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Capturing Transformative Change in Education: The Challenge of SDG Target 4.7 Susan Gallwey, Irish Development Education Association November 2015

Capturing Transformative Change in Education: The Challenge of SDG Target 4.7 Susan Gallwey, Irish Development Education Association November 2015

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‘By 2030, ensure that all learners acquire the knowledge and skills needed to promote sustainable development, including, among others, through education for sustainable development and sustainable lifestyles, human rights, gender equality, promotion of a culture of peace and non-violence, global citizenship and appreciation of cultural diversity and of culture’s contribution to sustainable development.’ SDG Target 4.7

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Page 1: Capturing Transformative Change in Education: The Challenge of SDG Target 4.7 Susan Gallwey, Irish Development Education Association November 2015

Capturing Transformative Change in Education: The

Challenge of SDG Target 4.7 Susan Gallwey, Irish Development Education

AssociationNovember 2015

Page 2: Capturing Transformative Change in Education: The Challenge of SDG Target 4.7 Susan Gallwey, Irish Development Education Association November 2015

IDEA is an umbrella association for a diverse group of organisations and individuals involved in development education in Ireland.

What I will cover in the session: Target 4.7 and why it is so important Challenges in measuring change in this area Work of IDEA members in tracking progress

towards Target 4.7 Recommendations for the way forward

Introductions

Page 3: Capturing Transformative Change in Education: The Challenge of SDG Target 4.7 Susan Gallwey, Irish Development Education Association November 2015

‘By 2030, ensure that all learners acquire the knowledge and skills needed to promote sustainable development, including, among others, through education for sustainable development and sustainable lifestyles, human rights, gender equality, promotion of a culture of peace and non-violence, global citizenship and appreciation of cultural diversity and of culture’s contribution to sustainable development.’

SDG Target 4.7

Page 4: Capturing Transformative Change in Education: The Challenge of SDG Target 4.7 Susan Gallwey, Irish Development Education Association November 2015

Many ‘educations’ are active in the area of Target 4.7, includingEducation for Sustainable Development, Education for Global Citizenship,Development Education, Human Rights Education, Peace Education, Intercultural Education… in IDEA we support all of the above.

Page 5: Capturing Transformative Change in Education: The Challenge of SDG Target 4.7 Susan Gallwey, Irish Development Education Association November 2015

‘It is not enough for education to produce individuals who can read, write and count. Education must be transformative…It must give people the understanding, skills and values they need to cooperate in resolving the interconnected challenges of the 21st century.’

UN Global Education First Initiative 2013

Why is this target so exciting?

Page 6: Capturing Transformative Change in Education: The Challenge of SDG Target 4.7 Susan Gallwey, Irish Development Education Association November 2015

So it’s not just about providing education ‘over there’….

It’s also about transformingeducationEVERYWHERE.

Page 7: Capturing Transformative Change in Education: The Challenge of SDG Target 4.7 Susan Gallwey, Irish Development Education Association November 2015

Target 4.7 provides legitimacy for, and raises the profile of, Development Education in educational policy and practice.

It encourages Development Education programmes to clarify their purpose, measure progress and gather evidence of impact.

It can help to strengthen a global community of practice based on the values of Development Education.

Target 4.7 brings major benefits

Page 8: Capturing Transformative Change in Education: The Challenge of SDG Target 4.7 Susan Gallwey, Irish Development Education Association November 2015

‘Turf wars’ between the various educations named in Target 4.7 over how the indicators will be articulated.

The types of tools usually used to measure progress towards international development goals (e.g. Results Frameworks) are not well suited to measure progress towards 4.7, where change is complex, long-term and non-linear.

There is a risk that measurement will focus on what is easily measurable rather than on real critical engagement with sustainable development and global citizenship issues.

But there are some major challenges:

Page 9: Capturing Transformative Change in Education: The Challenge of SDG Target 4.7 Susan Gallwey, Irish Development Education Association November 2015

Work of IDEA members in this area

Page 10: Capturing Transformative Change in Education: The Challenge of SDG Target 4.7 Susan Gallwey, Irish Development Education Association November 2015

Sites for Measuring Educational Change

Page 11: Capturing Transformative Change in Education: The Challenge of SDG Target 4.7 Susan Gallwey, Irish Development Education Association November 2015

This is an obvious way to measure progress towards Target 4.7, as we already have multiple systems in place for monitoring students’ learning.

