Climate Change, Sustainability Education, and Community Engagement in Postsecondary German Classes: A Framework for Action-Oriented Pedagogy

Abstract

Teaching sustainability in the language classroom has the potential to promote both climate action and community engagement, especially when the curriculum is experiential, participatory, and connected to real-world issues. Programs that include hands-on projects, leadership opportunities, and systems thinking encourage meaningful behavior change and climate leadership. They may help students cultivate the resilience required to continue learning in a world of rapidly evolving climate change and determine the most responsible and feasible actions in their context. This article examines the integration of sustainability education and community-engaged learning in postsecondary German classes at all levels, including in a languages for specific purposes course. Drawing from multiple sustainability projects, the authors present a pedagogical framework that combines language-learning tasks with action-oriented approaches to addressing global challenges. The courses and curricula proposed are built around the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals that emphasize student agency, cross-cultural collaboration, and the development of transferable skills.

DOI

https://doi.org/10.4079/gbl.v26.3