Jessica Nolanpointed out this campaign in GQ aimed at increasing scientific literacy: http://www.rockstarsofscience.org/rsos_portfolio.pdf
I wonder if we might not try campaigns like this of our own, with specific focus on the science of global warming?
Thursday, June 11, 2009
Wednesday, June 3, 2009
Useful Links--on climate change data
Here are links to which Mike Cann referred in his workshop presentation on 5/28/09. They are useful when you need data on climage change and its impact.
- Climate change information: http://data.giss.nasa.gov/gistemp/2008
- GDP growth rates:
CIA World Fact Book
https://cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2003rank.html
- The Sustainable Scale Project
http://www.sustainablescale.org/ConceptualFramework/UnderstandingScale/MeasuringScale/TheIPATEquation.aspx
/MeasuringScale/TheIPATEquation.aspx
- Ecological Overshoot:
http://www.footprintnetwork.org/en/index.php/GFN/page/world_footprint/
- BP statistical review of world energy:http://www.bp.com/productlanding.do?categoryId=6929&contentId=7044622
and a useful article reference: “A Plan to Keep Climate In Check” Robert H. Socolow & Stephen W. Pacala,
Scientific American, September, 2006, p 50-57
Tuesday, June 2, 2009
Green Computing
Our colleague in computer science, Jack Beidler, has developed a personal website that includes information on buying a green computer, together with a curricular module on green computing for use in the computer literacy courses. His website can be found at: http://www.scranton.edu/beidler
Reading for day 4
GreenBuz: March 31, 2008
Taking Care of Business
What's your footprint?It's a question being asked increasingly of both large and small companies. And it can be tough to answer. There's no standard definition or measurement of "footprint." In some contexts, it refers mainly to carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas emissions: a company's "carbon footprint." In others it refers to the full measure of impacts involved with designing products, sourcing materials, manufacturing, distribution, and sales -- and sometimes the use and disposal of products. In either case, figuring out what to count can involve equal parts art and science.Patagonia, the innovative and maverick clothing company, recently launched an interactive website describing in words and pictures the footprint of representative products. It's a fun visual tour of a typical product's path around the world. But it's much more than that, of course. It's also a chance for companies and their customers to assess a given product's biggest impacts, sometimes with surprising results. For example, Patagonia found that transportation represents a much smaller portion of energy use than previously thought.Patagonia isn't alone. Many companies are assessing their footprint, especially for carbon, and a few are disclosing them publicly, as columnist Coral Rose reported last year.It's a promising trend. As companies more fully understand their impacts, they will be better able to find opportunities for reducing emissions and costs, and their customers will be better able to make smart choices, reducing their impacts, too.
-- Joel Makower, Executive Editor
Please read the article below and then go to the Patagonia web site to review the Footprint Chronicles ( http://www.patagonia.com/web/us/footprint/index.jsp )
Patagonia Shares Eco-Footprint of Select Products with Consumers ( http://www.greenbiz.com/news/2008/03/25/patagonia-shares-eco-footprint-select-products-with-consumers )
By GreenBiz Staff
March 25, 2008
Patagonia unveiled last fall a microsite that examines the footprint of select products as part of a consumer education experiment.The company plans to track the paths of 10 more products this year, sharing what it has found as it looks at each product's environmental footprint from the design studio to its distribution center in Reno, Nevada, according to Fast Company magazine.So far, the Footprint Chronicles has turned up a few surprises, such as the fact that transportation of goods represents a much smaller percentage of total energy use in its supply chain; manufacturing of products accounted for far greater energy consumption."If we had followed environmental chatter and spent all that time shortening our supply chains, it would have had a huge impact on our product quality," Jill Dumain, Patagonia's director of environmental analysis, told the magazine. "To realize that our conservation efforts needed to be focused elsewhere was really freeing."The company also was open about its negative findings. For instance, its Eco Rain Shell jacket is made of recycled polyester components that save energy and produce little waste, yet the shell's water-repellent finish contains perfluorooctanoic acid, which accumulates in the bloodstream and may be toxic.Although the company believes removing the coating would sacrifice performance, one consumer called for its removal after learning about it on the website. Patagonia is trying to remove the chemical from its product lines.
