6 October 2020, online and Berlin: European Forum on Science and Education for Sustainability 2020
Daniel-Mietchen opened this issue · 2 comments
as per
https://www.efses2020.eu/en/ .
Upon registration, they had asked for my motivation to attend, and I had posted the following:
I would like to participate in the workshop for two main reasons:
- (i) sustainability-related issues and climate justice in particular are attracting a lot of engagement from younger people, and I am interested in the effects that this has on the spread of knowledge and action
- (ii) I see the open sharing of knowledge and educational resources as a key component of a transition towards greater sustainability.
They also asked about my prior activities in this space, for which I had posted the following:
I have been working on open approaches to research and education for well over a decade, leveraging the social and technical opportunities that web-based technologies provide, e.g. as per
https://w.wiki/dTo (2012) or
http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4031806 (2020).The School of Data Science where I work was founded just about a year ago, so working on policies was and still is a big part of that endeavour. Besides, I have been involved in international policy work, e.g. as part of an expert group of the European Commission https://op.europa.eu/s/oli9 or a curriculum task force https://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004943 . I am also involved in a project to develop an ontology for educational interventions.
I am a member of the University of Virginia's Sustainability Committee
https://sustainability.virginia.edu/about-us/committee-sustainability and a volunteer in various sustainability-related contexts, e.g. https://w.wiki/DsD .
Hashtag: #EFSES2020
Some observations from the plenary session:
- https://netzwerk-n.org/ is a student-led initiative that tries to transform the German higher education landscape towards more emphasis on sustainability
- ETH Zurich report from 2018 found that about half of ETHZ's CO2 emissions were due to air travel
- Ørsted has been labeled "the most sustainable company in the world"
- question I posted in the conferencing tool had bubbled up to the top and was thus posed to the panelists
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"What approaches have proven successful to get decision-makers to stop subsidizing fossil fuels?"
- summary by Johan Rockström: "we're failing - we should be penalizing the use of fossil fuels, not subsidize it."
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- Leopoldina document on Sustainability & Education
- Science Based Targets Network
- form with questions displayed during the workshop sessions: