Learning For Sustainability: The Report of The One Planet Schools Working Group
Learning For Sustainability: The Report of The One Planet Schools Working Group
Learning For Sustainability: The Report of The One Planet Schools Working Group
23 November 2012
COVER IMAGE
In chaos theory the butterfly effect attempts to describe how a seemingly insignificant
change can result in dramatic consequences elsewhere. Releasing the butterfly into the
world symbolises the power local action has on global issues. Acting locally brings colour
and light to a seemingly dark and bleak landscape.
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CONTENTS
FOREWORD 03
INTRODUCTION 05
DEFINITION OF TERMS 08
APPENDIX I 26
Members of the Working Group
26
Organisations consulted 27
APPENDIX II 28
Summary of recommendations 28
REFERENCES 31
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FOREWORD
Concepts such as ‘sustainable development education’ and ‘global citizenship’ have been
built upon contributions of distinguished Scottish thinkers including Sir Patrick Geddes
who is widely associated with the concept of sustainability and the notion of ‘thinking
globally, acting locally’; conservationists such as John Muir who pioneered the National
Parks movement; and ecologists such as Professor John Smyth who co-wrote the
education chapter of the 1992 Rio Declaration on Environment and Developmenti.
Successive Scottish Governments have maintained this long-standing commitment
through various initiatives; most recently those outlined in Scotland’s UNDESD Action
Plans, Learning for our Future and Learning for Changeii.
Our report emerges at a time of other major education policy developments in Scotland.
Curriculum for Excellence provides the overarching philosophical, pedagogical and
practical framework and context in which the One Planet Schools recommendations
presented here can be applied. Moreover, the focus on learning for sustainability and
social justice in the values section of the revised General Teaching Council for Scotland’s
Professional Standards and the changes resulting from the Donaldson Review of Teacher
Education, Teaching Scotland’s Future, contribute to a fertile professional context for our
recommendations. In taking these initiatives forward, Scotland is fortunate in having
many practitioners and policy officers committed to a ‘One Planet living’ agenda and to
providing the best learning opportunities for children and young people to understand and
act on it.
Although our Working Group was drawn from a wide range of stakeholders from across
diverse fields, we sought additional expertise in certain areas through meeting with
colleagues with the requisite knowledge, skills and responsibilities. Through Education
Scotland and the National Parent Forum of Scotland, the Working Group also sought the
views of practitioners and parents. The findings of these consultations and those from
additional research funded by the Field Studies Council and Forestry Commission
Scotlandiv have informed the Working Group’s recommendations around what practical
measures need to be taken to bring about a step change in progress. This collaborative
and consultative process provided key insights and informed our thinking, and we are
grateful to our colleagues and consultees for their guidance and support.
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At the forefront of our deliberations have been children and young people; the learners
within the Scottish education system who will have such a key role in the future of our
planet. We are grateful to those who informed our thinking, with particular thanks to
Madeliene Stone and Billy McCafferty of King’s Park Secondary
School who conceptualised and designed the artwork for the cover of this report.
This report is our vision of how Scottish education can build on its world leading status
and further contribute to sustainable and socially just practices throughout Scottish
society. I am pleased to commend it to you.
Ecologically literate
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INTRODUCTION
WWF’s 2012 Living Planet Reportvshows that globally, humanity is currently using 50%
more resources than the planet can sustain. We are, in essence, living as if we had one
and a half planets. The disproportionate overuse of resources by industrialised nations
has raised living standards in many countries but at a huge cost to the health of the
Earth’s living systems. The UN Development Programme’s Human Development Report
2011vi provides clear evidence of the unequal distribution of this rise in living standards
which has resulted in high levels of inequality and poverty within and between societies
and has contributed to political tension and conflict across the world.
