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Creating a Sustainable World

By Charles Redman  

If you're concerned about environmental crisis and climate change, learn about sustainability. Look at our Featured Programs

Creating a Sustainable World

If you're concerned about environmental crisis and climate change, learn about sustainability.

What world leaders and citizens do to change the way we use resources early in this century will influence how we live for generations in the future. If you're concerned about environmental crisis and climate change, you will want to learn about sustainability—the concept and practice that may let us continue to enjoy life on this planet.

Sustainable development means "meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs" (Brundtland Commission). That means cutting only enough trees per year that can be regrown. That means minimize the burning of fossil fuel, which causes global warming. That means designing energy-efficient buildings, using recycled materials when possible. And it means rethinking our social institutions and the way we conduct our business to be more equitable to all both across the globe and in future generations.

Because universities are at the forefront of research and development, many U.S. campus leaders have decided that all future construction will be "sustainable" and that they will transform the daily operation of the campus to conserve resources.

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English for Sustainability and the Environment

The American English and Culture Program at Arizona State University offers English for Sustainability and the Environment, possibly the only U.S. language course focused solely on this topic. Students improve English language skills by discussing contemporary environmental issues and concerns. They take field trips to “green” buildings on campus and nearby, listen to expert speakers, and work on research projects dealing with such topics as water resources, Native American environmental practices, recycled building materials, and life in a desert community (the desert climate, adaptations by plants and animals, and implications for people.) Classes have visited the Grand Canyon and rare or threatened environments like the Desert Botanical Gardens, to explore how these treasures can be enjoyed and preserved for future generations.

Moreover, they are introducing courses, majors and conferences on sustainability.

You, the international student, can learn firsthand about this crucial concept the minute you decide to study in the U.S.A. You can practice recycling, eat locally grown food and wash your car and clothes with non-toxic, biodegradable products.

A leader in sustainability is Arizona State University near Phoenix, which has established the world's first School of Sustainability. The undergraduate, graduate and research programs focus on problems including urbanization, energy and water use, biodiversity, and economic and social development. Graduate students will be able to specialize in areas such as water use and conservation, sustainable construction techniques and materials, urbanization and planned communities, alternative fuels, and environmental health issues, including ozone pollution and "brown clouds." Students in the American English and Culture Program (AECP) at ASU have visited local "green" buildings and toured the School of Sustainability as part of their ESL studies.

Clark University is located in central Massachusetts, and is host to the department of International Development, Community, and Environment (IDCE). IDCE prepares students to become agents of social change in an increasingly interconnected world. The focus is on major forces of social change: grass roots initiatives, social movements, government policy, market approaches, entrepreneurship, technological innovation, individual action, and education.

The IDCE Department offers four distinct, yet interlinked Master's degree programs: International Development and Social Change (IDSC), Environmental Science and Policy (ES&P), Community Development and Planning (CDP), and Geographic Information Science for Development and Environment (GISDE) and two undergraduate degree programs: International Development and Social Change (IDSC) and Environmental Science and Policy (ES&P).

There are multiple existing and emerging exciting opportunities for IDCE students to get involved in sustainability efforts at multiple scales spanning the local to the international. ES&P students have been involved in Clark’s Sustainability Task Force which has developed a Climate Action Plan that is currently being finalized and will be online soon. Clark has also partnered with Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI) to initiate a new Institute for Energy Innovation and Sustainability in Worcester that has been designed to promote Central Massachusetts as a green energy hub.

As part of its commitment to environmental stewardship, Bemidji State University in Minnesota purchases five percent of its electricity from wind power and supports recycling, "green" cleaning and maintenance, and waste reduction programs. The Chemistry Department uses laboratory techniques that reduce hazardous waste and conserve purchases of new chemicals. The university maintains over 600 feet of Lake Bemidji shoreline with native plants and rocks as part of a restoration and stabilization project. At least one environmental course is required for a Liberal Arts degree at BSU.

Students in the Studies in American Language (SAL) Program at San Jose State University in California learn what Silicon Valley companies are doing to reduce energy usage and costs when their Business and Communication classes visit Adobe Systems' San Jose headquarters. "I was very impressed with their 'green' energy plan," said Chang Chi-Yu, from Taiwan, after a recent tour. "They really put the idea into practice." The building won a national award for measures such as drought tolerant landscaping. San Jose State employs energy-saving techniques on campus. Better glazing and new technology in lighting design and control systems have reduced the cooling and heating requirements of SJSU's new library building by one-third to nearly one-half.

Boulder, Colorado has been a center of environmental consciousness and sustainable practices since the 1960s. Sustainability is an interdisciplinary subject at University of Colorado at Boulder, with programs and classes offered by the departments of Engineering, Business, Arts and Sciences, and Architecture and Planning. CU is the home of one of the country's leading research institutes in environmental sciences, the law school's Energy and Environmental Security Initiative developing legal solutions and policies to solve the energy crisis, and a field laboratory for sustainable construction practices such as building with straw bales. The campus is frequently the site of sustainable development, green building and renewable resources conferences.

The American English and Culture Program at Arizona State University offers English for Sustainability and the Environment, possibly the only U.S. language course focused solely on this topic. Students improve English language skills by discussing contemporary environmental issues and concerns. They take field trips to "green" buildings on campus and nearby, listen to expert speakers, and work on research projects dealing with such topics as water resources, Native American environmental practices, recycled building materials, and life in a desert community (the desert climate, adaptations by plants and animals, and implications for people.) Classes have visited the Grand Canyon and rare or threatened environments like the Desert Botanical Gardens, to explore how these treasures can be enjoyed and preserved for future generations.

Cascadia Community College near Seattle is located directly across from a real-life laboratory for science students.  The College is restoring high-functioning wetlands, similar to those found on the site 200-300 years ago, complete with a stream and creekbed. From campus it’s an easy walk to this outdoor “classroom” to plant, care for and observe trees, shrubs, and herbaceous plants native to the area.

Cascadia students can earn a two-year transfer degree in Environmental Technologies and Sustainable Practices (ETSP). They gain expertise in subjects such as Solar Energy Systems, Energy Management, and Carbon Footprint and sustainability analysis.

The ETSP program has a strong applied science and hands-on culture with an emphasis on demonstrating technologies for the benefit of students, the community and local sustainable industries.

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By Charles Redman

Director of the Global Institute of Sustainability at Arizona State University.

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