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European agrifood and forestry education for a sustainable future - Gap analysis from an informatics approach

Burleigh, Stephen LU and Jönsson, Håkan LU orcid (2024) In Open Research Europe 4.
Abstract

BACKGROUND: The NextFood Project ( www.nextfood-project.eu) started work in 2018 to identify 'Categories of Skills' that students should be equipped with to address the upcoming global challenges within agrifood and forestry disciplines, and involved concepts such as sustainability, technological adaptation and networking. This study is based on the initial skills and competencies mapping, but takes a different methodological approach. Instead of investigating what the research literature and professionals think are important skills for the future, this study asks how existing education programmes include or exclude these skills in the description of their programs.

METHODS: Python-based web-scraping scripts were used to collect... (More)

BACKGROUND: The NextFood Project ( www.nextfood-project.eu) started work in 2018 to identify 'Categories of Skills' that students should be equipped with to address the upcoming global challenges within agrifood and forestry disciplines, and involved concepts such as sustainability, technological adaptation and networking. This study is based on the initial skills and competencies mapping, but takes a different methodological approach. Instead of investigating what the research literature and professionals think are important skills for the future, this study asks how existing education programmes include or exclude these skills in the description of their programs.

METHODS: Python-based web-scraping scripts were used to collect texts from a selection of European Masters program websites, which were then analysed using statistical tools. A total of 14 countries, 27 universities, 1303 European Masters programs, 3305 web-pages and almost two million words were studied using this approach.

RESULTS: While agrifood and forestry Masters programs were aligned with the NextFood Project 'Categories of Skills' equal to or more often than unrelated Masters programs, we found evidence for the relative underuse of words associated with networking skills, such as collaboration, communication and teamwork. Agriculture-related programs used these words the least among the agrifood Masters programs. In contrast, agrifood programs used words associated with sustainability and system thinking more than the non-agrifood Masters programs.

CONCLUSIONS: The informatics approach provides evidence that many European agrifood and forestry Masters programs are following the educational paths for meeting future challenges as outlined by the NextFood Project, with the possible exception of networking skills. This approach allows a complementary and time-efficient overview of the current state of education in the agrifood system in Europe.

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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Open Research Europe
volume
4
article number
93
publisher
F1000 Research Ltd.
external identifiers
  • pmid:39868028
ISSN
2732-5121
DOI
10.12688/openreseurope.17205.3
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
Copyright: © 2024 Burleigh S and Jönsson H.
id
c5fc31b1-0345-4a08-8ee0-9fbe70e1c62b
date added to LUP
2025-01-28 09:09:35
date last changed
2025-02-03 11:35:16
@article{c5fc31b1-0345-4a08-8ee0-9fbe70e1c62b,
  abstract     = {{<p>BACKGROUND: The NextFood Project ( www.nextfood-project.eu) started work in 2018 to identify 'Categories of Skills' that students should be equipped with to address the upcoming global challenges within agrifood and forestry disciplines, and involved concepts such as sustainability, technological adaptation and networking. This study is based on the initial skills and competencies mapping, but takes a different methodological approach. Instead of investigating what the research literature and professionals think are important skills for the future, this study asks how existing education programmes include or exclude these skills in the description of their programs.</p><p>METHODS: Python-based web-scraping scripts were used to collect texts from a selection of European Masters program websites, which were then analysed using statistical tools. A total of 14 countries, 27 universities, 1303 European Masters programs, 3305 web-pages and almost two million words were studied using this approach.</p><p>RESULTS: While agrifood and forestry Masters programs were aligned with the NextFood Project 'Categories of Skills' equal to or more often than unrelated Masters programs, we found evidence for the relative underuse of words associated with networking skills, such as collaboration, communication and teamwork. Agriculture-related programs used these words the least among the agrifood Masters programs. In contrast, agrifood programs used words associated with sustainability and system thinking more than the non-agrifood Masters programs.</p><p>CONCLUSIONS: The informatics approach provides evidence that many European agrifood and forestry Masters programs are following the educational paths for meeting future challenges as outlined by the NextFood Project, with the possible exception of networking skills. This approach allows a complementary and time-efficient overview of the current state of education in the agrifood system in Europe.</p>}},
  author       = {{Burleigh, Stephen and Jönsson, Håkan}},
  issn         = {{2732-5121}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{F1000 Research Ltd.}},
  series       = {{Open Research Europe}},
  title        = {{European agrifood and forestry education for a sustainable future - Gap analysis from an informatics approach}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/openreseurope.17205.3}},
  doi          = {{10.12688/openreseurope.17205.3}},
  volume       = {{4}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}