October 22, 2025

Making the SDGs Meaningful for Transition-Age Pupils

An inspiring transition teacher in the Liberton Learning Community in Edinburgh is focusing on embedding global citizenship throughout the curriculum.

Through learning about the Sustainable Development Goals, her P7 classes are helping to smooth the transition from primary to secondary school.

To help inspire the young people at the beginning of this learning journey, the school reached out to Scotdec, who were excited to collaborate and assist with this important work, providing an introductory workshop for the pupils.

– Jehan, transition teacher, Edinburgh Council

Workshops

The workshop aimed to increase the pupils’ familiarity with the SDGs, understanding the motivation behind their creation as well as their interdependence. Participatory methodologies were utilised to engage the learners in conversations around what human beings need to both survive and thrive in the world we live in, followed by a discussion on the problems, risks and dangers that the world faces. This contextualised the SDGs as an important initiative to address the world’s problems. The young people were then asked to draw on their imagination to envisage a world where these problems were addressed as a ‘preferred future’, considering the ways in which the SDGs might link to this ‘preferred future’.

Reflecting on this activity Jehan said:

SDG connections

The final part of the workshop involved outdoor learning (yes in January), where the pupils formed a circle showcasing the SDGS symbols and relevant images demonstrating the SDGs. They then engaged in a fun activity using a ball of string to evaluate how the SDGS could be linked to each other. Whilst a challenging exercise, the pupils engaged well with this task and were able to embrace the cold and wind whilst drawing these links.

Jehan described the workshop as:

Next Steps

The pupils will now engage in this unit of work until the end of April using the key global citizenship themes to explore the SDGs. They will begin looking at social justice and equity, demonstrating how these themes often link to several goals – further illustrating how they are all connected. The pupils will revisit the core GCE concepts in S1 but look at different contexts – for example, the pupils will explore racism under the theme of social justice in P7, and in S1 will focus on gender inequality under this theme:

Thankfully some P7 pupils made it known that they would like Scotdec to come back to their school and continue to engage in their learning. Scotdec hopes to return to each of the schools at the end of their unit of work to help pupils reflect and evaluate the impact of this important work. We’re looking forward to it and the prospect of further outdoor learning but perhaps with warmer weather.

STRIDE_2025_lightbulb

Good to know:


NOTiCEBOARD

How do rich countries export climate breakdown? Come along to this free professional learning session on Carbon Colonialism and find out!

Join Global Education Week (18–24 November) — a Europe-wide celebration of learning for a fairer, more sustainable world. Explore classroom ideas, connect with others, and showcase your school’s global citizenship work

Who fought for the British army? What countries did they come from? On the run up to Remembrance Day on 11 November, explore WWII through a global lens with your learners with this handy topic planner

Explore children’s rights in your setting for World Children’s Day on 20th November with this classroom activity 

Explore Tools for Global Citizenship

Whether you're planning ahead or responding to what's happening in the world, these tools are here to support you with meaningful, ready-to-use classroom activities.

Cookie consent

Stride Magazine uses cookies to improve your experience, remember your preferences, and deliver relevant content. By continuing to use our site, you consent to our use of cookies.