Taking Care of Business
What's your footprint?It's a question being asked increasingly of both large and small companies. And it can be tough to answer. There's no standard definition or measurement of "footprint." In some contexts, it refers mainly to carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas emissions: a company's "carbon footprint." In others it refers to the full measure of impacts involved with designing products, sourcing materials, manufacturing, distribution, and sales -- and sometimes the use and disposal of products. In either case, figuring out what to count can involve equal parts art and science.Patagonia, the innovative and maverick clothing company, recently launched an interactive website describing in words and pictures the footprint of representative products. It's a fun visual tour of a typical product's path around the world. But it's much more than that, of course. It's also a chance for companies and their customers to assess a given product's biggest impacts, sometimes with surprising results. For example, Patagonia found that transportation represents a much smaller portion of energy use than previously thought.Patagonia isn't alone. Many companies are assessing their footprint, especially for carbon, and a few are disclosing them publicly, as columnist Coral Rose reported last year.It's a promising trend. As companies more fully understand their impacts, they will be better able to find opportunities for reducing emissions and costs, and their customers will be better able to make smart choices, reducing their impacts, too.
-- Joel Makower, Executive Editor
Please read the article below and then go to the Patagonia web site to review the Footprint Chronicles ( http://www.patagonia.com/web/us/footprint/index.jsp )
Patagonia Shares Eco-Footprint of Select Products with Consumers ( http://www.greenbiz.com/news/2008/03/25/patagonia-shares-eco-footprint-select-products-with-consumers )
By GreenBiz Staff
March 25, 2008
Patagonia unveiled last fall a microsite that examines the footprint of select products as part of a consumer education experiment.The company plans to track the paths of 10 more products this year, sharing what it has found as it looks at each product's environmental footprint from the design studio to its distribution center in Reno, Nevada, according to Fast Company magazine.So far, the Footprint Chronicles has turned up a few surprises, such as the fact that transportation of goods represents a much smaller percentage of total energy use in its supply chain; manufacturing of products accounted for far greater energy consumption."If we had followed environmental chatter and spent all that time shortening our supply chains, it would have had a huge impact on our product quality," Jill Dumain, Patagonia's director of environmental analysis, told the magazine. "To realize that our conservation efforts needed to be focused elsewhere was really freeing."The company also was open about its negative findings. For instance, its Eco Rain Shell jacket is made of recycled polyester components that save energy and produce little waste, yet the shell's water-repellent finish contains perfluorooctanoic acid, which accumulates in the bloodstream and may be toxic.Although the company believes removing the coating would sacrifice performance, one consumer called for its removal after learning about it on the website. Patagonia is trying to remove the chemical from its product lines.
Reading for day 3 social sustainability
What is social sustainability?
Definition and principles of sustainability contain the social
Sustainability has grown out of the environmental movement and in many people’s minds is mostly about the broader aspects of the environment – reducing resource consumption,
reducing automobile dependence, reducing the processes that lead to land degradation.
However, it didn’t take long for people to realize that this agenda could not be achieved without making social considerations a priority. Households and communities consume resources; cities and suburbs become car dependent; regional and local communities prioritize land management. Thus social considerations were drawn into how we understand sustainability, though without a clear understanding of what that could mean. In particular, the link between social justice and sustainability is being heavily debated …
The social sustainability agenda does not mean that every social agenda is part of it.
Sustainability is about social causes that simultaneously produce economic and
environmental benefit. It is about environmental causes that simultaneously produce
economic and social benefit, and it is about economic causes that have social and
environmental benefit. Not everything fits this. Throwing the word “sustainability” onto the end of a pet social cause doesn’t or shouldn’t cut any ice just as it doesn’t when a business tries to add luster to its case by liberally spraying “sustainability” about on its brochures. Sustainability has to be argued and demonstrated, and not just used as a vague context word…
Social disparities do generally have multiple implications that can be related to
sustainability. …disparities [can] lead to unsustainability--particularly with social issues such as housing, health, education, transport. For example, housing affordability, quality and location can lead to poorer people wasting energy and water and traveling far too much when they can least afford it. Generally, for such disparities to be understood in terms of their environmental aspects, it requires the social issue to be analyzed in terms of its geography or place implications. This is not always done yet the issue becomes much richer and more policy relevant when it is.
