Abstract

Virtual exchange (VE) in higher education provides an underemployed opportunity for fostering consumer and sustainability competencies. We explore how a crosscultural teaching-learning environment can be designed to encourage students to reflect on a complex global challenge - food consumption patterns - and their role in it. We discuss challenges regarding food consumption as a topic for VE and describe a didactic concept that employs inquiry-based learning and digital storytelling as the framework for student exploration and expression. Initially developed for VE in food studies and nutrition education, the concept can be readily transferred to other disciplines and topics. We present insights from a pilot implementation with 16 food science students from Laos and 26 pre-service teachers from Germany. The analysis of students’ responses from pre- and post-questionnaires and their digital stories suggest that the concept is promising, although some factors require improvement and careful attention, such as technologies and the lingua franca of the learning environment. Findings and lessons learned might inform other projects that similarly seek to address complex global challenges.

Highlights

  • Food consumption is an important area of sustainable development

  • To address the complex and interrelated challenges, the EAT-Lancet Commission advocates for a “Great Food Transformation” as the “unprecedented range of actions taken by all food system sectors across all levels that aim to normalize healthy diets from sustainable food systems” (Willett et al, 2019, p. 450, emphasis added)

  • In the context of higher education for sustainable development, we pursue the question: how can a teaching-learning environment be designed to encourage students to reflect on their sustainable food consumption patterns? Here we put forward one approach and offer a starting point for further developments

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Summary

Introduction

Food consumption is an important area of sustainable development. To address the complex and interrelated challenges, the EAT-Lancet Commission advocates for a “Great Food Transformation” as the “unprecedented range of actions taken by all food system sectors across all levels that aim to normalize healthy diets from sustainable food systems” In the context of higher education for sustainable development, we pursue the question: how can a teaching-learning environment be designed to encourage students to reflect on their (un-) sustainable food consumption patterns? We refer to sustainable consumption behavior as “individual acts of satisfying needs in different areas of life by acquiring, using, and disposing [of] goods and services that do not compromise the ecological and socio-economic conditions of all people (currently living or in the future) to satisfy their own needs” Consumption patterns mirror the respective production and provision systems available to the consumer (Reisch et al, 2020)

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