Scotland has done much to rise to these significant challenges. The Scottish
Government’s ambitions for a ‘greener’ and ‘fairer’ nation encompass many overarching
strategic objectives; sustainable development, being one of the key National Performance
Outcomes, features in many aspects of the government’s work. A prime example of
these commitments is the Scottish Government’s ambitious targets, which have cross-
party support, for reducing greenhouse gas emissions through the Climate Change
(Scotland) Act 2009. The Act includes the target of a 42% Greenhouse gas (GHG)
reduction by 2020 against 1990 levels.
Action is also being taken to reduce our local and global environmental impact by moving
towards a Zero Waste Scotlandvii, minimising the use of the Earth’s resources and
increasing the use of renewable energy. Work is also underway to improve the built
environment and protect our natural heritage for present and future generations.
Furthermore, the Scottish Government has placed great emphasis on tackling the
significant inequalities in Scottish society and in creating sustainable communities which
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promote physical, emotional, mental and social wellbeing for all our nation’s citizens. In
addition, it has reaffirmed its commitment to a global agenda through its International
Development Policyviiiwhich articulates the vision of Scotland’s place in the world as a
responsible nation within the global community; committed to playing its role in
addressing the challenges faced by our world.
Within the first half of the United Nations Decade of Education for Sustainable
Development, themes relating to sustainable development education, global citizenship
and outdoor learning were firmly embedded within Curriculum for Excellence and feature
prominently in the experiences and outcomes. The support given to Eco-Schools
Scotland has also helped Scotland to have one of the most successful Eco-Schools
programme in the world with over 98% of local authority schools participating in the
programme and 45% awarded Green Flag status.
In 2013, the Scottish Government will bring forward further legislation through the
Children and Young People’s Billix which will enhance the existing policy framework in
relation to Getting it Right for Every Childx and ensuring that children’s rights are taken
into consideration across the whole of the public sector, including education, in line with
the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Childxi.
Against this backdrop, the One Planet Schools Working Group was established on behalf
of Scottish Ministers to provide strategic advice and direction to support the
implementation of the 2011 manifesto commitment:
The terms of reference for the Working Group, membership information and minutes of
meetings have been published on the Scottish Government’s websitexii.
The Working Group examined the concept of One Planet Schools in a holistic sense,
giving consideration as to how sustainable development education, global citizenship and
outdoor learning can be woven together to assist in the delivery of other high level
educational priorities including raising attainment, improving behaviour, supporting
inclusion and promoting health and wellbeing.
In bringing forward our report and its recommendations, this report does not ask anything
of educators that is not already implied by Curriculum for Excellence, the revised General
Teaching Council for Scotland (GTCS) Professional Standards and Teaching Scotland’s
Future.
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We are not proposing a new initiative, scheme or award; rather our recommendations
form an agenda for strategic change that will create an enabling framework, remove
barriers, and build on existing excellent practice. Our intention is to ensure that learning
relating to sustainable development, global citizenship and outdoor learning is
experienced in a transformative way by every learner in every school across Scotland.
Pupils for King’s Park Secondary School interview Duncan McLaren of Friends of the
Earth and James Curran of SEPA at a Human Rights Conference
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DEFINITION OF TERMS
Sustainable development education, global citizenship and outdoor learning each makes
an essential contribution to building the values, attitudes, knowledge, skills and
confidence needed to engage positively with the challenges our society and the world
face. These three share much common ground but also have their unique features.
Bringing these areas together to create a coherent whole school approach that
encompasses the curriculum, campus, culture and community of the school, and the
wider community in which the school sits, is required if we are to realise our objectives.
Many schools1are already successfully weaving these together to develop a holistic and
coherent whole school approach where learning about sustainable development and
global citizenship is brought to life through outdoor learning as part of successful
implementation of Curriculum for Excellence and an approach to learning which is more
relevant, connected and meaningful.
The Working Group felt the repeated use of the terms sustainable development
education, global citizenship and outdoor learning to be cumbersome and that none of
these individual terms encompassed the full breadth of what this report is intended to
address. Finding an appropriate alternative, which was universally acceptable, proved a
challenging task but the issue of terminology should not present a distraction or divert us
from our key objectives.
