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FROM CLASSROOM TO COMMUNITY AND BEYOND:
EDUCATING FOR A SUSTAINABLE FUTURE
Report of the Public Linkage, Dialogue, and Education Task Force
of the President's Council on Sustainable Development
February 1997
Table of Contents
-
Task Force Members and Liaisons
A Letter from the Task Force
Co-Chairs
Preface
Executive Summary
Introduction
Chapter 1. Dialogue and Education: Keys to
Sustainability
- Steps Toward Sustainability
The Need For Public Dialogue on Sustainability
Overcoming Barriers Through Dialogue and Education
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Chapter 2. Education for Sustainability:
Definition and Goals
- What is Education for Sustainability?
What are its Objectives?
How can Education for Sustainability be Accomplished?
Environmental Education and Education for Sustainability
Task Force Policy Recommendations and Actions
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Chapter 3. In the Classroom: Restructuring
Formal Education
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Defining Essential Learnings
Emphasizing Interdisciplinary Learning
Expanding Professional Development
Serving as Models of Sustainability
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Chapter 4. In the Community: Encouraging
Nonformal Learning
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Encouraging Lifelong Learning
Raising Public Awareness
Providing Outreach
Expanding Community Visioning
Fostering Workforce Training
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Chapter 5. And Beyond: Improving and Enhancing
Sustainability Education
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Forming Partnerships
Expanding Information Networks
Fostering Global Understanding
Integrating Multicultural Perspectives
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Chapter 6. Continuing the Dialogue
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Toward Sustainability
Expanding the American Dream
Consumers and Institutional Stewardship
Fostering Grassroots Leadership
Hope for the Future
Bridges to a Sustainable Future
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Appendix A: Endnotes
Appendix B: Acknowledgments
Appendix C: Resource Guide
This report of the Public Linkage, Dialogue, and Education Task Force
(PLTF) is one of seven Task Force reports prepared for the President's
Council on Sustainable Development. The Council was established by
President Bill Clinton through Executive Order No. 12852 on June 29,
1993 and charged with the following missions:
- make recommendations to the President to advance sustainable
development, including a national sustainable development action strategy;
- expand public awareness of the challenges inherent in moving toward
sustainability, including the need to manage the nation's natural
resources carefully;
- institute a Presidential Honors Program recognizing exemplary efforts
that advance sustainable development.
President Clinton also appointed the individual members of the Council --
leaders drawn from business and industry; government at all levels;
non-governmental organizations; education and research institutions;
labor and civil rights groups, and communities.
Shared responsibility for success was a hallmark of the eight Task
Forces, organized by the Council. Their purpose was to provide advice to
the Council on major issues, spur dialogue, and involve the public.
Individual Council members served on various Task Forces. At their
discretion, Task Force chairpersons invited others to participate in
various capacities. The expertise and resources of the Council members
were expanded and enhanced with a cadre of volunteer leaders and experts,
as well as citizens representing diverse domestic and international
interests. Through local and regional conferences, workshops, roundtable
discussions, demonstration projects, case studies, and other public
meetings -- conducted around the country -- hundreds of other leaders and
experts, and thousands of citizens were involved in the dialogues and
deliberations of the Task Forces.
Each Task Force developed a work plan corresponding to the opportunities
and challenges reflected in the subjects and issues to be addressed. The
eight Task Forces were:
- Eco-Efficiency;
- Energy and Transportation;
- Natural Resources Management and Protection;
- Population and Consumption;
- Principles, Goals and Definitions (administrative function -- no
report prepared;
- Public Linkage, Dialogue, and Education;
- Sustainable Agriculture, and
- Sustainable Communities.
The Task Force reports serve as a record of each group's dialogues and
deliberations, and their respective contributions to the information
needs and interests expressed by the Council. The work of the eight
initial Task Forces culminated during the spring of 1996, subsequent to
their transmittal of policy recommendations and suggested actions for
consideration by the full Council. After review of each Task Force's work
by the Council, recommendations were transmitted to the President for his
further review and action. Thereafter, President Clinton requested that
the Council continue its work, and he asked it to undertake aspects of
implementation related to the Task Forces' recommendations.
In addition to seven Council members who served on the PLTF, there were
six PCSD member's liaisons, and fifty-eight additional non-PCSD members
who participated. Another forty-seven leaders and experts were invited to
participate in special meetings. Extensive public participation was
invited throughout the period of the PLTF's work.
This report is intended to summarize the observations, findings, and
recommendations made by the PLTF to the Council and the President, and to
provide additional ideas, information, and examples which may prove
helpful to others interested in sustainable development matters. The PLTF
hopes that the ideas, recommendations, and suggestions found within this
report will be publicly discussed and debated, and further refined over
time. Although its work was comprehensive, for practical reasons the Task
Force did not seek to provide policy recommendations or suggest actions
intended to address all of the significant issues associated with its
mission. Rather, the report and recommendations are intended to be a call
for action on strategic issues, and to stimulate further public dialogue
and debate that will carry us to the next levels of public linkage,
dialogue, and education for sustainability.
This report reflects the observations, findings, and recommendations made
by the Public Linkage, Dialogue, and Education Task Force (PLTF) of the
President's Council on Sustainable Development (PCSD). The mission of
the PLTF was twofold:
- to foster a two-way dialogue between the public and the Council,
ensuring that interested stakeholders were kept informed about the PCSD
process and encouraging public comment on that process, and
- to formulate policies on how to integrate sustainable development
into the nation's formal and non-formal education systems.