Social sustainability is about social capital related to place
People cannot live truly without relating to place. Modernism suggests we can float through life as observers and consumers not belonging anywhere. But such is not the worldview of those holding indigenous and traditional beliefs… Sustainability challenges modernism that reduces everything to a global professional function and finds “belonging” and “sense of place” to be nonsense. A “sense of place” and heritage “reaches some deeper hunger for continuity when the future may appear cavernously unpredictable,” says Kim Wikie (quoted recently by Andre Malan when discussing the importance of place). Sustainability challenges globalization (the global modernism agenda) to show that bioregions and communities do matter. [Social sustainability approaches] … show that the social dimension is the missing link of economic planning in regions…It suggests that regional sustainability strategies need to develop new ways of bringing “sense of place” perspectives into regions [in both rural and urban areas]. This will require an understanding of the story of a region – its aboriginal story, its local history and its natural history. This is now called “place narrative” and only by doing this can a place or region create a long term vision for its future and hence shape its development.
Social sustainability is about values and visions shaping the market.
The market has been shaped by community values and visions to prevent slavery, child labor and excessive working hours. …Environmental assessment is another process shaping the market. Sustainability provides us with a coherent checklist for drawing together our core values about economic, social and environmental benefits that we want for our future. It asserts fundamental human rights, but it is wary of fundamentalism. Just as we cannot say “fix the market and we fix everything,” we cannot say “fix the environment and we fix everything” or “fix the community and we fix everything.” We need values that integrate these three.
[…]
Social sustainability gives new substance to transparent participatory processes, to
multiculturalism and to the arts.
The sustainability agenda is a list of really hard issues, long-term complex issues that do not lend themselves to simple engineering or financial solutions. Transparent participatory processes are highlighted by sustainability not only because of the human right to be informed but because without it we won’t solve the problems. … deliberative democracy is required to solve “wicked problems” that logic cannot solve. These issues require innovation based on dialogue from different perspectives. Such innovation comes from welcoming differences and delighting therefore in multiculturalism. It also recognizes the importance of artistic voices that can probe beneath the surface and push us into new awareness.
(adapted by Sharon Meagher from THE SOCIAL SIDE OF THE STATE SUSTAINABILITY STRATEGY By Professor Peter Newman, Director, Sustainability Policy Unit Department of the Premier and Cabinet, Western Australia, available on the website for The Sigma Project--Sustainability --Integrated Guidelines for Management, the UK Department of Trade and Industry; the unedited text can be found at: http://72.14.207.104/search?q=cache:P-9Ya0ZUF_YJ:www.projectsigma.com/RnDStreams/RD_soc_research.pdf+social+sustainability&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=19)
Definition and principles of sustainability contain the social
Sustainability has grown out of the environmental movement and in many people’s minds is mostly about the broader aspects of the environment – reducing resource consumption,
reducing automobile dependence, reducing the processes that lead to land degradation.
However, it didn’t take long for people to realize that this agenda could not be achieved without making social considerations a priority. Households and communities consume resources; cities and suburbs become car dependent; regional and local communities prioritize land management. Thus social considerations were drawn into how we understand sustainability, though without a clear understanding of what that could mean. In particular, the link between social justice and sustainability is being heavily debated …
The social sustainability agenda does not mean that every social agenda is part of it.
Sustainability is about social causes that simultaneously produce economic and
environmental benefit. It is about environmental causes that simultaneously produce
economic and social benefit, and it is about economic causes that have social and
environmental benefit. Not everything fits this. Throwing the word “sustainability” onto the end of a pet social cause doesn’t or shouldn’t cut any ice just as it doesn’t when a business tries to add luster to its case by liberally spraying “sustainability” about on its brochures. Sustainability has to be argued and demonstrated, and not just used as a vague context word…
Social disparities do generally have multiple implications that can be related to
sustainability. …disparities [can] lead to unsustainability--particularly with social issues such as housing, health, education, transport. For example, housing affordability, quality and location can lead to poorer people wasting energy and water and traveling far too much when they can least afford it. Generally, for such disparities to be understood in terms of their environmental aspects, it requires the social issue to be analyzed in terms of its geography or place implications. This is not always done yet the issue becomes much richer and more policy relevant when it is.
