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  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • 10.1002/tl.70027
Virtual Exchange as a Strategy to Foster Global Learning and Internationalization of the Curriculum
  • Jan 31, 2026
  • New Directions for Teaching and Learning
  • Ana Cristina Biondo Salomão + 1 more

ABSTRACT This chapter describes the constitution and development of one of the first institutional initiatives for implementing a virtual exchange program in a Higher Education Institution in Brazil. The focus is on the description and discussion of the role of stakeholders in fostering and supporting virtual exchange activities, as well as examples of implemented courses and an analysis of students’ perceptions of the practical issues associated with virtual exchange, its interface with employability and new skills and competences demanded by the labor market.

  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • 10.1002/tl.70032
360° Immersive Video for Internationalizing Teaching and Learning: A Tool for Future Education Abroad
  • Jan 31, 2026
  • New Directions for Teaching and Learning
  • Andrew R Gillespie + 1 more

  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • 10.1002/tl.70013
Sustainability Across the Curriculum: Sharing Ideas From a Cross‐Canada Community of Practice
  • Jan 12, 2026
  • New Directions for Teaching and Learning
  • Janet Pivnick + 1 more

ABSTRACT This chapter offers a “look‐back” one year after the formation of a Canadian sustainability education community of practice, and provides highlights of “sustainability across the curriculum” work that is taking place at Canadian Post‐Secondary Institutions, modeling benefits and challenges of cross‐campus organizing around sustainability pedagogy, and successes from individual campuses. Note: All titles and contact information are accurate as of the time of submission for publication (spring 2024).

  • Research Article
  • 10.1002/tl.70015
Leading From Within: Climate Co‐Teaching at Barnard College
  • Dec 16, 2025
  • New Directions for Teaching and Learning
  • Melissa A Wright + 3 more

ABSTRACT Building on the concept of “co‐mentorship” in climate education, this chapter pulls back the curtain on the authors’ process of facilitating the development of co‐taught, interdisciplinary courses on climate at Barnard College, including what we learned, the barriers we faced, and the forward momentum we realized through a combination of top‐down and bottom‐up strategies.

  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • 10.1002/tl.70016
Pedagogies of a Just Transition: A Provocation
  • Dec 12, 2025
  • New Directions for Teaching and Learning
  • Abby Schroering

  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • 10.1002/tl.70014
A Bioregional Approach to Teaching Sustainability and Resilience Online
  • Dec 9, 2025
  • New Directions for Teaching and Learning
  • Laird Christensen

ABSTRACT This chapter describes how the first graduate program in resilient and sustainable communities has evolved over the past decade, maintaining its bioregional approach to distance learning while adapting the curriculum to meet new challenges in the age of climate change.

  • Front Matter
  • 10.1002/tl.70018
Editor's Notes
  • Dec 6, 2025
  • New Directions for Teaching and Learning
  • Heather Keith

