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Emory University's campus
is situated in Atlanta, in Georgia's piedmont. |
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Sustainability Initiative Transforms
Emory's Curriculum, One Course at a Time
Emory University is situated in
Georgia's piedmont, a region of rolling hills and forests
that lies between the Appalachian Mountains and the Atlantic
coastal plain. It is also situated in the sprawling Atlanta
metropolitan area. Promoting understanding of these two environments—the
natural and the built—is a primary aim of Emory's
Piedmont Project, an innovative program that helps faculty
incorporate sustainability and environmental issues into their
teaching.
The Piedmont Project takes
a decentralized, faculty-led approach to reform. Each summer, faculty from a range of disciplines participate
in the project. They take an intensive workshop on sustainability,
learn about piedmont ecosystems and local environmental problems,
and ultimately develop new courses or course modules. Although
the project may seem modest in scale, Emory is finding that
it can nonetheless produce deep transformations—in the
lives and pedagogies of individual faculty members as well
as in the courses they teach.
A New Faculty Development Program
Peggy Barlett, a professor of anthropology
at Emory University, helped to found the Piedmont Project
five years ago. Up until then, Emory's sustainability
initiatives had focused not on courses but operations—reducing
campus energy use, encouraging alternative transportation,
constructing green buildings. In 2000, however, Barlett saw
a possible model for broad curricular reform in Northern Arizona
University's Ponderosa Project, a sustainability program
in which she was then participating as a guest. After returning
from Arizona and finding enthusiasm for starting a similar
project at Emory, Barlett teamed up with Arri Eisen, a biologist
who directs Emory's Program in Science and Society,
and launched the Piedmont Project.
Barlett and Eisen continue to lead
the Piedmont Project today. Each year since its founding,
the project has supported about twenty faculty as they develop
new courses or modules for existing courses. This new course
content is meant to help students learn about sustainable
communities, local and global ecological problems, environmental
justice, and related social, political, and economic issues.
A range of organized activities
support the course development. The project begins after graduation
in May with an intensive two-day workshop. At the end of summer,
when the course development work is complete, faculty take
a field trip, and they reunite again in the following spring
to compare notes and reflect on their experiences. In addition
to introducing participants to local environmental issues,
such activities build a sense of community, creating new conversations
among faculty from different disciplines.
Connecting to Place
According to Peggy Barlett, the
connection between faculty and place fostered in the initial
two-day workshop is the key to the Piedmont Project's success.
Project participants—who, as academics, have typically come
to Emory from other parts of the country—often lack a strong
sense of rootedness. "We are in the piedmont of Georgia,"
says Barlett. "What does that mean?"
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| Faculty in the Piedmont Project learn
about local ecosystems firsthand through field trips and
woods walks. Photo by Anne L. Hall. |
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To help faculty answer this question,
the workshops feature a series of "resource people," experts
who give presentations on local environmental issues. One
resource person discusses the ecology of the piedmont; one
talks about the social and political dimensions of sustainability
in Atlanta; another speaks about how sustainability issues
bear on day-to-day campus life. These specialist talks are
interspersed with group discussion, which Barlett says builds
a "rhythm of hearing something and then going into small groups
to talk about it, think together about it, brainstorm."
The project also connects faculty
to place through hands-on learning. Both days of the workshop
feature guided afternoon "woods walks" in which faculty "learn
through smelling and feeling and walking through the forest,"
Barlett says. On one walk, for example, the group visits a
small old-growth forest on campus, which contrasts with the
second- and third-growth forests that predominate in Georgia's
piedmont. They also learn firsthand about some of the threats
facing piedmont forests, seeing how invasive species, soil
erosion, and stream degradation affect local ecosystems.
Building a Greener Curriculum
Although the Piedmont Project is
a relatively small faculty development program, its cumulative
effect on undergraduate education at Emory has been significant.
Each year, the new content developed by just one cohort of
professors reaches from six hundred to one thousand students.
Surveys of faculty participants reveal other promising trends:
although faculty commit to changing only one course, more
than half end up changing two or three, and three-quarters
of faculty say that they incorporate more experiential teaching
methods into their courses. Increased civic engagement and
interdisciplinarity in the curriculum are other indirect results
of the project.
The curricular changes spurred by
the project vary widely and cut across disciplines. One English
professor who participated in the project added an experiential
component to his class on romanticism and natural history,
requiring students to directly observe and write about nature.
Other professors have designed courses that exploit the "hidden
curriculum," or the incidental content of courses—for
instance, students in one Chinese course write pamphlets about
Emory's relationship to the environment as a way of
improving their language skills. Some courses, such as those
influenced by "green chemistry," address environmental
issues directly through new laboratory practices and experiments.
One chemistry professor has even developed an introductory
class that teaches basic concepts in chemistry entirely through the
issue of global warming.
The Piedmont Project, however, also
faces obstacles as it seeks to effect broad curricular change.
While the project's participants typically represent
a diverse cross-section of Emory's campus, they are
still a self-selecting group—as, to some extent, are
the students who choose to enroll in courses that address
sustainability. And the program's own sustainability
is not entirely secure: the project has only been funded on
a year-to-year basis until now, although Peggy Barlett and
Arri Eisen are currently searching for a permanent source
of funding.
Despite such challenges, Eisen believes
that higher education can and must be at the center of efforts
to build a sustainable future. Environmental sustainability,
he says, "simply cannot be addressed effectively without
rich multidisciplinary conversation, investigation, experimentation,
and action"—things that colleges and universities,
at their best, can support. Moreover, campuses can provide
a starting point for larger efforts to raise environmental
awareness. "The Piedmont Project has made me realize
that one thing that works is starting small and local,"
Eisen says.
Colleges and universities themselves,
of course, also benefit from sustainability efforts, even
apart from the curricular innovations. Campuses can draw strength
from the sense of community and personal fulfillment that
results from faculty development efforts like the Piedmont
Project. "There are a lot of ways in which the university
fragments us, and there's a lot of intellectual and
personal nourishment in learning together," Barlett
says. "The Piedmont Project, I think, reestablishes
that joy of learning—that's part of why we got
into this in the first place."
More
information about the
Piedmont Project is available on Emory University's Web
site. An analysis of faculty experiences of the project can
be found in an essay by Peggy Barlett that is included in
Urban Place: Reconnecting with the Natural World,
a forthcoming book from MIT
Press. AAC&U supports campus sustainability efforts
through a partnership with University
Leaders for a Sustainable Future and through its advocacy
of learning
for a world lived in common.
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