Social sustainability is about social capital related to place
People cannot live truly without relating to place. Modernism suggests we can float through life as observers and consumers not belonging anywhere. But such is not the worldview of those holding indigenous and traditional beliefs… Sustainability challenges modernism that reduces everything to a global professional function and finds “belonging” and “sense of place” to be nonsense. A “sense of place” and heritage “reaches some deeper hunger for continuity when the future may appear cavernously unpredictable,” says Kim Wikie (quoted recently by Andre Malan when discussing the importance of place). Sustainability challenges globalization (the global modernism agenda) to show that bioregions and communities do matter. [Social sustainability approaches] … show that the social dimension is the missing link of economic planning in regions…It suggests that regional sustainability strategies need to develop new ways of bringing “sense of place” perspectives into regions [in both rural and urban areas]. This will require an understanding of the story of a region – its aboriginal story, its local history and its natural history. This is now called “place narrative” and only by doing this can a place or region create a long term vision for its future and hence shape its development.
Social sustainability is about values and visions shaping the market.
The market has been shaped by community values and visions to prevent slavery, child labor and excessive working hours. …Environmental assessment is another process shaping the market. Sustainability provides us with a coherent checklist for drawing together our core values about economic, social and environmental benefits that we want for our future. It asserts fundamental human rights, but it is wary of fundamentalism. Just as we cannot say “fix the market and we fix everything,” we cannot say “fix the environment and we fix everything” or “fix the community and we fix everything.” We need values that integrate these three.
[…]
Social sustainability gives new substance to transparent participatory processes, to
multiculturalism and to the arts.
The sustainability agenda is a list of really hard issues, long-term complex issues that do not lend themselves to simple engineering or financial solutions. Transparent participatory processes are highlighted by sustainability not only because of the human right to be informed but because without it we won’t solve the problems. … deliberative democracy is required to solve “wicked problems” that logic cannot solve. These issues require innovation based on dialogue from different perspectives. Such innovation comes from welcoming differences and delighting therefore in multiculturalism. It also recognizes the importance of artistic voices that can probe beneath the surface and push us into new awareness.
(adapted by Sharon Meagher from THE SOCIAL SIDE OF THE STATE SUSTAINABILITY STRATEGY By Professor Peter Newman, Director, Sustainability Policy Unit Department of the Premier and Cabinet, Western Australia, available on the website for The Sigma Project--Sustainability --Integrated Guidelines for Management, the UK Department of Trade and Industry; the unedited text can be found at: http://72.14.207.104/search?q=cache:P-9Ya0ZUF_YJ:www.projectsigma.com/RnDStreams/RD_soc_research.pdf+social+sustainability&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=19)
Readings for May 2009 workshop
Day 1: What is sustainability?
a) Definitions of sustainability: There are many definitions of “sustainability.” The most commonly used definition is from the UN Brundtland Report. Please read definitions at: http://www.ecy.wa.gov/sustainability/more_defns.htm
b) Introduction to sustainability: please read “Introduction to Sustainability” at http://www.sustainablemeasures.com/Sustainability/ and then at bottom of this web page click on “An even Better Picture of a Sustainable Community,” or on this direct link: http://www.sustainablemeasures.com/Sustainability/ABetterView.html
OPTIONAL RESOURCE:
For further exploration of sustainability definitions: The City of Philadelphia has a website that includes links to many more definitions and considerations of sustainability. If you wish to examine additional definitions, see: http://sustainablephiladelphia.com/html/whatis.html and scroll down to “definitions of sustainability on the web”; there you can trace the origins of many of the definitions.
Day 2: Sustainability and the Environment
As you have seen from yesterday’s reading (Introduction to Sustainability), the environment, society and economics are intertwined. In the second, third, and fourth readings we will focus in turn on each of these areas. Today’s readings primarily focus on the Environment. Human consumption of natural (particularly nonrenewable) resources and the concomitant production of waste (pollution) is a central issue of sustainability and how it relates to the environment.
a) overview of environmental issues: Please read Chapter 1. Entering a New World (pdf), from Plan B 3.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization (W.W. Norton & Company).
http://www.earth-policy.org/Books/PB3/Contents.htm
b) ecological footprint: To get an idea of how your lifestyle affects the environment, please calculate your ecological footprint at http://www.myfootprint.org/
OPTIONAL RESOURCES:
--Lester Brown’s 2008 entire book is available at: http://www.earth-policy.org/Books/PB3/Contents.htm (entire book) Plan B 3.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization (W.W. Norton & Company).