Currently in Ireland the assessment of knowledge far outweighs the assessment of skills and values.

IDEA members have been working on ways to meaningfully track the development of young people’s skills and values for global citizenship and sustainable development.

Measuring change….in learners

Page 12: Capturing Transformative Change in Education: The Challenge of SDG Target 4.7 Susan Gallwey, Irish Development Education Association November 2015

The course aims to provide students with the ‘awareness, knowledge, skills, values and motivation to live sustainably’.

Students will be assessed through a Reflective Journal and Action Record, focusing on the development of skills for active citizenship --- with students taking an active role in their own assessment.

Tracking scores in this short course could be an effective way of measuring growth in the skills needed for sustainable development and global citizenship.

Example from proposed Junior Cycle

Short Course in Citizenship

Page 13: Capturing Transformative Change in Education: The Challenge of SDG Target 4.7 Susan Gallwey, Irish Development Education Association November 2015

We can track changes in educational policy ---for example, DES’s new ESD strategy.

We can monitor the role of Development Education in Initial Teacher Education --- for example, DICE and Ubuntu provide DE in ITE institutions and collect data on student teacher engagement with DE.

It’s harder to monitor the extent and depth of DE in schools around Ireland as this is not required by the DES. However, some IDEA members have initiated work in this area, particularly WorldWise Global Schools.

Measuring change…in educational policy and practice

Page 14: Capturing Transformative Change in Education: The Challenge of SDG Target 4.7 Susan Gallwey, Irish Development Education Association November 2015

The Global Passport scheme is a voluntary, self-assessed, externally audited accreditation scheme for second level schools. Schools are invited to collect ‘stamps’ for their Passport in 7 areas: Curriculum, Extra-Curricular, Teacher Capacity, Student Capacity, School Leadership, Policy & Ethos, and Respectful Relationships. Together, the 7 areas create a composite picture of a ‘global school’, allowing different schools to take different approaches.

Progress towards the full ‘passport’ could be tracked as an indicator of how well school environments are helping to develop the knowledge and skills needed for global citizenship and sustainable development.

Example from World Wise Global Schools

Page 15: Capturing Transformative Change in Education: The Challenge of SDG Target 4.7 Susan Gallwey, Irish Development Education Association November 2015

Behavioural/Social change as a result of education interventions is very difficult to measure, particularly in the time-frame of most monitoring schemes.

Attribution vs contribution? Critical engagement vs ‘clicktivism’? Pre-determined outcomes can be very limiting.

Track the actor rather than measure the action? Some IDEA members have been exploring this path.

Measuring change in…society

Page 16: Capturing Transformative Change in Education: The Challenge of SDG Target 4.7 Susan Gallwey, Irish Development Education Association November 2015

SUAS measures the action dimension not by what actions are taken but by how participants engage with action options.

OUTCOME: Participants will be familiar with a range of action pathways which they can take to create positive change in the worldINDICATOR: Change in participants’ level of awareness of different ways that they can bring about positive change

Scores on a ‘participation pathway rubric’ could be collected from a variety of DE projects and collated to track citizens’ ability to work effectively for a more just and sustainable world.

Example from SUAS

Page 17: Capturing Transformative Change in Education: The Challenge of SDG Target 4.7 Susan Gallwey, Irish Development Education Association November 2015

Co-operation between the different ‘educations’ working towards target 4.7, particularly around the language used in indicators.

Recognition that progress towards target 4.7 happens at different sites and in different ways and therefore requires a diverse toolbox for monitoring.

Dialogue between practitioners, policy-makers and funders, especially in terms of using targets as a means of learning rather than as a means of control.

The way forward…

Page 18: Capturing Transformative Change in Education: The Challenge of SDG Target 4.7 Susan Gallwey, Irish Development Education Association November 2015

Susan GallweyIDEA, 6 Gardiner Row, Dublin 1www.ideaonline.ie

Questions, comments, further info