Mission 4.7 launches at the 2020 Vatican Youth Symposium

By Sam Thompson and Shannon Kobran, SDG Academy

On December 16th, 2020, a group of distinguished supporters, including former UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, UNESCO Director-General Audrey Azoulay, and His Holiness Pope Francis, launched Mission 4.7, a new initiative co-founded by Global Schools and the SDG Academy, both flagship programs of the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network; the Ban Ki-moon Centre for Global CitizensUNESCO; and the Center for Sustainable Development at Columbia University, to advance SDG Target 4.7 at the highest levels.

To achieve the SDGs, every individual must acquire the sustainable development knowledge, global citizenship values, and 21st century skills critical to tackling our shared challenges and promoting equitable, inclusive, and resilient societies. Education is a crucial enabler of this transformation. It is the basis for cultivating the best in ourselves and our communities, and is the key for learning to live together and work together for a better world. 

 
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Education for Sustainable Development (ESD), Global Citizenship Education (GCED), and 21st century skills provide learners with knowledge to promote social inclusion, find peace and cooperation, and raise awareness of how to protect our societies from emerging diseases, human-induced climate change, loss of biodiversity, and large-scale pollution. In the wisdom of Agenda 2030 and the SDGs, the entire world has endorsed the concept of building a just world through education. The remarkable SDG Target 4.7 shows us a powerful way forward.

Mission 4.7 was launched to put into global practice this bold vision. The seventh annual Vatican Youth Symposium, hosted by SDSN Youth and the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences, provided the perfect stage for the launch. With its mission to bring together pioneers in global development to catalyze solutions for the Sustainable Development Goals, the event proved that the world has visionary leaders ready to shoulder the challenge of achieving Target 4.7.

His Holiness Pope Francis welcomes participants of the Vatican Youth Symposium.

His Holiness Pope Francis welcomes participants of the Vatican Youth Symposium.

Following a welcome from Monsignor Marcelo Sánchez Sorondo, Chancellor of the Pontifical Academies of Sciences and Social Sciences and host of the symposium, His Holiness Pope Francis delivered a welcome address (en español) urging the audience “to be the poets of a new human beauty, a new beauty of fraternity and friendship, and of protection of the earth we inhabit.” To enact change, he said, we “must start a new wave of educational opportunity based on social justice and reciprocal love.” His words of wisdom set the tone for the rest of the session and reminded the virtually assembled participants why Mission 4.7 is so important.

Mission 4.7 co-chair and moderator of the event’s opening session Prof. Jeffrey Sachs followed, quoting the Pope’s 2015 encyclical Laudato si’: “Here we are today to help move forward on that common plan for our common home.”

Laudato si’ and the 2020 encyclical Fratelli tutti together provide powerful calls “for awareness and leadership in sustainable development and in the global appreciation of culture and global citizenship,” said Prof. Sachs. “And how wonderful that that guidance is so wonderfully compatible with our purpose of launching Mission 4.7.”

Professor Jeffrey Sachs addresses the Vatican Youth Symposium.

Professor Jeffrey Sachs addresses the Vatican Youth Symposium.

Remarks from Mission 4.7 patrons Audrey Azoulay, Director-General of UNESCO, and former UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon followed. Ms. Azoulay addressed the crucial role of education in recovering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The Secretary-General, too, emphasized that, with only ten years left to achieve the SDGs, now is a critical time to accelerate action.

The launch’s first session concluded with remarks from Mission 4.7 co-chairs Monsignor Marcelo Sánchez Sorondo; UNESCO’s Assistant Director-General for Education Stefania Giannini; and Tan Sri Dr. Jeffrey Cheah, Founder and Chairman of the Sunway Group.

Tan Sri Dr. Jeffrey Cheah greets the participants of the Mission 4.7 launch.

Tan Sri Dr. Jeffrey Cheah greets the participants of the Mission 4.7 launch.

Dr. Cheah perfectly summarized the urgency of the situation in his remarks. “You are all familiar with the challenges we face, and unless we act, and act now, to educate our younger generation, I fear for their future and the world they will inherit,” expressed Dr. Cheah. “To quote an old Chinese saying, ‘If your plan is for one year, plant rice. If your plan is for ten years, plant trees. If your plan is for a hundred years, educate children.'”

The event’s second session discussed the implementation of Education for Sustainable Development in primary and secondary schools. Moderated by Ms. Monika Froehler, CEO of Ban Ki-moon Centre for Global Citizens and Co-founder of Mission 4.7, the session featured further remarks by Ms. Giannini, and a panel discussion with Mr. Sam Loni and Ms. Amanda Abrom, Director and Program Officer, respectively, of SDSN Youth’s Global Schools program; Dr. Andreas Schleicher, Director of Education and Skills at the OECD; Dr. Siva Kumari, Director General of the International Baccalaureate; and Professors Mustafa Öztürk of Turkey’s Hacettepe University and Abdelkrim Marzouk of Morocco’s Al Akhawayn University, both of whom participated in Global Schools’ pilot research project auditing ESD in their respective national curricula.

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“We should not underestimate the impact, the values, the attitudes, the skills, the knowledge that people have, that we promote in our schools…It’s going to be educators who hold the key to what extent the SDGs become a real contract between citizens,” stressed Dr. Schleicher.

The launch’s concluding session, moderated by SDG Academy Director and Chair of the Mission 4.7 Secretariat Ms. Chandrika Bahadur, introduced the theme of ESD in tertiary and professional settings. “One of the most interesting things about SDG 4 is that it makes reference to lifelong learning for all…Learning does not stop when we step out of our educational institutions,” Ms. Bahadur said in her opening statement.