The Working Group has agreed on the term learning for sustainability as it related most
closely to the remit of the Working Group, and this is the term used by the GTCS in the
revised Professional Standards. The Working Group defines learning for sustainability as:
A whole school approach that enables the school and its wider
community to build the values, attitudes, knowledge, skills and
confidence needed to develop practices and take decisions which are
compatible with a sustainable and equitable society.
The GTCS has contributed to this definition and indicated its intention to continue to
ensure convergence between this and that used in the revised Professional Standards.
This is not to suggest that sustainable development education, global citizenship and
outdoor learning are absorbed into this term or that this limits any of these educational
domains but rather that, in taking a whole school approach to learning for sustainability,
all must feature.
1
The term ‘school’ denotes any education establishment or community setting where 3-18 years
formal education takes place including early years centres, primary, ASN and secondary schools
and colleges. It can also be taken in its widest sense to encompass learning communities.
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Learning for sustainability is a broad agenda and encompasses a wide spectrum of issues
and approaches (see Figure 1). Most schools will recognise that many of these are
already part of their learning and teaching, and the life of their school.
Learning for sustainability is not intended to replace what schools are already doing but to
build on it by providing a linking thread that draws these together into a coherent whole,
united by the aim of building learners’ capacity to develop practices and take decisions
which are compatible with a sustainable society.
The Working Group is very clear that the term learning for sustainability should not be
understood to relate exclusively or solely to the environment and ‘green issues’. We use
sustainability in the way it is understood by UN agencies and countries across the globe
to incorporate the inextricable link between environmental, social and economic issues.
Learning outdoors
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FIGURE 1: THE BREADTH OF LEARNING FOR SUSTAINABILITY
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HIGH LEVEL RECOMMENDATIONS
The over-riding ambition of the Working Group is to ensure that learning for sustainability
becomes the everyday experience of every learner in every school in every community in
Scotland. This necessitates a step-change in terms of the progress that is being made so
that the excellent and inspiring practice that exists in many settings and classrooms
becomes the universal norm.
To achieve this we need to move from a system which is often reliant on the enthusiasm
and commitment of individuals, to one where a learner’s access to learning for
sustainability is recognised as core to their learning experience. This proposed shift
towards a structurally embedded entitlement lies at the heart of our recommendations.
The following represents the high level recommendations of the Working Group. These
recommendations are explained in further detail in the subsequent sections of this report.
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LEARNERS
The big issues that affect our planet such as climate change, loss of biodiversity and
global poverty, require a population committed to living equitably within ecological limits
and to finding solutions that enable them to do so. Democracy needs people who
recognise the importance and value of participation and of making their voice, and the
voices of others, heard. Addressing the injustices and inequalities in and between
societies requires people who care about social justice and human rights, who recognise
that our lives are inextricably linked and that, in our interdependent and globalised world,
we all have a role in both creating and addressing injustice. We are part of rather than
apart from nature, and so the threat to biodiversity is a threat to ourselves, and
understanding and acting to preserve biodiversity calls out for people who are ecologically
literate and are deeply connected to the natural world. Our communities need to be
enriched and revitalised by learners who have a strong sense of place and who are
committed to the common good.
Education Scotland’s 3-18 Curriculum Impact Reviews for Sciences and Social Studiesxvii
show that this approach to learning and teaching is becoming increasingly commonplace
in Scottish schools with both reports citing many examples of learning for sustainability
within their good practice case studies. However, they recommend that more needs to be
done to involve learners in decisions about learning and, in primary schools, they
recommend that further work is done to improve knowledge and understanding of
democracy and the rights and responsibilities of citizens. Furthermore, they report that in
best practice, children and young people are given opportunities to show leadership and
be active citizens.
2 This refers to Outdoor Learning as defined in Curriculum for Excellence through Outdoor
Learning using locations including school grounds, the local area, day-long experiences and those
farther afield including outdoor centres and national parks. Ideally all such locations should model
best practice in their approach and facilities.
