From Flagship to Flotilla? Findings from a Review of Literature on Learning Spaces in Higher Education, and Education for Sustainable Development

The development of physical and digital teaching and learning spaces in higher education has been the focus of attention from researchers in recent years. Teaching spaces on campus, and the campus itself, have been reconsidered in light of pedagogical, technological, political, ecological, and socia...

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Main Author: Claire McAvinia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Technological University Dublin 2024-01-01
Series:Irish Journal of Academic Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arrow.tudublin.ie/ijap/vol11/iss2/12
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author Claire McAvinia
author_facet Claire McAvinia
author_sort Claire McAvinia
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description The development of physical and digital teaching and learning spaces in higher education has been the focus of attention from researchers in recent years. Teaching spaces on campus, and the campus itself, have been reconsidered in light of pedagogical, technological, political, ecological, and social changes influencing higher education over the past three decades. Spaces are historically under-researched in higher education, and the area is under-theorised with a failure to recognise space as a mediator of learning. The closure of most campuses during the COVID-19 pandemic prompted some reconsideration of the mediating role of physical and virtual learning spaces in higher education but there is little evidence of change or adaptation for resilience. Neither has research discussed in detail the connections with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and education for sustainable development. This paper presents an analysis of the literature on teaching and learning spaces in higher education and considers potential implications in relation to Education for Sustainable Development (ESD). Evidence indicates that socio-material frameworks would be valuable in evaluating uses of space, and that more stakeholders – particularly students – need to be involved in planning, designing, and evaluating spaces for teaching and learning. The findings point to a need for multiple smaller and more flexible spaces. The paper proposes that higher education stakeholders should reconsider large-scale campus ‘flagship’ expansion with inherently high embodied carbon, in favour of a sustainable ‘flotilla’, repurposing existing spaces on and off-campus.
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spelling doaj-art-9d4c8f35f57f46ccad9ef683ab73e5ee2024-12-16T12:37:32ZengTechnological University DublinIrish Journal of Academic Practice2009-73872024-01-0111210.21427/40x2-wb98From Flagship to Flotilla? Findings from a Review of Literature on Learning Spaces in Higher Education, and Education for Sustainable DevelopmentClaire McAvinia0Technological University DublinThe development of physical and digital teaching and learning spaces in higher education has been the focus of attention from researchers in recent years. Teaching spaces on campus, and the campus itself, have been reconsidered in light of pedagogical, technological, political, ecological, and social changes influencing higher education over the past three decades. Spaces are historically under-researched in higher education, and the area is under-theorised with a failure to recognise space as a mediator of learning. The closure of most campuses during the COVID-19 pandemic prompted some reconsideration of the mediating role of physical and virtual learning spaces in higher education but there is little evidence of change or adaptation for resilience. Neither has research discussed in detail the connections with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and education for sustainable development. This paper presents an analysis of the literature on teaching and learning spaces in higher education and considers potential implications in relation to Education for Sustainable Development (ESD). Evidence indicates that socio-material frameworks would be valuable in evaluating uses of space, and that more stakeholders – particularly students – need to be involved in planning, designing, and evaluating spaces for teaching and learning. The findings point to a need for multiple smaller and more flexible spaces. The paper proposes that higher education stakeholders should reconsider large-scale campus ‘flagship’ expansion with inherently high embodied carbon, in favour of a sustainable ‘flotilla’, repurposing existing spaces on and off-campus.https://arrow.tudublin.ie/ijap/vol11/iss2/12campus architecture; educational development; learning spaces; sustainable development goals; sociomateriality; sdg 4; teaching spaces
spellingShingle Claire McAvinia
From Flagship to Flotilla? Findings from a Review of Literature on Learning Spaces in Higher Education, and Education for Sustainable Development
Irish Journal of Academic Practice
campus architecture; educational development; learning spaces; sustainable development goals; sociomateriality; sdg 4; teaching spaces
title From Flagship to Flotilla? Findings from a Review of Literature on Learning Spaces in Higher Education, and Education for Sustainable Development
title_full From Flagship to Flotilla? Findings from a Review of Literature on Learning Spaces in Higher Education, and Education for Sustainable Development
title_fullStr From Flagship to Flotilla? Findings from a Review of Literature on Learning Spaces in Higher Education, and Education for Sustainable Development
title_full_unstemmed From Flagship to Flotilla? Findings from a Review of Literature on Learning Spaces in Higher Education, and Education for Sustainable Development
title_short From Flagship to Flotilla? Findings from a Review of Literature on Learning Spaces in Higher Education, and Education for Sustainable Development
title_sort from flagship to flotilla findings from a review of literature on learning spaces in higher education and education for sustainable development
topic campus architecture; educational development; learning spaces; sustainable development goals; sociomateriality; sdg 4; teaching spaces
url https://arrow.tudublin.ie/ijap/vol11/iss2/12
work_keys_str_mv AT clairemcavinia fromflagshiptoflotillafindingsfromareviewofliteratureonlearningspacesinhighereducationandeducationforsustainabledevelopment