KTKP020 Sustainable Education and Society / Kestävä kasvatus ja yhteiskunta
Course overview:
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Where and when |
What |
Follow-up tasks |
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12th Jan 14.15-15.45 · Luoko JULIETs Ruu E314 · Aiko JULIETs Suurryhmä |
Orientation |
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19th Jan 14.15-15.45 · All S110 |
Exploring the relationship between school and society |
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26.01.2026 14.15-15.45 · All C310 |
Key questions and initial observations |
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02.02.2026 14.15 - 15.45 ·All Ruu E314 |
Exploring key concepts |
Prepare the small group presentation – A Day in the Life of a Finnish School |
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09.02.2026 14.15-15.45 · All Ruu 3rd floor aula |
Workshop – daily life in different school contexts |
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16.02.2026 14.15-15.45 · All C418 |
Democracy education, democratic education or education for democracy?! |
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No formal session this week – consider this a reading week! |
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02.03.2026 14.15-15.45 · All - AgC233.1 |
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Hopefully the visit week – if not, a week to swap with one of the previous weeks |
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09.03.2026 14.15-15.45 · LUOKAs2025Juliet AgC233.1 · Aiko JULIETs Suurryhmä |
Bringing it all together |
Final task |
KTKP020 (5op, 127 hours)
- A democratic society and sustainable education are built on sustainable solutions to ecological, social, economic and cultural issues. Education and school play a significant role in this: they are social activities that maintain society on the one hand and change society on the other. Studying ‘sustainable education and society’ involves examining and problematizing changing practices and structures that create the conditions and boundaries for educational and individual action.
The tasks of education and school are constantly defined in relation to prevailing political, ideological and cultural conditions and power structures. Because education and school are also political phenomena, education policy includes power struggles and negotiations of interests. They can be seen at the macro, meso and micro levels, for example, in the preparation of national curricula and in the practices of education. The realisation of a cohesive and sustainable society requires communities that value eco-social education, justice and non-discrimination, as well as active activities. Those working in education and training have the opportunity and obligation to be involved in building such communities.
How can education contribute to a democratic, equal, equitable and sustainable society?
Themes: The social nature of knowledge and knowledge, civic education and social education, inclusion, democracy education, education and administrative guidance
Core competence areas: Ethical competence, community and societal competence, scientific competence
After completing the course, students should be able to:
- perceive how education manifests itself as part of social structures and practices and as a force for change
- examine the phenomena of education and school from a social and cultural perspective, utilising the concepts of the sociology of education.
- analyse connections between educational practices and cultural changes that taken place in childhood, adolescence and adulthood.
Study tasks
- Watch each lecture and take notes
- Complete the readings
- Keep notes throughout the course – questions, insights, realisations, connections with own experience, observations
- Small group analysis of a ‘A day in the life of a Finnish school’ from the perspective of educational sociology (structures, power, boundaries, interests…) short presentation on 9th Feb – use observations from OA1 course (LUOKO Js) and from organised visit (AIKO Js)
- Visit to an educational activity in small groups with EDUMA students (to be organised)
- Final assignment – bringing all the parts together. The final assignment is a 1800-2000 word essay which draws on readings, observations and insights from the course to outline how the everyday timetable, arrangements and organisation of school reflect the relationship between school and society. To complete this assignment it is a good idea to first map for yourself everything that has been included in this course - review your notes on the lectures and readings, as well as your observations. Try to make connections between these different parts. As there is a word limit, think carefully about what themes from the course you can address in your essay. It doesn't have to be all the themes from the course, but it is important that this assignment indicates that you have done the required work for the course (you've engaged with different materials), you've been thoughtful and really tried to find/build connections between big theories/concepts and what happens in the day-to-day life of school. You can compare different levels of schoolling if you like (e.g. junior high and general upper secondary, rural and urban primary schools...) and see how the same theme is present in two different settings. Carefully plan the text before starting to write it. The deadline is 6th April.