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The best practice experienced by some learners needs to be the everyday experience of
all learners if we are to bring about the significant and widespread change we seek. A
greater strategic impetus is required if we are to move towards the principle of entitlement
and the recommendations in this report are intended to address this.
Learning for sustainability, and the pedagogy that flows from it, provides a means of
achieving Scotland’s educational aims in a way that also contributes to our ambition to be
a low carbon, equitable, sustainable nation. An estimated 130,000 jobsxviii will be created
in Scotland by 2020 as we move towards a successful, low carbon economy. By
developing valuable skills for learning, life and work through learning for sustainability, we
will improve the life chances of children and young people. This will enable access to
exciting careers, in the emerging industries and other sectors and help us tackle
inequality and exclusion in our society.
RECOMMENDATIONS
1.2 As part of this entitlement, learners should have opportunities within their
curricular experiences to engage with democratic processes and to connect
and contribute to their communities, locally, nationally and internationally, as
active global citizens.
1.3 As part of this entitlement, learners should have active curricular learning
experiences that develop their understanding of the inter-relationship of
environment, society, economy and inequity, of the ecological limits to
development and the interdependence of ecological and human wellbeing.
1.4 The Scottish Government and Education Scotland should put in place
mechanisms to determine how well the learning for sustainability entitlement
of learners is being met.
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PRACTITIONERS AND LEADERS
Enabling the profession to grow and develop on such a scale presents a significant
challenge but recent policy developments and initiatives have provided a window of
opportunity. The GTCS is currently reviewing and updating the national Professional
Standardsxix for teachers. Learning for sustainability and social justice will be embedded
in the professional values and personal commitments sections of the three new
Professional Standards relating to Registration, Career-long Professional Learning and
Leadership and Management.
‘...all teachers should have the opportunity to develop their skills and
knowledge in relation to important cross-cutting themes across the
curriculum, such as international education, sustainable development,
citizenship, enterprise and creativity’.
These policy developments and existing good practice provide a foundation on which
strategic progress can be made. This will require a renewed focus on teacher education
to enable practitioners and school leaders to develop the values, attitudes, knowledge,
skills and confidence required to embed learning for sustainability within the curriculum,
within their approaches to learning, including outdoors and off-campus, within the way the
school campus is managed, within the culture of the school and within the way the school
community works and reaches out to the wider world.
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Meeting the professional development needs across the spectrum of education from
newly qualified practitioners to those aspiring to headship requires a blended programme
that is broad in scope and allows for progression. It should also encompass the
professional development of those in Teacher Education Institutes, local authorities and
other bodies that support schools in achieving a whole school approach to learning for
sustainability.
There are already high quality professional learning programmes relating to learning for
sustainability available from a wide variety of local and national providers. However,
realising the ambitions of this report will depend on bringing together providers – local,
national, statutory, non-statutory and voluntary – in a collaboration that results in the
coordinated, coherent, strategic national provision of professional development.
Much practitioner expertise relating to learning for sustainability already exists within the
Eco-Schools and Forest Education Initiative Cluster Group networks, local authority
Outdoor Learning networks, Outdoor Education Centres, Development Education
Centres’ Networks and in Education Scotland’s Outdoor Learning 3-18 Places Projects
and the Global Citizenship Peer Support and Collaboration Programme, amongst others.
Progress has already been made through the on-going Global Learning Project (GLP)
and other projects initiated by the International Development Education Association for
Scotland (IDEAS). Work over a six year period has promoted research, capacity building
and partnership working across Scotland’s seven teacher training universities around
global citizenship themes, with relevant links to sustainable development education and
outdoor learning. The changes initiated by the GLP and the research findings,
approaches, tools and collaborations developed, provide a model and a foundation for
progress on learning for sustainability in the early phase, and this is complemented by a
growing body of independent research-informed practice in the Teacher Education
Institutions.
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RECOMMENDATIONS
2.4 In line with the new GTCS Professional Standards, learning for sustainability
is a core responsibility of every teacher educator and a programme of
professional learning and peer collaboration relating to learning for
sustainability for teacher education should be established.