--Local environmental scorecard: This is a link to a website that provides an environmental scorecard for local areas by entering your zip code; it’s useful for finding specific facts and figures about Scranton or wherever you live:
http://www.scorecard.org/community/index.tcl?zip_code=18510&set_community_zipcode_cookie_p=t&x=45&y=7%20
Day 3: Social Sustainability and Social Justice
The third readings focus on the issues of society and justice.
a) “What is social sustainability?” (please see the attached article)
b) The Catholic Church on Ecological Degradation: http://faculty.theo.mu.edu/schaefer/ChurchonEcologicalDegradation/CatholicChurchonEnvironmentalDegradation.shtml
OPTIONAL RESOURCE:
on environmental justice: Definition and history of environmental justice: http://www.epa.gov/compliance/basics/ejbackground.html
--for a fuller history of the environmental justice movement, see R.D. Bullard’s article: http://www.ejrc.cau.edu/ejinthe21century.htm
Day 4: Economics and Business
Today’s readings center on economics and business. Please open the two attachments: Reading 4 #1Patagonia_Footprint
Reading 4 #2: To get a sense of where business is today with regard to climate change and overall sustainability, please visit the United States Climate Action Partnership (USCAP) wesite. You will note that many large corporations have joined forces with NGOs (non-government organizations) to solve the climate change problem that the US government is avoiding.
“We are committed to a pathway that will slow, stop and reverse the growth of U.S. emissions while expanding the U.S. economy.”
http://www.us-cap.org/
As you peruse the site, browse through the Summary Overview: A Blueprint for Legislative Action at http://www.us-cap.org/blueprint/overview.asp. The article should give you a good idea of the position that big business is taking with regard to climate action and jump-starting the economy.
OPTIONAL RESOURCE: more on business and the environment: http://www.bsdglobal.com/sd_journey.asp; this webpage contains lots of resources for those wanting to explore more but the assigned reading focuses on the “big picture.” It is particularly helpful in showing how sustainable business requires more than just mere compliance with environmental regulations.
Day 5: Health
The fifth readings focus on health issues related to air pollution and other environmental toxins.
a) “Air Pollution Fatalities New Exceed Traffic Fatalities by 3 to 1” http://www.earth-policy.org/Updates/Update17.htm
b) Children's Environmental Health: http://www.who.int/ceh/en/ and then click on left link "risks" for further information
OPTIONAL RESOURCE:
--on environmental estrogens: http://www.worldandi.com/public/2001/October/ee.html
Day 6: Education
The UN has declared the years 2005-14 as the Decade of Education for Sustainable Development. The infusion of sustainability into the curriculum at Scranton is in conjunction with a UN driven worldwide effort to bring attention to the issues of sustainability. The following readings should put our efforts into perspective:
For the UN’s vision of education for sustainable development, please see: http://portal.unesco.org/education/en/ev.php-URL_ID=27279&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html
Then follow links of greatest interest/use to you. Teacher educators might be interested in: http://portal.unesco.org/education/en/ev.php-URL_ID=48712&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html
Day 7: Curriculum Infusion Models
The seventh readings also focus on Education—Emory University has been involved in infusing sustainability across their curriculum for several years and has developed a terrific website detailing their activities.
a) Please go to Emory University’s sustainability curriculum infusion project (The Piedmont Project) http://www.scienceandsociety.emory.edu/piedmont/index.htm and pay particular attention to the syllabi/course modules [click on the “curriculum” link], especially the ones most relevant to you.
b) In addition, please review the University of Scranton’s Education for Justice: The Case for Sustainability project, on-line at: http://matrix.scranton.edu/sustainability/. If you go to the academic link (http://matrix.scranton.edu/sustainability/done-academics.shtml) you will then find a link to the Workshop on Sustainability (http://matrix.scranton.edu/sustainability/workshop-2005-2006.shtml). This page will provide you with examples of course statements and syllabi of courses at the University where sustainability is infused. These provide a wealth of information on not only content but pedagogy. Please peruse these and feel free to contact faculty if you have any questions. These may even provide the impetus for you to explore interdisciplinary efforts. A year from now we will be asking you for the same information to post on this site.
