Purpose This study aims to examine how the combined use of technologies, such as Artificial Intelligence (AI), equity-oriented access strategies and sustainability-infused, interdisciplinary curricula, fosters the leadership competencies that K-12 systems need to support a future, ethically grounded space sector. Design/methodology/approach A PRISMA-guided systematic review of Google Scholar (2021 – May 2025) screened 3,570 records retrieved with the string “K-12 outer space education” AND STEM AND “transformative OR distributed OR instructional” AND “sustainability OR SDG” AND “equity OR inclusion” AND “Artificial Intelligence (AI)”. After dual-reviewer filtering and quality appraisal, 67 high-relevance studies were synthesized thematically and mapped onto a hybrid leadership framework. Findings When transformational vision, distributed decision-making and instructional data routines are present alongside VR/AR or AI tools it raises leadership self-efficacy, widens underrepresented participation and embeds sustainability literacy. AI personalization and analytics act as catalysts, but most interventions are short-term and geographically concentrated in North America and Europe. Originality/value Linking EdTech, equity scaffolds and SDG-aligned interdisciplinarity with a tri-paradigm (transformational–distributed–instructional) leadership lens, it is significant to translate those links into a quality-assurance framework that educational agencies can operationalize for the emerging space-education economy.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Rengui Xu
Union Hospital
LI Jian-jun
South China Agricultural University
Joohan Ryoo
Hanyang University
Quality Assurance in Education
Hanyang University
Capital Normal University
Handong Global University
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Xu et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6992b4469b75e639e9b093bd — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/qae-02-2025-0040