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WHOLE SCHOOL APPROACH
A whole school approach is often summarised as the ‘four Cs’ approach - curriculum,
campus, culture and community. It is fair to say that despite what has been achieved so
far, much remains to be done to achieve the potential of all schools in learning for
sustainability. In some schools, progress has been slow because it has mistakenly been
seen as a diversion from the drive to improve standards and attainment. In other
situations, schools have relied too heavily on the efforts of one individual and a small
group of learners to take forward work on behalf of the school. It can be extremely difficult
for these groups and individuals to gain support from colleagues and engage the wider
school in the face of so many competing priorities and pressures. Unsurprisingly, this
work can also falter or lose momentum when a key individual leaves the school or
changes remit.
To make strategic and sustained progress towards every school in Scotland having a
whole school approach to learning for sustainability, strong leadership at all levels is
required. The influence and guidance from school leaders and senior local authority staff
is pivotal in ensuring that learning for sustainability is in the school improvement plan and
embedded in related policies, and that programmes move forward in a coordinated and
strategic way. Central to a whole school approach is the involvement of all to promote a
culture of democracy and participation so as to effectively embed learning for
sustainability across the four contexts for learning: ethos and relationships, curriculum
areas and subjects, interdisciplinary learning and opportunities for personal achievement.
The drive to improve the sustainability of school buildings and grounds is also part of a
whole school approach. Across Scotland, acres of playground tarmac are being replaced
with wilderness gardens and vegetable patches to facilitate contact with biodiversity and
the natural world, and provide stimulating environments for learning and play.
In some ways, use of the term whole school approach may appear limiting: learning for
sustainability is a whole community approach that bridges the gap between the school
and the wider community in which it is situated. Learning for sustainability involves
learners actively participating in environmental stewardship, social justice and democracy
in ways that develop a sense of connection to the local, national and global community to
build understanding of their own and the school’s role within these communities.
Programmes like the Junior Climate Challenge Fund support this approach, in providing
young people with resources and support they need to take action on climate change in
their community.
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Learners need to experience belonging to groups; actively protecting, conserving and
transforming their physical environment; building relationships with local people, and
engaging in genuinely reciprocal partnerships across generations and nations. This
fosters attitudes of love and care, and a high regard for interdependence and collective
wellbeing.
Learning of this nature requires schools to be outward looking; viewing the school as a
valued part of the community, and the community, in its widest sense, as a valued part of
the school. The manifestation of this is the forging of partnerships ‘beyond the school
gate.
Key to this is the recognition of parents and carers as partners in learning. Establishing
collaborative relationships between parents, carers and school staff with regard to the
school’s culture, ethos, values and aspirations for its pupils is an essential aspect of a
whole school approach to learning for sustainability. Fostering productive relationships
with parents and carers has long been viewed as vital to a child’s learning and an
essential part of building a vibrant, successful school.
Local authorities
Local authorities have many responsibilities and legislative commitments including Best
Valuexxii and the Public Sector Climate Change Dutyxxiii which are aligned to the ambitions
and scope of this report. They also have a quality and improvement role for schools in
their area. Despite many pressures and financial challenges, a number of local authorities
launched significant outdoor learning strategies for their schools as this report was being
written. Others have developed innovative partnerships with recycling, waste and energy
officers to help schools to become more sustainable.
Many local authorities have set high expectations in relation to the involvement of their
schools in programmes such as Eco-Schools, Fairtrade Schools and Rights Respecting
Schools and have provided professional learning opportunities and have established
strong networks of practitioners to support on-going innovation and improvement with
respect to sustainable development education, global citizenship and outdoor learning.
The impact in many cases has been significant and demonstrates the crucial role local
authorities have in taking many of the recommendations in this report forward. In this
context, it is vital that local authorities continue to support these activities in the long term
and promote learning for sustainability as a priority.
