National Council for Science and the Environment
HIGHER EDUCATION

The concept of sustainability can be a unifying principle for a wide range of interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary problems and solutions. It can serve to capture the interests and imaginations of students, faculty, administrators and governing boards and can vividly encapsulate the greater needs of human society.There are many challenges and opportunities with respect to the understanding and application of sustainability concepts at institutions of higher education.

RECOMMENDATIONS

Significant additional support is required for curriculum development, operations, and campus/community partnerships in the environmental education arena.The National Science Foundation (NSF) should focus its increased support on the high-priority areas listed below. As these are consistent with the environmental objectives of other federal, state and local agencies, as well as the private sector, all of these entities should be brought in as partners to support this agenda.

1. Curriculum Development, Graduate Studies, and Fellowships
To better understand the concept of sustainability and to foster faculty and student involvement, funding should be increased for curriculum development, graduates studies, and fellowships. This funding should:

  • encourage development and evaluation of interdisciplinary curricula and support their dissemination
  • provide opportunities for students to learn off campus in local communities.

2. Campus Community Partnerships
Partnerships between campuses and communities (including different professions, social groups and minority groups) should be established in order to:

  • enable students to be involved in service-learning and community partnerships
  • recruit minority students into environmental fields and programs, including through development of programs targeted to faculty and students at minority institutions
  • encourage collaborations between institutions of higher education and different segments of communities
  • support culturally-sensitive transfer of knowledge among people in different societies.

3. Training and Research Projects
NSF should fund training and research projects on sustainability and its integration into different aspects of university life by:

  • providing “bite-sized” grants (grants for smaller projects on the order of $10,000 each)
  • funding graduate student traineeships and fellowships in areas relating to sustainability
  • funding research on how to measure sustainability.


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