Sustainability: Nutrition and Dietetic Students’ Perceptions

Opportunities exist for nutrition and dietetic (N&D) professionals to contribute to sustainable development and support actions towards the attainment of the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals (SGD’s). Students undertaking higher education are well-placed to develop skills and capabilities in cr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sustainability 2020-02, Vol.12 (3), p.1072
Hauptverfasser: Burkhart, Sarah, Verdonck, Michele, Ashford, Theresa, Maher, Judith
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container_issue 3
container_start_page 1072
container_title Sustainability
container_volume 12
creator Burkhart, Sarah
Verdonck, Michele
Ashford, Theresa
Maher, Judith
description Opportunities exist for nutrition and dietetic (N&D) professionals to contribute to sustainable development and support actions towards the attainment of the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals (SGD’s). Students undertaking higher education are well-placed to develop skills and capabilities in creative and critical problem solving for sustainability. However, there is limited literature exploring nutrition and dietetic students’ perceptions of sustainability that would help to inform an effective and constructively aligned embedding of sustainability content and active learning opportunities into curriculum. This descriptive cohort study design utilised a 17-question online survey to explore 95 Australian N&D undergraduate students’ self-reported familiarity with and perceived importance of sustainability and related concepts, and view of sustainability for future practice. Participants reported being more familiar with the term environmental sustainability and related concepts than economic or social sustainability. Varying levels of familiarity of 42 sustainability related concepts within economic resilience, environmental integrity, social development and cross-cutting issues were reported. Most participants (82%, n = 78) reported sustainability was very important in general (82%, n = 78), and for professional practice (63%, n = 60). Over half of the participants identified government led initiatives to address the future of society (65%, n = 71). Our study highlights the complexity of sustainability in a discipline specific context and the need for understanding students’ perceptions of sustainability to inform N&D curriculum design.
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source MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals
subjects College students
Cross cutting
Curricula
Dietitians
Education
Familiarity
Farms
Food
Higher education
Learning
Likert scale
Nutrition
Nutritionists
Perceptions
Problem solving
Professional practice
Questionnaires
Social change
Social justice
Students
Sustainability
Sustainable development
Undergraduate study
title Sustainability: Nutrition and Dietetic Students’ Perceptions
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