Day 8: Finding additional resources for your own courses/disciplinary interests
As we hope the small sampling of readings we have done over the past several days shows, the internet provides us with a rich array of resources on sustainability (of course, so do good, old-fashioned books and articles). Please go to: http://www.sustainable.org/ and scroll down to the bottom of the page to find additional resources and links organized around major sustainability topics. Choose at least one link that you think will be helpful to you in redesigning your course, and come prepared to discuss it on Thursday, May 28-29th.
a) Definitions of sustainability: There are many definitions of “sustainability.” The most commonly used definition is from the UN Brundtland Report. Please read definitions at: http://www.ecy.wa.gov/sustainability/more_defns.htm
b) Introduction to sustainability: please read “Introduction to Sustainability” at http://www.sustainablemeasures.com/Sustainability/ and then at bottom of this web page click on “An even Better Picture of a Sustainable Community,” or on this direct link: http://www.sustainablemeasures.com/Sustainability/ABetterView.html
OPTIONAL RESOURCE:
For further exploration of sustainability definitions: The City of Philadelphia has a website that includes links to many more definitions and considerations of sustainability. If you wish to examine additional definitions, see: http://sustainablephiladelphia.com/html/whatis.html and scroll down to “definitions of sustainability on the web”; there you can trace the origins of many of the definitions.
Day 2: Sustainability and the Environment
As you have seen from yesterday’s reading (Introduction to Sustainability), the environment, society and economics are intertwined. In the second, third, and fourth readings we will focus in turn on each of these areas. Today’s readings primarily focus on the Environment. Human consumption of natural (particularly nonrenewable) resources and the concomitant production of waste (pollution) is a central issue of sustainability and how it relates to the environment.
a) overview of environmental issues: Please read Chapter 1. Entering a New World (pdf), from Plan B 3.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization (W.W. Norton & Company).
http://www.earth-policy.org/Books/PB3/Contents.htm
b) ecological footprint: To get an idea of how your lifestyle affects the environment, please calculate your ecological footprint at http://www.myfootprint.org/
OPTIONAL RESOURCES:
--Lester Brown’s 2008 entire book is available at: http://www.earth-policy.org/Books/PB3/Contents.htm (entire book) Plan B 3.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization (W.W. Norton & Company).
--Local environmental scorecard: This is a link to a website that provides an environmental scorecard for local areas by entering your zip code; it’s useful for finding specific facts and figures about Scranton or wherever you live:
http://www.scorecard.org/community/index.tcl?zip_code=18510&set_community_zipcode_cookie_p=t&x=45&y=7%20
Day 3: Social Sustainability and Social Justice
The third readings focus on the issues of society and justice.
a) “What is social sustainability?” (please see the attached article)
b) The Catholic Church on Ecological Degradation: http://faculty.theo.mu.edu/schaefer/ChurchonEcologicalDegradation/CatholicChurchonEnvironmentalDegradation.shtml
OPTIONAL RESOURCE:
on environmental justice: Definition and history of environmental justice: http://www.epa.gov/compliance/basics/ejbackground.html
--for a fuller history of the environmental justice movement, see R.D. Bullard’s article: http://www.ejrc.cau.edu/ejinthe21century.htm
Day 4: Economics and Business
Today’s readings center on economics and business. Please open the two attachments: Reading 4 #1Patagonia_Footprint
Reading 4 #2: To get a sense of where business is today with regard to climate change and overall sustainability, please visit the United States Climate Action Partnership (USCAP) wesite. You will note that many large corporations have joined forces with NGOs (non-government organizations) to solve the climate change problem that the US government is avoiding.
“We are committed to a pathway that will slow, stop and reverse the growth of U.S. emissions while expanding the U.S. economy.”
http://www.us-cap.org/
As you peruse the site, browse through the Summary Overview: A Blueprint for Legislative Action at http://www.us-cap.org/blueprint/overview.asp. The article should give you a good idea of the position that big business is taking with regard to climate action and jump-starting the economy.
