Abstract
Though many educational discourses stress the significance of involving children as active participants in promoting sustainability, sustainable development may initially seem like a complicated and abstract concept for young learners. The purpose of this study is to identify the contradictions between theoretical ideals and real classroom practices, as well as to investigate useful strategies for incorporating sustainable development concepts into early childhood curricula. In all, 384 female early childhood educators from kindergarten through third grade in Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Jordan took part in the study. The study found five paired strategies for incorporating sustainability into early learning using a descriptive-analytical methodology: Narrative-based vs. experiential/practical activities, direct instruction vs. project-based learning, individualized learning vs. group or collaborative learning, indoor classroom activities vs. outdoor/nature-based activities, and conventional/traditional vs. digitally enriched activities. Both structured and open-ended questions were used to gather the opinions of the teachers. The first set in each pair-narrative, direct, individualized, indoor, and traditional activities-was clearly preferred by participants over its more progressive counterparts, which included experiential, project-based, collaborative, outdoor, and digital activities, according to the results. Despite their strong support for incorporating sustainable development concepts into early childhood activities, the teachers' answers highlighted a fundamental paradox: The sophisticated and useful application of these concepts frequently surpasses their present level of expertise and day-to-day work. Many educators have questioned whether young children are developmentally ready to understand complex concepts related to sustainability, like social responsibility, environmental justice, and the green economy. They therefore tended to prefer easier, more recognizable instructional techniques-like storytelling, direct instruction, and regular classroom assignments-instead of hands-on, group, or tech-based learning. Teachers also identified a number of barriers, such as a lack of specialized training, a lack of curriculum materials that are age-appropriate, and a lack of institutional emphasis on sustainability in early childhood education.
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This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Article Type: Research Article
EUR J SUSTAIN DEV RES, Volume 10, Issue 1, 2026, Article No: em0342
https://doi.org/10.29333/ejosdr/17279
Publication date: 01 Jan 2026
Online publication date: 14 Oct 2025
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