Harald Heinrichs · Pim Martens Gerd Michelsen · Arnim Wiek Editors


Keywords Education • System integration • Transformation • Competences •  Assessment 1 Levels of Change: From Minor Additions to System


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core text sustainability

Keywords Education • System integration • Transformation • Competences • 
Assessment
1 Levels of Change: From Minor Additions to System 
Integration of SD
Education is an essential contributor to sustainable development (SD). This is 
expressed in many sources, e.g.:
Education is critical for promoting sustainable development and improving the capacity of the 
people to address environment and development issues. […] Education [is] indispensable to 
changing people’s attitudes so that they have the capacity to assess and address their sustain-
able development concerns. It is also critical for achieving environmental and ethical aware-
ness, values and attitudes, skills and behaviour consistent with sustainable development and 
for effective public participation in decision-making. (UNCED 
1992
: Agenda 21, §36.3)
In order to contribute to SD, education will have to change drastically. The science 
that investigates this change process is “Education for Sustainable Development” (ESD).
When educational institutions start ESD activities, this usually initially leads to 
minor changes, in which SD elements are added, “bolted-on,” to the education with-
out deeply changing the existing. In an ESD assessment instrument, AISHE (Roorda 
2001
; Roorda et al. 
2009
), this development stage is described as “stage 1: activity 
oriented.” As the development proceeds, the institution may enter stage 2, “process 
oriented,” in which SD becomes more and more integrated into the curriculum and 
in the institutional vision, policy, and operations.
A crucial next stage is “system oriented.” If a university or school reaches this 
stage on a wide range of criteria, it realizes a state of “SISD”: System Integration of 
Sustainable Development
. This stage is described as:
SISD not only means a systematic integration of sustainable development into an educa-
tional organization (or a functional unit within it, e.g. a faculty, a school, or a study pro-
gram), but also, and even primarily, at integration at a systems level. The latter implies that 
sustainable development has become a part of the fundamental characteristics of the 
organization, of its very identity. If this is the case, it will be observed that sustainability has 
become a part of all or most activities, or at least of the thoughts and philosophies behind 
those activities. (Roorda 
2010
, p. 138)

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