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Exploring Changes in Perceptions and Practices of Sustainability in ESD Communities in Australia during the COVID-19 Pandemic
Author(s) -
Kim Beasy,
Laura Ripoll González
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of education for sustainable development
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 0973-4074
pISSN - 0973-4082
DOI - 10.1177/09734082211012081
Subject(s) - sustainability , pandemic , collective action , education for sustainable development , covid-19 , action (physics) , public relations , perception , environmental education , sustainable development , political science , sociology , psychology , pedagogy , medicine , politics , ecology , physics , disease , pathology , quantum mechanics , neuroscience , infectious disease (medical specialty) , law , biology
Education for sustainable development (ESD) aims to empower future generations to address current global environmental threats, though it faces challenges to implementation, often linked to narrow perceptions of sustainability. To observe such changes in practice and draw their implications for ESD, we explore the effects of COVID-19 in perspectives and practices of sustainability across an education community. We reflect on how disruptions or threats can trigger a (re)imagination of individual and collective action. Our findings suggest that the COVID-19 pandemic and its effects on individuals and societies have altered perceptions and practices of sustainability through envisaging previously unimaginable global environmental restoration, and experiencing personal, professional and collective changes. Our study shows that the perceived restorative effects on the environment of the pandemic lifted the education community spirits and enhanced a willingness to change by leveraging the social network around the education community to promote collective action.

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