Comprised of experts representing diverse public- and private-sector
organizations, the PLTF engaged in a two-year process to accomplish its
mission. Internal deliberations as well as public dialogues were
conducted. Included in the dialogues were grassroots leaders; business,
community, and government representatives; educators and school
administrators; education consumers, and others involved with formal and
nonformal education and training -- at all levels -- ranging from
pre-school to the university level, and beyond.
From those dialogues, the Task Force concluded that our citizens do want
a sustainable future, and that many already have the fundamental,
conceptual underpinnings and motivation to drive needed change. In some
communities, there has already been significant progress made to effect
change for sustainable development. However, when viewed from a state,
regional, or national perspective, movement toward such change is still
very nascent. Stephen Joel Trachtenberg, President of The George
Washington University, put it this way: "Most of us do not lack a
philosophical commitment for sustainability, we lack the knowledge
necessary to make decisions for sustainable actions." Therein lie some of
the challenges for our academic and research institutions and our
education systems.
The PLTF report focuses on the important role that formal and nonformal
education plays in equipping citizens with the knowledge, skills, and
abilities necessary to move our nation -- indeed the world -- towards a
sustainable future. Education for sustainability must be a lifelong
endeavor that goes beyond classroom walls, enabling students, teachers,
and entire communities to turn learnings into commonplace, everyday
sustainable choices and actions.
To effectively drive and frame nationally needed change for
sustainability education, new policies and actions were determined to be
needed at all levels. From its dialogues, the PLTF developed three policy
recommendations and a total of thirteen suggested action items.
The full text of each recommended policy and suggested action items
appears in a section of the report, beginning on page twenty, and they
are individually discussed at length in the chapters indicated below.
These recommendations and suggestions were included in the PCSD's report
Sustainable America: A New Consensus (February 1996), which was
transmitted to President Clinton for his review and action. During the
spring of 1996, the President requested the Council to continue its work,
and he asked it to begin aspects of the implementation process.
Implementation at local, state, national, and international levels,
should be a coordinated effort to make the best possible use of all
available resources. The policy recommendations and an abbreviated
version of each action item follow:
Policy Recommendation 1: Formal Education Reform. Encourage
changes
in the formal education system to help all students (kindergarten through
higher education), educators, and education administrators learn about
the environment, the economy, and social equity as they relate to all
academic disciplines and to their daily lives. [Chapter 3]
Action 1: | ...identify the essential skills and knowledge
that students should have at specified benchmark grades... |
Action 2: | ...support education reform; emphasize
systems thinking and interdisciplinary approaches; pursue experiential,
hands-on learning... |
Action 3: | ...incorporate education about sustainability
into pre-service training and in-service professional development for
educators... |
Action 4: | ...promote curriculum and community awareness
and follow sustainable practices in school and on campus. |
Policy Recommendation 2: Nonformal Education and Outreach.
Encourage nonformal access to information on, and opportunities to learn
and make informed decisions about, sustainability as it relates to
citizens' personal, work, and community lives. [Chapter 4]
Action 1: | ...encourage
lifelong learning about sustainability... |
Action 2: | ...develop an integrated approach for
raising public awareness and support for sustainability goals, conveying
information on indicators...encourage people to adopt sustainable
decision making... |
Action 3: | ...a national extension network should be
developed to provide needed information to enhance the capacity of
individuals and communities... |
Action 4: | ...local and state governments should expand
partnerships with community organizations and other levels of government
to support community sustainability planning processes and
assessments. |
Action 5: | ...employers, through partnerships, should
develop
training programs to equip the workforce with skills and abilities needed
to adapt to changes brought on by national and global transition to
sustainability. |
Policy Recommendation 3: Strengthened Education for
Sustainability. Institute policy changes at the federal, state, and
local levels to encourage equitable education for sustainability;
develop, use, and expand access to information technologies in all
educational settings, and encourage understanding about how local issues
fit into state, national, and international contexts. [Chapter 5]
Action 1: | ...government at all levels should form
partnerships
to develop and implement coordinated strategies supporting education for
sustainability. |
Action 2: | ...public and private sectors should support
the
development of, and access to, enhanced multimedia telecommunications
technologies and improved clearinghouse capabilities that promote an
understanding of sustainability. |
Action 3: | ...educators should help students understand
the international factors that affect the nation's transition to a
sustainable society. |
Action 4: | ...educators should ensure that education for
sustainability invites and involves diverse viewpoints, and that everyone
has opportunities to participate in all aspects of the learning
process. |
The report also provides many specific examples of diverse sustainability
education projects and initiatives, currently underway, domestically and
around the world. Additionally, an appendix contains a resource guide
which lists the organizations and groups cited in the examples; it
includes mailing addresses, telephone and fax numbers, and e-mail
addresses -- when available at the time of publication.
Although the Public Linkage, Dialogue, and Education Task Force completed
its mission during the spring of 1996, the members hope that the
recommendations, examples, and resources cited in this report will
encourage individuals and organizations to develop their own
sustainability visions and commitments to action.
The views expressed in this report are those of the Task Force members,
and were not the subject of endorsement by the full Council. Many of the
federal officials who serve on the Council also serve on the Council's
Task Forces and participated actively in developing the Task Force's
recommendations, but those recommendations do not necessarily reflect
administration policy.
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