Instructor–student mentoring: Strengths of transformative sustainability learning and its direct application to impact industry and curricular refinement

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Abstract

There is a growing need to educate students about the applications of environmental sustainability to current and future jobs. One method that has emerged to teach this application is transformative sustainable learning (TSL). Instructors can use TSL to understand better how to integrate sustainability topics into seemingly unrelated course topics. Thus, the purpose of this study was to explore the effectiveness of a series of TSL courses in a graduate sport management program. To this end, a collaborative reflection guided the data collection from weekly one-on-one conversations between the researchers (i.e., instructor, student). Results aligned with TSL themes (i.e., head, heart, hands) and suggested that the intentional TSL course design and scheduled conversations benefited both the instructor and student. The student experienced an in-depth experience to understand and apply course concepts. The instructor was able to gain better insights to structure the class and create assignments adapted to meet student needs through collaborative reflection during mentoring sessions.

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McCullough, B. P., & Pelcher, J. A. (2021). Instructor–student mentoring: Strengths of transformative sustainability learning and its direct application to impact industry and curricular refinement. Sustainability (Switzerland), 13(19). https://doi.org/10.3390/su131910768

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