Imagining a Sustainable Future: Shaping Emergent Thinking by Reflecting Through Aesthetic Action
Journal article, 2017

The contested nature of knowledge about sustainable development makes it difficult to embed sustainable development in engineering curricula, which tend to have a deterministic approach to understanding theoretical concepts. Such an approach does not align well with the emergent thinking of sustainable development, where thinking about the future requires dealing not only with what is known, but also with what is unknown and at times unknowable. Text-based approaches that privilege explicit and codified knowledge are limited in helping students visualise what a sustainable future might look like. To facilitate such visualisation would require expansion of the repertoire of tools and artefacts beyond text-based materials. In this article, we critically reflect on a series of student-centred 'Open-space' workshops over the past several years aimed at promoting debate and co-production of knowledge around developing sustainable futures using a range of artefacts such as pictorial illustrations, wiki terms, art materials and chill-out music. Attention is paid on critically appraising the role artefacts play in developing knowledge to empower students to collectively reflect on, imagine and visualise sustainable futures.

rich pictures

artefacts

participant observation

sensemaking

Author

Paul Chan

Christine Räisänen

Chalmers, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Construction Management

Engineering Project Project Organisation Journal

Vol. 7 August 83_98-

Areas of Advance

Information and Communication Technology

Subject Categories

Educational Sciences

Civil Engineering

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Learning and teaching

Pedagogical work

More information

Created

10/8/2017