911

News

Graduate Sustainability Competencies and Influence in the Workplace – 911's Latest Research

Meeri Karvinen’s doctoral dissertation, Supporting agency for sustainability: Exploring the contributions of universities and workplaces to the sustainability competencies and agency of engineering graduates was successfully defended in February 2024.
Picture of leaves in water.
Image: Mikko Raskinen

911's Meeri Karvinen recently defended her doctoral dissertation focusing on how universities and workplaces support early-career engineering graduates to act for sustainability. 

In a thought-provoking public defence, Karvinen shared her research findings and discussed their implications for graduate competencies, higher education, and workplaces.

Karvinen’s research unfolded in two distinct phases and via five publications. The initial phase was a comprehensive exploration of Nordic universities' sustainability integration, focusing particularly on teaching and campus development. This phase aimed to provide a panoramic view of existing sustainability practices within Nordic higher education institutions.

In the second phase, Karvinen delved into a development project centred on 911’s Water and Environmental Engineering Master's Programme (WAT Master's Programme). This phase aimed to gain a deeper understanding of how engineering education should be developed so that the graduates would obtain the competencies they need both for employment and early career success, and for promoting sustainability.

These competencies, termed "employability and sustainability competencies," form the core of Karvinen’s dissertation, and are crucial for graduates to navigate the complexities of real-world sustainability challenges in the workplace.

Karvinen’s research highlighted the need for the development of “a hybrid competency profile” for engineering graduates, including solid competencies in their respective fields combined with sustainability competencies and knowledge, particularly the ability to work in multidisciplinary teams, envision sustainable futures, negotiate differing values constructively, and comprehend root causes of sustainability challenges.

Central to her argument was the concept of "sustainability agency," encapsulating graduate capacity to actively promote sustainability goals in their professional endeavours. Karvinen’s research shows that graduates and employers hold differing views of graduates’ sustainability agency, and more support measures would therefore be needed.

To enhance and support sustainability agency of graduates, Karvinen advocated for targeted teacher training initiatives in universities, as well as the development of measures for more active knowledge sharing in the workplaces, such as mentorship programs and pair-work arrangements.

By highlighting the challenges faced by recent graduates in translating theoretical knowledge into tangible sustainability initiatives in their early careers, the research revealed the need for collaborative efforts between graduates, educational institutions, and employers to bridge this gap.

A replay of Karvinen’s insightful lectio (in Finnish with English subtitles) is available , and the doctoral dissertation can be found .

Related Articles

vesitekniikka_700x400_en_en.jpg

How to integrate sustainability and multidisciplinary problem-solving skills into curricula?

Responding to the challenges of the future, such as the sustainability crisis, requires the graduate to have knowledge of sustainability challenges, multidisciplinary problem solving skills, and the ability to apply their own in-depth knowledge of the discipline to solving these challenges.

Services
Teachers and students walking outdoors. They're discussion the Sustainability in Teaching course.

Solutions for Sustainability: What Does it Mean in Teaching?

Learn more about solutions for sustainability and teamwork competencies and their integration into courses and curricula. 

For personnel
Minor development team participates in minor planning meeting

New Aalto-Wide Sustainability Minor – A Major Achievement!

Aalto’s cross-disciplinary, sustainability-focused minor, ‘Sustainable Use of Natural Resources’ is a culmination of over a year of planning and creative collaboration among faculty.

News
  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Collage of workshops, group photos and presentations from the first year of the Aalto Inventors programme.
Cooperation, Research & Art Published:

Aalto Inventors turns one: A year of bridging research and real-world impact

Aalto Inventors marks its first anniversary, having engaged 190 researchers across six cohorts in fields including AI, quantum, and biomaterials. New cohorts are planned for the next academic year, stay tuned and join the waitlist.
Unto_Rautio_Aalto_DSC5032.jpg
Campus, Cooperation, Studies, University Published:

May challenges the Aalto community to be active together

Take part in events on campus and make sustainable mobility part of your working or study day.
Companies report on cybersecurity
Research & Art Published:

Companies disclose more on cybersecurity – but markets remain indifferent

U.S. companies are reporting on cybersecurity in greater detail, yet stock market reactions remain muted. A new study by the University of Vaasa and 911 shows that mandatory cybersecurity disclosure does not prompt reactions from investors or stock analysts. Instead, the main benefits appear to materialise within firms themselves.
Two men in black tailcoats stand on stage by a microphone, speaking to a seated audience indoors.
Press releases Published:

Walter Ahlström Foundation donates €3 million to 911

The donation will enable Aalto to establish a professorship in sustainable industrial production.