Whilst they cannot, and should not, replace mainstream provision, they play a crucial role
in supporting it. In establishing a strategic national approach to learning for sustainability,
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it is essential that these programmes and organisations are viewed as key stakeholders
and partners.
RECOMMENDATIONS
3.3 Scottish Government, ADES and CoSLA should encourage local authorities
to maintain high expectations in relation to learning for sustainability and the
adoption of a whole school approach.
Pupils from Bellahouston Academy work with older community members to build
mobile phone skills
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SCHOOL BUILDINGS, GROUNDS AND
POLICIES
School campuses can support learning for sustainability by growing food, supporting
active travel, reducing energy and waste and providing well-designed environments for
outdoor learning and play. They have the potential to be accessible hubs that engage with
and serve their local community, celebrate local diversity and distinctiveness and offer
pupils and the community, meaningful opportunities to make the school and local
community more sustainable.
Many of these concepts are well captured in the Scottish Government’s School Estate
Strategy, Building Better Schoolsxxv (BBS), particularly in stating the guiding principles that
schools should serve their communities, be ‘greener’, more sustainable and
environmentally efficient and have grounds that are an integral part of the learning
environment.
New schools
Over the next 10 years, we are likely to re-build around 5% of our school estate. New
schools represent a unique opportunity to create a more sustainable school estate based
on the BBS guiding principles. Building Standards on extending non-domestic
sustainability labelling to all new school buildings are currently out to public consultation.
Included within proposals are two user guides: one relating to optimising the building’s
performance; another relating to enhancing biodiversity and promoting ecology. This
offers a further opportunity to align with the principles of learning for sustainability in the
development of new schools buildings and grounds.
Existing schools
A bigger challenge is to develop campuses to support learning for sustainability across
the 95% of the school estate which will not benefit from significant capital investment. The
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task is to put in place mechanisms that will see the guiding principles of BBS become a
reality in every school in Scotland, not just in new schools. This is a significant and long-
term challenge and the mechanisms that are needed are different for new schools than
for the existing estate.
The legacy of PPP (Public Private Partnership) schools means that a number of recently
built schools are significantly constrained in their ability to develop their buildings and
grounds to support learning for sustainability. Some school communities have managed
to negotiate meaningful improvements to their campuses and there is a need to draw out
the lessons from these examples to support the process of change in other PPP schools.
School grounds
School grounds can play a significant role in delivering learning for sustainability. They
provide an accessible space for curriculum-based outdoor learning and offer the
opportunity for pupils to connect with nature on a daily basis and throughout the seasons.
By helping to develop and look after their school grounds, pupils can become active
stewards of the environment.
Good Places Better Health for Scotland’s Childrenxxvi recognises the importance of these
childhood experiences in shaping the development of sustainable attitudes and
behaviours in adulthood. It also highlights the importance of well-designed school grounds
in supporting physical health and emotional wellbeing and the value of natural play in
school as a means of nurturing resilience, developing interpersonal skills and supporting
self-esteem.
A growing number of schools are demonstrating good practice in the use of their outdoor
spaces, supported at national level by organisations such as Eco-Schools, Grounds for
Learning, The Conservation Volunteers and the John Muir Award. However, too many of
our pupils are growing up in ‘sterile’ and unimaginative outdoor environments and missing
these vital childhood experiences. As with school buildings, there is a need for local
authority school estate management to provide more proactive support for the
development of school grounds that deliver learning for sustainability.
RECOMMENDATIONS
4 All school buildings, grounds and policies should support learning for
sustainability
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4.1 Every learner should have the opportunity for contact with nature in their
school grounds on a daily basis and throughout the seasons through the
provision of thoughtfully developed green space for outdoor learning and
play.
4.2 The Scottish Government should develop a framework to ensure that local
authority school estate management proactively develops campuses that
support learning for sustainability.
4.3 Scottish Futures Trust (SFT) release of Scottish Government funding for new
schools should be conditional on submission of a strategic design brief that
meets the guiding principles of Building Better Schools.
4.4 The principles outlined in any users’ guides for the sustainability labelling
scheme should be adopted for existing school estates.
