The greenest colleges in the U.S.
Photo: Hey Paul/Flickr
Forget your grandmother or your mother. This isn’t even your older sister’s environmentalism. Five years ago, green residence halls or organic dining would have seemed like cutting edge improvements of a campus’ environmental impact, but no longer. “Things that would’ve been really impressive three or four years ago are now kind of commonplace,” says Julian Dautremont-Smith, associate director for the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education.




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Comments
View:Good Stuff
Posted By real-exams - Tue, Nov 24 2009 at 4:07 AM ESTThis is a very interesting story. I really like it.
CORRECTION
Posted By Anonymous - Fri, Sep 04 2009 at 1:48 PM ESTUniversity of Colorado was NOT the first college to attempt zero-waste football games. University of California, Davis (for example) started this a year earlier.
The Greatnest
Posted By Nensi - Wed, Jul 22 2009 at 3:46 PM ESTThe scores were generated through surveys of over 120,000 students currently attending 368 institutions. Questions on the survey included everything from energy use, recycling, food 640-553, buildings, transportation, academic course offerings, and long-term action plans to mitigate their respective carbon footprint. Robert Franek, vice president of the Princeton Review, summarized their part in this new endeavor by stating,.... More
Sterling College, Vermont- A Work College
Posted By Ann Guyer, Trustee - Sun, May 24 2009 at 9:29 AM ESTI expected that Sterling would be on the radar on this site. Sterling is a little college in the beautiful Northeast Kingdom of Vermont with programs in Conservation Ecology, Sustainable Agriculture, Circumpolar Studies and Outdoor Education & Leadership and including the Center for Northern Studies. The faculty is remarkable and the college attracts students interested in self designed degree programs in these areas. Sterling was founded in 1958 as a boys school and has been a 4 year.... More
A Sticky Subject
Posted By Uncle B - Fri, May 22 2009 at 2:06 PM ESTA sticky subject to say the least, but some parts of the U.S. have already perfected dry urinals, and we need dry toilets badly in drought areas, yet we stick to the "Crapper" an 18th century marvel indeed, but American engineering has come a long way since then, (outer space even!) and still, the world copies the old Brits and their out commoded design? Humanure is considered a resource flow in many countries, India, Sweden and Norway are on record on the net for making bio-gas for fuel, and a.... More
Greening...the courses
Posted By Noah Pollock - Tue, Apr 21 2009 at 8:41 AM ESTThanks for a great compilation of some of the innovative steps colleges are taking to green their campuses. However, you left out one very important category: the educational process itself. A truly green university also takes steps to reshape the way courses are taught and degrees are organized. For example, here at the University of Vermont, professors are increasingly committing to fostering learning and service for the purpose of developing solutions for interconnected environmental and.... More
Yes, we agree
Posted By Hope Dlugozima - Tue, Apr 21 2009 at 3:26 PM ESTthat's a great story idea for us & we'll consider writing an article about it...you're right that the teaching itself is part of the green process...not just the buildings.




















Green Colleges
Posted By Barbara Morrow - Sat, Jul 03 2010 at 3:37 PM ESTIt's not just about green buildings or even green teaching, it's about GREEN LIVING every day. That's why it was so surprising not to see Sterling College (VT) in this article. Sterling has been doing everything mentioned and more, for over 30 years. It's about a green life, not a green course.