisher = "Prescott College",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Higher Education for Sustainable Consumption

T2 - Concept and Results of a Transdisciplinary Project Course

AU - Fischer, Daniel

AU - Rieckmann, Marco

PY - 2010/5/9

Y1 - 2010/5/9

N2 - We introduce the notion of sustainable consumption as a transdisciplinary challenge to higher education through the presentation of a concept seminar designed as a response to this challenge. The seminar aimed to equip students with the skills and competencies needed to design informal learning settings in close collaboration with campus service-providers (e.g. coffee shops, canteen, campus vegetable stall, bike repair shop) with the goal ofincorporating sustainability principles into students’ experience while obtaining or consuming those services. The student projects were informed and guided by the didactic first phase of the seminar where transdisciplinary collaboration for sustainable development, informal learning theories, consumer competence models and project management were covered.Results of the project course comprise (a) self-reported competence increase in designing and providing settings for sustainable learning on side of the participating students, (b) highly visible imprints of sustainable consumption on the entire campus and (c) an increased awareness of the principles and objectives of sustainable consumption for the participating service-provider partners.

AB - We introduce the notion of sustainable consumption as a transdisciplinary challenge to higher education through the presentation of a concept seminar designed as a response to this challenge. The seminar aimed to equip students with the skills and competencies needed to design informal learning settings in close collaboration with campus service-providers (e.g. coffee shops, canteen, campus vegetable stall, bike repair shop) with the goal ofincorporating sustainability principles into students’ experience while obtaining or consuming those services. The student projects were informed and guided by the didactic first phase of the seminar where transdisciplinary collaboration for sustainable development, informal learning theories, consumer competence models and project management were covered.Results of the project course comprise (a) self-reported competence increase in designing and providing settings for sustainable learning on side of the participating students, (b) highly visible imprints of sustainable consumption on the entire campus and (c) an increased awareness of the principles and objectives of sustainable consumption for the participating service-provider partners.

KW - Sustainability education

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 1

SP - 296

EP - 306

JO - Journal of Sustainability Education

JF - Journal of Sustainability Education

SN - 2151-7452

IS - 2

ER -