Education Scotland
As the lead body in Scotland tasked with supporting quality improvement in Scottish
education, Education Scotland has a major role to play with regard to learning for
sustainability and, along with the contributions from its predecessor organisations, has
been instrumental in the progress made to date. The launch of the new educational
agency has created an exciting opportunity, and the cross-team working that has already
taken place across the different functions of the organisation is to be welcomed and
encouraged as it will enhance the capacity to deliver this agenda.
Education Scotland, in its inspection role, is also uniquely placed to gather evidence
regarding the experiences of learners and in supporting schools in assessing their own
progress towards establishing a whole school approach to learning for sustainability. The
recently launched 3-18 Curriculum Impact Reports for Sciences and Social Studies
provide encouraging examples of this.
Inevitably, many of the recommendations and activities flowing from this report will be
taken forward by Education Scotland in partnership with stakeholders. In doing so it is
critical that Education Scotland gives careful consideration as to how it can use its
resources and various functions most effectively to bring about strategic and lasting
change within Scottish schools, to ensure learning for sustainability is fully embedded.
This will ensure significant progress is made on a broad front including children’s rights,
political literacy and democracy, health and wellbeing, Getting it Right for Every Child and
community learning and development. These deliberations should include discussions to
ensure long-term leadership and direction is in place to develop strategic partnerships
with local authorities and other stakeholders to help build capacity.
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qualifications, and further, that it highlights the role of outdoor learning and fieldwork in all
subject areas.
The National Qualifications and associated support notes and course materials have been
developed and launched during the life of this Working Group and it is recognised that
there is flexibility to periodically review and amend these. The Scottish Qualifications
Authority, in partnership with Education Scotland, should ensure that opportunities to
embed learning for sustainability within the senior phase are sought, highlighted and
maximised.
Although much expertise and good practice already exists in Scotland, further research
and innovation will be necessary as learning for sustainability becomes established. A
strong evidence and research basis will help to accelerate progress and secure the
support of stakeholders. A key priority will be to undertake further research into the
relationship between learning for sustainability and the performance indicators used
widely by schools and local authorities relating to attainment, achievement, health and
wellbeing and behaviour. A growing body of evidence suggests that learning for
sustainability brings many positive benefits in these areas, but further robust research is
required to show that learning for sustainability is the vehicle by which we can achieve
many of the ambitions to secure a better future for our learners and our society as a
whole, and in what ways we can be most efficient in doing so.
Scottish academic institutions and the Third Sector, with the full support of the Scottish
Government are in the process of establishing a United Nations University accredited
Regional Centre of Expertise in Education for Sustainable Development (RCE ESD) for
Scotland, to generate research and innovation of this nature. The RCE is due to be
established in early 2013xxvii and will provide new opportunities for collaborative working
between practitioners, academics, government and civil society.
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RECOMMENDATIONS
5.3 Education Scotland and the Scottish Qualifications Authority should identify
learning for sustainability as a key organisational priority which is reflected in
their corporate strategies and work plans
5.4 Education Scotland, through the inspection process and other functions,
should further encourage a whole school approach to learning for
sustainability.
5.6 The Scottish Qualifications Authority should further embed learning for
sustainability within the new qualifications.
5.8 The College for Educational Leadership should identify learning for
sustainability as a key organisational priority.
5.9 The National Implementation Group should seek to work closely with the UN
University accredited Scottish Regional Centre of Expertise in Education for
Sustainable Development on research and innovation.
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APPENDIX I
26
Organisations consulted in the writing of this report
Association of Directors of Education Scotland (ADES)
Education Scotland
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APPENDIX II
Summary of recommendations
1 All learners should have an entitlement to learning for sustainability
1.4 The Scottish Government and Education Scotland should put in place
mechanisms to determine how well the learning for sustainability
entitlement of learners is being met.
2.4 In line with the new GTCS Professional Standards, learning for
sustainability is a core responsibility of every teacher educator and a
programme of professional learning and peer collaboration relating to
learning for sustainability for teacher education should be established.
