Abstract

This research is implemented in the backdrop of the increasing number of private universities established in China over the last decade, and a growing public concern of sustainable development. The private university has a different reputation and source of funding compared with the public one, leading to different perception and practices toward sustainable development. Yet, none of past studies have investigated into public and private universities in the Chinese context, making this study fill this gap through comparing students’ perception in Zhongkai University of Agriculture and Engineering (a public university) and Guangzhou College of South China University of Technology (a private university). By using the five-point Likert scale questionnaire, 393 students from the public university and 347 students from the private university participated in the survey. The results reveal that students have greatest concern with sustainability commitment and their university’s role for promoting sustainable development, and have least concern with sustainability curricula and research. Compared with students from the public university, students in the private one more often agree on the importance of sustainable development, and have a higher level of perception about commitment, knowledge, attitudes, and practices toward sustainability. The study findings assert that the higher level of perception from private university’s students is due to active campus sustainability engagement and positive stakeholder relationship managed by university management. The study implies that higher education needs to decentralize sustainable plans and decision-making to students, staff, and faculty, and public universities need to incorporate more sustainability-related context into curriculum and academic project.

Highlights

  • Sustainable development (SD) in Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) has been a global topic in recent decades, with a growing awareness of the role of the university in SD promotion [1]

  • The participants are largely female in two selected universities, representing by 63.9% and 60.8% of students in Zhongkai University of Agriculture and Engineering (ZHKU) and GCU, respectively

  • HEIs may influence on society to a significant extent and contribute to SD through fostering students’ personal identity and value

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Summary

Introduction

Sustainable development (SD) in Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) has been a global topic in recent decades, with a growing awareness of the role of the university in SD promotion [1]. The growing concerns of resource consumptions at campus level and the growing trend of sustainability promotion in society strengthen the discussion of SD promotion in HEIs [2]. HEIs have played a critical role in achieving transformative changes in society by preparing future professionals, academics, leaders, managers, and decision-makers [4,5]. An increasing number of SD-related missions and declarations in HEIs have been launched in response to the ongoing concerns of sustainability and to guide universities to perform sustainably [6]. Researches suggested that HEIs usually sign more than one declaration, and those HEIs with greater commitment tend to undertake more SD actions [6]

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