Fostering sustainability capabilities through experience: A case study on virtual mobility in STEM

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.53761/yg7d7a82

Keywords:

sustainability capabilities, international student mobility, virtual mobility, science education for sustainability

Abstract

For a 21st century facing cascading crises, including global pandemics, climate change, and social and economic disruption, education is more critical than ever. Universities, and consequently their curricula, have a responsibility to prepare all students and graduates to respond to and live within a disrupted, complex, and uncertain future. One way of preparing students to think and address complex global challenges is through international learning experiences. However, the global pandemic triggered an unforeseen disruption to student mobility and the acceleration of online learning environments, such as virtual mobility programs. To date there has been little exploration of how virtual mobility programs can be designed for science and their ability to foster sustainability capabilities within the discipline. This paper reports on the design (its curriculum and pedagogy) of an experiential virtual mobility program, designed and delivered during the pandemic. It illustrates an innovative, co-created, STEM-focused case study whereby learning focused on varied approaches to agricultural challenges and practices. Through the perspective of student participants, key education for sustainability capabilities of sustainability thinking, collaboration, affective learning, critical reflection, and interdisciplinary knowledge were analysed as themes and are discussed in relation to how these capabilities were shaped by the program design. We share this discussion to support and expand the use of further meaningful virtual experiences to foster sustainability capabilities in an international (online) setting by other University educators.

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Author Biographies

  • Dr Brittany Vermeulen, Western Sydney University

    Brittany Vermeulen is a PhD student and full-time staff member at Western Sydney University working in the field of Sustainability Education. Her doctoral research interest is centred around the intersection of science education and student learning. Her thesis is a mixed-methods study looking at varying approaches to STEM-based mobility within Australian universities. 

  • Dr Jenny Pizzica, Western Sydney University

    Dr Jenny Pizzica is a Senior Lecturer and Academic Developer and has more than twenty years’ experience in academic development and designing and coordinating graduate programs in higher education. She has held academic appointments at Western Sydney University, University of Technology Sydney, Sydney University and the University of Notre Dame Australia. In 2022 she received an Australian Award for University Teaching – Team Citation – for the stewardship of a scholarly approach to fostering a culture of reflective evidence-based practice. Jenny’s research interests include learning and teaching in higher education, academic practice, phenomenology and sociomateriality and she supervises research students interested in higher education, curriculum, and professional learning.

  • Dr Adrian Renshaw, Western Sydney University

    Dr Adrian Renshaw has diverse scientific interests, predominately biological and has taught in forensics, environmental, ecology, conservation, botany and more recently animal science. He has 30 years of teaching experience across numerous courses and programs at the university. He has work with the WHO and the Australian government in Indigenous programs and CSIRO school teaching programs. He has won both institutional and Australian National awards for his teaching.

  • Dr Jason Reynolds, Western Sydney University

    Dr Jason Reynolds is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Sciences at Western Sydney University. Jason has a research background in soil and landscape regeneration working in Australia, Finland, and the Philippines. He is a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy and has focused on improving the outbound mobility experience for Australian higher education students. Jason tweets about his research at @geojase.  

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Published

2024-02-29 — Updated on 2024-03-11

Data Availability Statement

No data has been made available.

How to Cite

Fostering sustainability capabilities through experience: A case study on virtual mobility in STEM. (2024). Journal of University Teaching and Learning Practice, 21(3). https://doi.org/10.53761/yg7d7a82