About this course
All over the world, we face similar challenges in the places where we live. These challenges are major: How can we develop living environments that are affordable to all, while providing equal living standards? How can we adapt living environments to future hotter and wetter or drier climates? How do we ensure that development of such environments does not conflict with other major goals, such as biodiversity restoration and sustainable production of healthy food? These raise issues of equity and social inclusion in design, bbiodiversity-climate-livelihood trade-offs and links, nature-inclusive design and natural processes.
At the same time, different concepts like "Environment", "Sustainability" and "Home" mean different things to different people. How we look at the world around us is crucial in designing a future we have not yet imagined. In this course, students from several study programmes at Utrecht University (the Netherlands), Wageningen University (the Netherlands), Eindhoven University (the Netherlands) and Nelson Mandela University (South Africa) will collaborate be bringing multiple disciplines together to analyse, compare and co-create opportunities to tackle local and global challenges in the places where we live.
Students will perform a deep analysis of a challenge in their living environment and work together in transdisciplinary teams with societal partners to propose nature-based opportunities to improve our living environments. Learning will be underpinned by a critical analysis of diverse Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and a grounding in participatory design and research methodologies as well as in-demand skills such as systems thinking and futuring. The final result will be a product presented in a multimedia format and substantiated by a report written for a popular audience.
The students will meet the lecturers and fellow students using innovative online learning tools such as the Virtual Classroom. The purpose of the inter-university collaboration is so we all meet people outside of our unique habitats and benefit from the expertise and perspectives others offer. At the same time, this collaboration will help reveal to the students from which knowledge, expertise, skills, perspectives and cultural aspects they approach the project themselves.
Learning outcomes
Please note: the information in the course manual is binding.
After successful completion of the course, the student is able to:
- Demonstrate individual and group expertise in problem framing and analysis using participatory research methodologies that create transformative pathways to action.
- Apply a variety of evaluative tools, including stakeholder analysis, to assess local contexts and unsustainable practices in the places where we live.
- Combine individual knowledge and expertise in a transdisciplinary team to design an integral solution to a local sustainability challenge.
- Recognise and manage inclusive, interdisciplinary and intercultural ways of working to integrate diverse perspectives and ethical issues in group working processes.
- Develop a global and intersectional perspective on sustainability and critically analyse synergies and trade-offs among the SDGs.
- Employ a variety of media to creatively communicate the rationale, results and perceived strengths and weaknesses of your work to a diverse audience.
Enrolment details
Do you study at Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e) or Wageningen University and Research (WUR)? You can enrol via eduXchange.nl
Prior knowledge
Max.16 students. In case more students are enrolled for the course the rules of the Teaching and Examination Regulations will be followed to appoint the students.
Additional information
- More infoCoursepage on website of Utrecht University
- Contact a coordinator
- CreditsECTS 7.5
- Levelbachelor