SPED4005 Sustainability, Social Justice and Special Education

    • Number of credits
      15
    • Teaching semester
      2026 Spring
    • Language of instruction
      English
    • Campus
      Lillehammer
    • Required prerequisite knowledge

      None

Course content

In this course, we will explore the strong link between sustainability, social justice, and special education. This link exists because a common approach to guiding social policy and education is instrumentalism. Instrumentalism assumes that there is a vast separation between humans and nature, or between certain kinds of humans and other kinds of humans and it can lead to policy, legislation, and associated interventions that ignore the environment and/or discriminate against certain people. However, there are alternatives to the instrumentalist approach, such as the ‘ecological model’, which emphasise the connectedness of humans to the environment and to each other and which aim to create healthy environments and societies in which people of all types, abilities and backgrounds can thrive. In this course, you will learn how to work towards creating healthy social and environment contexts in which people of all types, abilities and backgrounds can thrive. This course invites the students to reflect more in depth on how the interplay between the individual and their surroundings influence the lives of disabled people.

  • Disability and gender, class and ethnicity (intersectional perspectives)
  • Indigenist models and perspectives
  • Individual versus collective responsibility
  • Diversity as strength as well as strength-based, inclusive, sustainable special education as a concept

Learning Outcome

Upon passing the course, students have achieved the following learning outcomes:

Knowledge

Students  

  • have a conceptual understanding of theoretical perspectives on the ecology of learning
  • have the ability to critically evaluate existing knowledge and the need for an alternative approach to knowledge and practice within special education
  • have ethical awareness, including Indigenous ethical considerations, which enables individuals to act responsibly towards the environment and each other, thus creating the social and ecological conditions for all to thrive
Skills

Students

  • can critically examine the implications of disability for education and social work, in light of sustainability, participation and inclusion
  • can make informed arguments for the importance of sustainable special education
  • Will be able to critically assess sustainable special education projects and initiatives
General competence

Students

  • can competently provide leadership of sustainability education initiatives in their workplace and more generally
  • have the knowledge and skills to be an ambassador for sustainability
Teaching and working methods
  • Lectures and seminars.
  • Independent study      
  • Group work
  • Literature studies
Required coursework
  • 75% compulsory attendance and participation in lectures and seminars
Form of assessment

Individual project report/product discussing a project the students has carried out during the course.

Assessments
Form of assessmentGrading scaleGroupingDuration of assessmentSupport materialsProportionComment
Home exam
Passed - not passed
Individual
  • All
Faculty
Faculty of Education