News Story
College receives national sustainability recognition
Colleen Shea/The Ithacan
Sophomore Jeremy Tagliaferre empties his recycling into the recycle bins yesterday outside Emerson Hall. The college was recognized nationally this month for its first-year sustainability initiative.
Ithaca College was one of nine schools to receive recognition from
the National Wildlife Federation this month for its sustainability
initiatives on campus.
The college will be recognized in the annual Campus Ecology
Yearbook, which gathers case studies from campus teams
documenting successful sustainable and environmental actions
taken by colleges and universities around the world. The NWF’s
mission is to inspire Americans to protect wildlife for future
generations.
Though more than 50 schools submitted yearbook applications,
the college was chosen based on its first-year seminar program,
“Sustaining Our World: Hope for the Future.” The program is the
result of the college’s effort to create interdisciplinary courses that
explore sustainability.
In the first-year seminar, students are exposed to the
environmental, economic and social aspects of sustainability, while
also focusing on issues students experience on campus.
Peter Bardaglio, provost and vice president for academic affairs,
said the recognition could be attributed directly to the work faculty
members have done to implement sustainability across the
curriculum.
“I am especially excited about the way in which the first-year
Ithaca seminar has exposed students to sustainability thinking in
the course,” he said.
Each college’s proposal, including its goals and objectives, was
reviewed by a panel of judges that looked at criteria, including
specific goals set by the schools, how they engage all levels of the
campus in sustainability, educational components and how
committed the school is toward conservation and sustainability,
said Kristin Kranendonk, NWF campus ecology coordinator.
“It’s one of the biggest ways to acknowledge schools,” she said.
The other colleges receiving awards are American University, Colby
College, Daemen College, Berkshire School, Franklin Pierce College,
University of British Columbia, University of West Alabama and
Williams College.
Marian Brown, assistant to the provost, who submitted the case
study that received the award, said part of the reason the college
received the recognition is because it’s still slightly unusual for a
campus to be implementing sustainability into the curriculum
across a variety of different disciplines.
“You catch students early in their college career, and you change
their world view and the way they see things,” she said.
David Saiia, assistant professor of business management, who
teaches one of the sections of the first-year seminar, said he was
pleasantly surprised with the news about the award.
“The whole sustainability concept is kind of rapidly evolving, and
more and more colleges and universities around the U.S. and
around the world are getting involved,” he said. “So [the college] is
really on the cutting edge of something really great.”
Freshman Jeff Bush said it’s important that all students are
exposed to sustainability.
“Sustainability is not just about the environment. It’s economics
and society,” he said. “If the class doesn’t tie into a student’s
major, then it ties into their lives.”