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Editorial
. 2024 May;17(5):e14456.
doi: 10.1111/1751-7915.14456.

A concept for international societally relevant microbiology education and microbiology knowledge promulgation in society

Kenneth Timmis  1 John E Hallsworth  2 Terry J McGenity  3 Rachel Armstrong  4 María Francisca Colom  5 Zeynep Ceren Karahan  6 Max Chavarría  7 Patricia Bernal  8 Eric S Boyd  9 Juan Luis Ramos  10 Martin Kaltenpoth  11 Carla Pruzzo  12 Gerard Clarke  13 Purificación López-Garcia  14 Michail M Yakimov  15 Jessamyn Perlmutter  16 Chris Greening  17 Emiley Eloe-Fadrosh  18 Willy Verstraete  19 Olga C Nunes  20 Oleg Kotsyurbenko  21 Pablo Iván Nikel  22 Paola Scavone  23 Max M Häggblom  24 Rob Lavigne  25 Frédérique Le Roux  26 James K Timmis  27 Victor Parro  28 Carmen Michán  29 José Luis García  30 Arturo Casadevall  31 Shelley M Payne  32 Joachim Frey  33 Omry Koren  34 James I Prosser  35 Leo Lahti  36 Rup Lal  37 Shailly Anand  38 Utkarsh Sood  39 Pierre Offre  40 Casey C Bryce  41 Allen Y Mswaka  42 Jörg Jores  43 Betül Kaçar  44 Lars Mathias Blank  45 Nicole Maaßen  45 Phillip B Pope  46   47 Horia L Banciu  48 Judith Armitage  49 Sang Yup Lee  50 Fengping Wang  51 Thulani P Makhalanyane  52 Jack A Gilbert  53 Thomas K Wood  54 Branka Vasiljevic  55 Mario Soberón  56 Zulema Udaondo  10 Fernando Rojo  57 Jyoti Prakash Tamang  58 Tatiana Giraud  59 Jeanne Ropars  59 Thaddeus Ezeji  60 Volker Müller  61 Hirofume Danbara  62 Beate Averhoff  61 Angela Sessitsch  63 Laila Pamela Partida-Martínez  64 Wei Huang  65 Søren Molin  66 Pilar Junier  67 Ricardo Amils  68 Xiao-Lei Wu  69 Eliora Ron  70 Huseyin Erten  71 Elaine Cristina Pereira de Martinis  72 Alexander Rapoport  73 Maarja Öpik  74 W Donald R Pokatong  75 Courtney Stairs  76 Mohammad Ali Amoozegar  77 Jéssica Gil Serna  78
Affiliations
Editorial

A concept for international societally relevant microbiology education and microbiology knowledge promulgation in society

Kenneth Timmis et al. Microb Biotechnol. 2024 May.

Abstract

Executive summary: Microbes are all pervasive in their distribution and influence on the functioning and well-being of humans, life in general and the planet. Microbially-based technologies contribute hugely to the supply of important goods and services we depend upon, such as the provision of food, medicines and clean water. They also offer mechanisms and strategies to mitigate and solve a wide range of problems and crises facing humanity at all levels, including those encapsulated in the sustainable development goals (SDGs) formulated by the United Nations. For example, microbial technologies can contribute in multiple ways to decarbonisation and hence confronting global warming, provide sanitation and clean water to the billions of people lacking them, improve soil fertility and hence food production and develop vaccines and other medicines to reduce and in some cases eliminate deadly infections. They are the foundation of biotechnology, an increasingly important and growing business sector and source of employment, and the centre of the bioeconomy, Green Deal, etc. But, because microbes are largely invisible, they are not familiar to most people, so opportunities they offer to effectively prevent and solve problems are often missed by decision-makers, with the negative consequences this entrains. To correct this lack of vital knowledge, the International Microbiology Literacy Initiative-the IMiLI-is recruiting from the global microbiology community and making freely available, teaching resources for a curriculum in societally relevant microbiology that can be used at all levels of learning. Its goal is the development of a society that is literate in relevant microbiology and, as a consequence, able to take full advantage of the potential of microbes and minimise the consequences of their negative activities. In addition to teaching about microbes, almost every lesson discusses the influence they have on sustainability and the SDGs and their ability to solve pressing problems of societal inequalities. The curriculum thus teaches about sustainability, societal needs and global citizenship. The lessons also reveal the impacts microbes and their activities have on our daily lives at the personal, family, community, national and global levels and their relevance for decisions at all levels. And, because effective, evidence-based decisions require not only relevant information but also critical and systems thinking, the resources also teach about these key generic aspects of deliberation. The IMiLI teaching resources are learner-centric, not academic microbiology-centric and deal with the microbiology of everyday issues. These span topics as diverse as owning and caring for a companion animal, the vast range of everyday foods that are produced via microbial processes, impressive geological formations created by microbes, childhood illnesses and how they are managed and how to reduce waste and pollution. They also leverage the exceptional excitement of exploration and discovery that typifies much progress in microbiology to capture the interest, inspire and motivate educators and learners alike. The IMiLI is establishing Regional Centres to translate the teaching resources into regional languages and adapt them to regional cultures, and to promote their use and assist educators employing them. Two of these are now operational. The Regional Centres constitute the interface between resource creators and educators-learners. As such, they will collect and analyse feedback from the end-users and transmit this to the resource creators so that teaching materials can be improved and refined, and new resources added in response to demand: educators and learners will thereby be directly involved in evolution of the teaching resources. The interactions between educators-learners and resource creators mediated by the Regional Centres will establish dynamic and synergistic relationships-a global societally relevant microbiology education ecosystem-in which creators also become learners, teaching resources are optimised and all players/stakeholders are empowered and their motivation increased. The IMiLI concept thus embraces the principle of teaching societally relevant microbiology embedded in the wider context of societal, biosphere and planetary needs, inequalities, the range of crises that confront us and the need for improved decisioning, which should ultimately lead to better citizenship and a humanity that is more sustainable and resilient.