One needs only to read the headlines to know that the climate crisis is upon us. United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres suggests that we have passed from a warming phase into an “era of global boiling” (Reuters 2023). Climate scientists argue that the climate tipping point is likely closer than we suspect, noting that the Atlantic Ocean's circulation system, the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, will likely experience an abrupt and irreversible change due to warming as early as the middle part of this century, which will have widespread consequences (Ditlevson and Ditlevson 2023). We are now consistently experiencing the hottest months in history, and under an almost constant threat of volatile weather. Climate refugees are no longer a possibility, but a reality. The climate crisis may be the greatest threat colleges and universities face in this already volatile, uncertain, chaotic, and ambiguous century. Global warming threatens to squeeze, injure, and destroy institutions and the many purposes we invest in them. Yet at the same time as academia faces this challenge, we also have the opportunity to improve humanity's ability to understand, mitigate, and adapt to the emergency (p. 225). This call to action is amplified by climate writers and activists such as Joanna Macy, Katharine Hayhoe, and Bill McKibben, and the responsibility and ability of colleges and universities to respond to social and ecological crises is evident in pedagogy studies and philosophy of education, such as Kevin Gannon's Radical Hope, Paul Handstedt's Creating Wicked Students, David Orr's Earth in Mind, Alexander's Universities on Fire, and bell hooks’ Teaching to Transgress. This special issue explores higher education's ability to respond to the climate crisis through sustainability pedagogies in teaching and learning, program design, and cross-institutional collaborations. The first chapter explores many levels of teaching and learning through the lens of the Climate Alliance's “Just Transition Framework.” Applied to higher education, this framework issues a call for educational developers to work with faculty on course design aimed at justice and sustainability, supporting practices that are restorative and regenerative, rather than extractive. In chapter two, a group of educational developers and faculty at Barnard College share their both challenging and successful experience in facilitating co-taught, interdisciplinary courses on climate. They explain how they surmounted institutional and disciplinary barriers and what kind of programming was effective in creating partnerships across disciplines. Chapter three details the history and structure of one of the country's first online sustainability and resilience graduate programs. Developed at Green Mountain College and sustained by Prescott College, this program is centered on place-based pedagogies, even though it is primarily asynchronous and remote. Chapter four chronicles a sustainability pedagogy cross-institutional dialogue between educational developers and faculty at several universities in Canada. This program has yielded expected results, such as participants learning from the challenges and successes of other institutions, but it has also led to other benefits, such as research collaborations and a feeling of community. Chapter five showcases the interaction between a statewide initiative in Alaska and a particular class in the arts, emphasizing how project-based learning can lead to justice and sustainability-focused outcomes. This, in addition to the preceding chapters, is aimed at offering examples for and guidance on various high impact practices that will enhance our universities’ capabilities to contribute positively to social and environmental sustainability and resilience. Finally, the issue concludes with an opinion piece on artificial intelligence. The author reminds us of the significant environmental footprint of AI tools and asks us to consider taking a pause in what seems to be a frantic race to keep up with and leverage this technology. These suggestions come not only from environmental concerns, but the author argues that our pedagogies may be stronger and more resilient if we are more thoughtful in our adoption of AI. This is not an argument for ignorance but rather a statement that the worth of education must now be measured against the standards of decency and human survival—the issues now looming so large before us in the twenty-first century. It is not education but education of a certain kind that will save us (p. 238).

  • Research Article
  • 10.1002/tl.70012
Collected Voices: Art as Action for Change Partnership With UAA/APU Books of the Year: A Pedagogical Reflection
  • Dec 6, 2025
  • New Directions for Teaching and Learning
  • Herminia Din

ABSTRACT This reflective essay demonstrates art can be an influential medium by making the invisible “visible” as art can translate scientific data, facts, environmental concerns, inequalities, and social injustices, and so forth. It focuses on how art can be a bridge and connector and demonstrate integrated and collaborative practices with other disciplines.

  • Research Article
  • 10.1002/tl.70006
Academic Delay of Gratification: Implications for Preparing and Supporting Secondary Mathematics Teachers
  • Oct 5, 2025
  • New Directions for Teaching and Learning
  • Darolyn A Flaggs + 1 more

ABSTRACTTo achieve academic goals, preservice teachers need to learn how to effectively delay gratification in the face of conflicting desires, aspirations, and distractions. As learners, preservice mathematics teachers need to self‐regulate their thoughts, feelings, and behaviors in the pursuit of valued academic and professional goals and facilitate self‐regulated learning (SRL) so that their students are better equipped to reach their academic goals. In this chapter, we review research on academic delay of gratification situated within SRL theory and focus on its implications and strategies for preparing and supporting preservice secondary mathematics teachers.

  • Research Article
  • 10.1002/tl.70003
Academic Delay of Gratification Among Mature Adult Online Learners
  • Oct 3, 2025
  • New Directions for Teaching and Learning
  • Pamela Ford Murphy

ABSTRACTIt is crucial to recognize the significance of academic delay of gratification for mature adult college students in online learning environments. As these students navigate the online college landscape, they face unique opportunities and challenges that differ from those faced by traditional students. Mature and non‐traditional students often juggle multiple responsibilities such as work, family, and other commitments. Academic delay of gratification, as a valuable skill, plays a critical role in helping these learners overcome the diverse challenges they encounter. Educational implications are discussed involving delay of gratification as particularly relevant, including promoting strategies that encourage effective time management, self‐regulated learning, and perseverance in the face of distractions or immediate rewards.