The session began with remarks from Irina Bokova, former Director-General of UNESCO and member of the Mission 4.7 High-level Advisory Group, who echoed earlier speakers’ praise of the opportunities offered by technology, but cautioned that the digital divide remains a major barrier to equal access to education. She also stressed the need for reform in the tertiary education sector: “The complexity of our world needs a different, inter-sectoral approach at universities. This is where Education for Sustainable Development comes into the picture.”

Ms. Bokova’s remarks were followed by a panel discussion with experts in the field of ESD in higher education. The panelists discussed the current state of ESD and GCED in the sector, presenting examples both of success and remaining challenges.

Mr. José María del Corral (en español), Global Director of Scholas Occurrentes, spoke about his work with Pope Francis creating a new kind of school that promotes a “Culture of Encounter,” which now reaches more than one million students all over the world.

Harvard Professor Fernando M. Reimers proposed new models for mobilizing sustainable development education, and warned that the work of ESD should not be about the 17 Goals themselves, but understanding the challenges underlying sustainable development and identifying the knowledge, values, and skills needed to solve these problems.

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Ms. Theresa Yung, Project Lead of the SDG Student Program, stressed that “the SDGs are not something that need to be taught. They are something that need to be enabled as a way of doing…[Students] need to stop being passive consumers of content, and start creating interesting projects out in the communities.”

Prof. Akpezi Ogbuigwe, Director of Nigeria’s Rivers State University of Science and Technology Advancement/Linkages Centre, spoke next, emphasizing the parallel needs of content integration and teacher capacity building in the area of ESD.

Finally, Ms. Noha Al-Khalqi used examples from her work as Programs Director at Millennium Campus Network to highlight the importance of experiential learning to promote social impact among university students.

Ms. Bahadur ended the panel discussion with final thoughts and reflections, namely the need to create an environment where university students do much more than just learn about the SDGs; they actually design and implement solutions for sustainable development.

The session concluded with remarks from Professor Stefano Zamagni, President of the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences.

Throughout the launch event, speakers emphasized the incredible power of young people to develop solutions for the sustainable development challenges, and the need to mobilize education to deliver the knowledge, skills, and values that will drive action on the SDGs. Visit Mission4point7.org to learn more.

Watch the Mission 4.7 launch and see the full agenda below.

Launch Agenda

December 16, 2020

Session 1: Welcome/Launch of Mission 4.7

Now more than ever, the global response to COVID-19 has revealed the urgency of building inclusive, equitable, and resilient communities to achieve the SDGs and foster a peaceful and prosperous future. In order to create a sustainable path for humanity, leaders of all ages must heed this call to action and be equipped not only with technical knowledge, but with a deeper understanding of ethical values, sustainable development, global citizenship, and 21st century skills. This plenary session launched Mission 4.7, a new initiative to accelerate policy and research efforts on Education for Sustainable Development across the K-12, tertiary and professional education sectors.

Speakers:

  • His Holiness Pope Francis

  • Monsignor Marcelo Sánchez Sorondo, Chancellor, Pontifical Academy of Sciences and Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences

  • Mr. Sam Loni, Program Director, SDSN; & Director, Global Schools, Chair of Symposium

  • Professor Jeffrey Sachs, President, Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN)

  • Hon. Audrey Azoulay, Director-General, UNESCO

  • Hon. Ban Ki-moon, 8th Secretary-General of the United Nations

  • Hon. Stefania Giannini, Assistant Director-General for Education, UNESCO

  • Tan Sri Dr. Jeffrey Cheah, Founder & Chairman, Sunway Group

Session 2: Education for Sustainable Development in Primary and Secondary Schools

COVID-19 has disrupted education for millions of children across the globe. In the efforts to reimagine and redesign education to build back better, school curriculums should place a greater focus on SDG 4.7. This session discussed ways to embed concepts of sustainable development in K-12 school curricula, and presented a strong case for why ESD is important to a variety of stakeholders and the benefits of teaching 21st century skills and global citizenship to young learners.

Speakers:

  • Ms. Monika Froehler, CEO, Ban Ki-moon Centre for Global Citizens (Moderator)

  • Hon. Stefania Giannini, Assistant Director-General for Education, UNESCO 

  • Dr. Siva Kumari, Director-General, International Baccalaureate

  • Mr. Sam Loni, Program Director, SDSN; & Director, Global Schools 

  • Ms. Amanda Abrom, Program Manager, Global Schools, SDSN

  • Professor Mustafa Öztürk, Professor, Hacettepe University

  • Professor Abdelkrim Marzouk, Director, Executive Education Center, Al Akhawayn University 

  • Dr. Andreas Schleicher, Director of Education and Skills, OECD

Session 3: Education for Sustainable Development in Tertiary and Professional Settings

This session discussed the role of universities in a post-pandemic recovery, advancing the SDGs on campus and in their wider communities. Key topics included universities as hubs for innovation, the use of technology to overcome the digital divide in learning, utilizing ESD curricula to train students and teachers, and the need for institutions to lead by example to increase future leaders’ motivation and ability to act ethically.

Speakers:

  • Ms. Chandrika Bahadur, Director, SDG Academy, SDSN (Moderator)

  • Hon. Irina Bokova, Former Director-General, UNESCO

  • Ms. Theresa Yung, Project Lead, SDG Students Program, SDSN Youth

  • Professor Fernando Reimers, Professor of International Education, Harvard University

  • Ms. Noha Al-Khalqi, Programs Director, Millennium Campus Network

  • Professor Akpezi Ogbuigwe, Director, Rivers State University of Science and Technology

  • Mr. José María del Corral, Global Director, Scholas Occurrentes

  • Professor Stefano Zamagni, President, Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences

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Mission 4.7, a global initiative to achieve SDG Target 4.7, to be launched at the Vatican Youth Symposium on December 16