28
2.5 Learning for sustainability should be embedded in the GTCS’s
frameworks and procedures for programme validation and revalidation.
4 All school buildings, grounds and policies should support learning for
sustainability
4.1 Every learner should have the opportunity for contact with nature in their
school grounds on a daily basis and throughout the seasons through the
provision of thoughtfully developed green space for outdoor learning
and play.
4.3 Scottish Futures Trust (SFT) release of Scottish Government funding for
new schools should be conditional on submission of a strategic design
brief that meets the guiding principles of Building Better Schools.
4.4 The principles outlined in any users’ guides for the sustainability
labelling scheme should be adopted for existing school estates.
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5 A strategic national approach to supporting learning for sustainability
should be established
5.4 Education Scotland, through the inspection process and other functions,
should further encourage a whole school approach to learning for
sustainability.
5.6 The Scottish Qualifications Authority should further embed learning for
sustainability within the new qualifications.
5.8 The College for Educational Leadership should identify learning for
sustainability as a key organisational priority.
5.9 The National Implementation Group should seek to work closely with
the UN University accredited Scottish ‘Regional Centre of Expertise in
Education for Sustainable Development’ on research and innovation.
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REFERENCES
ihttp://www.unep.org/Documents.multilingual/Default.asp?DocumentID=78&Article
ID=1163
iihttp://www.scotland.gov.uk/Topics/Environment/SustainableDevelopment/UNDec
ade
iii See the final report of the group at:
http://www.educationscotland.gov.uk/learningteachingandassessment/approaches
/outdoorlearning/about/cfethroughoutdoorlearning.asp
iv Christie, B (2012). The impact of outdoor learning experiences on attainment
and behaviour in schools: a brief review of literature. Prepared for Forestry
Commission Scotland.
Christie, B (2012). The impact of outdoor learning experiences on attitudes to
sustainability: A review of literature. Prepared for the Field Studies Council.
v
http://www.wwf.org.uk/what_we_do/about_us/living_planet_report_2012/
vi
http://hdr.undp.org/en/
vii
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Topics/Environment/waste-and-pollution/Waste-
1/wastestrategy
viii
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Publications/2008/05/06144819/ and
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Topics/International/int-dev
ix
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Topics/People/Young-People/legislation
x
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Topics/People/Young-People/gettingitright
xi
http://www.unicef.org.uk/crc?gclid=CJGp_vnw0LMCFUbKtAod7jwAkg&sissr=1
xii
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Topics/Education/Schools/curriculum/ACE/OnePlane
tSchools
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McKeown, R., and Hopkins, C., (2010) Global Citizenship and Sustainable
Development: Transformation in the Initial Teacher Education of Teachers. In
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Christie, B (2012). The impact of outdoor learning experiences on attainment
and behaviour in schools: a brief review of literature. Prepared for the Forestry
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Christie, B (2012). The impact of outdoor learning experiences on attitudes to
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See e.g. Bird, W. (2007) Natural thinking.
http://www.rspb.org.uk/Images/naturalthinking_tcm9-161856.pdf
xvii
http://www.educationscotland.gov.uk/learningteachingandassessment/curriculu
mimpact/index.asp
xviii
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Publications/2012/09/8987/4
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xix
http://www.gtcs.org.uk/about-gtcs/Consultations/consultation-revision-
professional-standards.aspx
xx
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Topics/Education/Schools/Teaching/SGresponse090
32011
xxi
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Publications/2011/01/13092132/0
xxii
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Topics/Government/PublicServiceReform/14838/564
xxiii
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Topics/Environment/climatechange/howyoucanhelp/pu
blicbodies/publicsector
xxiv
Orr, D. (1997) Architecture as pedagogy. Conservation Biology, 11(3), 597-600
xxv
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Resource/Doc/285201/0086644.pdf
xxvi
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Resource/Doc/348058/0124383.pdf
xxvii
http://rcescotland.org/
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