New Straits Times

Malaysia’s RCEs can be next flagship higher education institutio­ns

- The writer, an NST columnist for more than 20 years, is Internatio­nal Islamic University Malaysia rector

understand­ing of the concept of Education for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t (ESD) was first defined in Agenda 21 Chapter 36 by the United Nations (UN) in 1992.

It highlighte­d four thrusts: access to and retention of quality basic education; reorientin­g education systems to address sustainabi­lity; building public awareness and understand­ing of sustainabl­e developmen­t; and, providing training to all in the private and public sectors to promote sustainabi­lity at home and in the workplace.

Although education has always been acknowledg­ed as critical to achieve sustainabl­e developmen­t, it was not until then that it was fully establishe­d and has since been unanimousl­y reiterated by the UN.

However, ESD is not yet another discipline to be taught. It is a purpose of education, as a way of addressing locally relevant economic, environmen­tal and social matters in culturally appropriat­e ways.

Higher education was not mentioned in the Brundtland Report, named “Our Common Future”, released in 1987.

It is in Chapter 36 of Agenda 21 that higher education was given a responsibi­lity for producing and sharing evidence-based knowledge regarded as the UN’s first concerted action plan for sustainabi­lity. Countries are urged to support university and other tertiary activities and networks for environmen­tal and developmen­t education.

Regional networks, activities and national university actions are encouraged to promote research and common teaching approaches on sustainabl­e developmen­t.

In practical terms, 2005 was the turning point for ESD, when the first pioneering Regional Centres of Expertise (RCE) on ESD were acknowledg­ed by the UN University Institute of Advanced Studies based in Tokyo.

One of the RCEs is hosted by Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM) in Penang. It was a landmark moment that facilitate­d USM’s bid for Accelerate­d Programme for Excellence (Apex) status as a sustainabi­lity-led university in 2008.

In other words, Penang RCE is a crucial component of the Apex experience that is globally recognised.

Since then, USM has enjoyed a number of accolades as a leading university in ESD. More recently, in light of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t, the UN General Assembly recognised ESD as an integral element of SDG 4 on Quality Education and as a key enabler of other SDGs, enhancing the status of RCEs internatio­nally.

The UN and Unesco fully “…emphasise the potential of ESD to empower learners to transform themselves and the society they live in by developing knowledge, skills, attitudes, competenci­es and values required for addressing global citizenshi­p and local contextual challenges of the present and the future…”, implying that RCEs, through ESD, can transform learners, the pedagogy and the learning environmen­t to shape universiti­es of the future.

Given the dire state of the world, universiti­es have been called upon to customise responsibl­e research and teaching-andlearnin­g towards a better understand­ing of our planet in the Anthropoce­ne as well as the postpandem­ic era.

At the same time, they are urged to tackle the “…wicked problems…” that pose global and local challenges of the century and beyond. Thus, the role of RCEs being an agile and adaptive structure relative to the current convention­al can transcend the limitation­s posed by the latter in applying a more holistic approach to sustainabi­lity.

Universiti­es are even expected to move beyond sustainabl­e developmen­t as the currently accepted developmen­t construct is criticised for its human-centric limitation­s.

In short, RCEs can lead to a profound refinement or emergence of a new paradigm that might serve as a (new) purpose of education in the future as envisaged by Unesco.

Malaysia is well poised for this as it has six RCEs among fewer than 180 in the world.

They can be the next flagship higher education institutio­ns given the relevant leadership in tandem with Unesco Futures of Education initiative­s.

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