OPTIONAL RESOURCE: more on business and the environment: http://www.bsdglobal.com/sd_journey.asp; this webpage contains lots of resources for those wanting to explore more but the assigned reading focuses on the “big picture.” It is particularly helpful in showing how sustainable business requires more than just mere compliance with environmental regulations.
Day 5: Health
The fifth readings focus on health issues related to air pollution and other environmental toxins.
a) “Air Pollution Fatalities New Exceed Traffic Fatalities by 3 to 1” http://www.earth-policy.org/Updates/Update17.htm
b) Children's Environmental Health: http://www.who.int/ceh/en/ and then click on left link "risks" for further information
OPTIONAL RESOURCE:
--on environmental estrogens: http://www.worldandi.com/public/2001/October/ee.html
Day 6: Education
The UN has declared the years 2005-14 as the Decade of Education for Sustainable Development. The infusion of sustainability into the curriculum at Scranton is in conjunction with a UN driven worldwide effort to bring attention to the issues of sustainability. The following readings should put our efforts into perspective:
For the UN’s vision of education for sustainable development, please see: http://portal.unesco.org/education/en/ev.php-URL_ID=27279&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html
Then follow links of greatest interest/use to you. Teacher educators might be interested in: http://portal.unesco.org/education/en/ev.php-URL_ID=48712&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html
Day 7: Curriculum Infusion Models
The seventh readings also focus on Education—Emory University has been involved in infusing sustainability across their curriculum for several years and has developed a terrific website detailing their activities.
a) Please go to Emory University’s sustainability curriculum infusion project (The Piedmont Project) http://www.scienceandsociety.emory.edu/piedmont/index.htm and pay particular attention to the syllabi/course modules [click on the “curriculum” link], especially the ones most relevant to you.
b) In addition, please review the University of Scranton’s Education for Justice: The Case for Sustainability project, on-line at: http://matrix.scranton.edu/sustainability/. If you go to the academic link (http://matrix.scranton.edu/sustainability/done-academics.shtml) you will then find a link to the Workshop on Sustainability (http://matrix.scranton.edu/sustainability/workshop-2005-2006.shtml). This page will provide you with examples of course statements and syllabi of courses at the University where sustainability is infused. These provide a wealth of information on not only content but pedagogy. Please peruse these and feel free to contact faculty if you have any questions. These may even provide the impetus for you to explore interdisciplinary efforts. A year from now we will be asking you for the same information to post on this site.
Day 8: Finding additional resources for your own courses/disciplinary interests
As we hope the small sampling of readings we have done over the past several days shows, the internet provides us with a rich array of resources on sustainability (of course, so do good, old-fashioned books and articles). Please go to: http://www.sustainable.org/ and scroll down to the bottom of the page to find additional resources and links organized around major sustainability topics. Choose at least one link that you think will be helpful to you in redesigning your course, and come prepared to discuss it on Thursday, May 28-29th.
The environment and motivating people
Here is an article suggested by Jessica Nolan that summarizes psychological research that explains the "disconnect" between global warning risks and people's actions. http://www.psychologicalscience.org/observer/getArticle.cfm?id=2467
Monday, May 11, 2009
The Denaples Center Wins Award
The Denaples Center was awarded LEED Silver certification--a major step towards our campus's sustainability initiatives. For an article on this award, please see the Times Leader article:
U of S DeNaples Center wins national award: http://www.timesleader.com/news/U_of_S_DeNaples_Center_wins_national_award_05-06-2009.html
U of S DeNaples Center wins national award: http://www.timesleader.com/news/U_of_S_DeNaples_Center_wins_national_award_05-06-2009.html
Tuesday, February 17, 2009
Gratefulness and Sustainability
www.gratefulness.org
WORD FOR THE DAY
Tuesday, Feb. 17
In the end we will conserve only what we love. We will love only what we understand. We will understand only what we are taught.
Baba Dioum, Senegalese conservationist (b. 1937)
WORD FOR THE DAY
Tuesday, Feb. 17
In the end we will conserve only what we love. We will love only what we understand. We will understand only what we are taught.
Baba Dioum, Senegalese conservationist (b. 1937)
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