Abstract: The biosphere of planet Earth is a microbial world: a vast reactor of countless microbially driven chemical transformations and energy transfers that push and pull many planetary geochemical processes, including the cycling of the elements of life, mitigate or amplify climate change (e.g., Nature Reviews Microbiology, 2019, 17, 569) and impact the well-being and activities of all organisms, including humans. Microbes are both our ancestors and creators of the planetary chemistry that allowed us to evolve (e.g., Life's engines: How microbes made earth habitable, 2023). To understand how the biosphere functions, how humans can influence its development and live more sustainably with the other organisms sharing it, we need to understand the microbes. In a recent editorial (Environmental Microbiology, 2019, 21, 1513), we advocated for improved microbiology literacy in society. Our concept of microbiology literacy is not based on knowledge of the academic subject of microbiology, with its multitude of component topics, plus the growing number of additional topics from other disciplines that become vitally important elements of current microbiology. Rather it is focused on microbial activities that impact us-individuals/communities/nations/the human world-and the biosphere and that are key to reaching informed decisions on a multitude of issues that regularly confront us, ranging from personal issues to crises of global importance. In other words, it is knowledge and understanding essential for adulthood and the transition to it, knowledge and understanding that must be acquired early in life in school. The 2019 Editorial marked the launch of the International Microbiology Literacy Initiative, the IMiLI. HERE, WE PRESENT: our concept of how microbiology literacy may be achieved and the rationale underpinning it; the type of teaching resources being created to realise the concept and the framing of microbial activities treated in these resources in the context of sustainability, societal needs and responsibilities and decision-making; and the key role of Regional Centres that will translate the teaching resources into local languages, adapt them according to local cultural needs, interface with regional educators and develop and serve as hubs of microbiology literacy education networks. The topics featuring in teaching resources are learner-centric and have been selected for their inherent relevance, interest and ability to excite and engage. Importantly, the resources coherently integrate and emphasise the overarching issues of sustainability, stewardship and critical thinking and the pervasive interdependencies of processes. More broadly, the concept emphasises how the multifarious applications of microbial activities can be leveraged to promote human/animal, plant, environmental and planetary health, improve social equity, alleviate humanitarian deficits and causes of conflicts among peoples and increase understanding between peoples (Microbial Biotechnology, 2023, 16(6), 1091-1111). Importantly, although the primary target of the freely available (CC BY-NC 4.0) IMiLI teaching resources is schoolchildren and their educators, they and the teaching philosophy are intended for all ages, abilities and cultural spectra of learners worldwide: in university education, lifelong learning, curiosity-driven, web-based knowledge acquisition and public outreach. The IMiLI teaching resources aim to promote development of a global microbiology education ecosystem that democratises microbiology knowledge.

Keywords: International Microbiology Literacy Initiative (IMiLI); critical‐systems thinking; curriculum change; democratisation of microbiology knowledge; global citizenship; lifelong learning; microbial technologies; societal inequalities; sustainability‐sustainable development goals.

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Figures

FIGURE 1
FIGURE 1
The rationale of use of TFs.
FIGURE 2
FIGURE 2
The IMiLI teaching resources and their deployment in microbiology education.
FIGURE 3
FIGURE 3
The societally relevant microbiology education value cloud.
FIGURE 4
FIGURE 4
The IMiLI concept.
FIGURE 5
FIGURE 5
Principal actors in and drivers of evolution of the IMiLI.

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