Vermont’s Sterling College Adopts New Mission & Vision

CRAFTSBURY COMMON, VT – The president of Sterling College recently said higher education is contributing to the catastrophic loss of the planet’s biodiversity and is worsening the effects of climate change by leaving a generation unprepared for the ecological and social crises ahead. This is a climate emergency.

“Colleges and universities, like strip mines that cleave off the tops of mountains and factories that produce herbicides, have been co-conspirators in the emergency now unfolding,” says Sterling President Matthew Derr. “It is critical, and overdue, that the academy, and its leaders, take action to avert imminent calamity.”

Higher education is addicted to and promotes extractive economic growth and consumption, Derr says. The seizure of the planet’s natural wealth for financial gain is a moral issue. If we continue to be the training ground for extractive economies—capitalist or socialist—that rob graduates of the livelihoods they promise, we will betray this and future generations. Instead, we must offer the education they need to contend with the ecological crises ahead.

For more than 50 years Sterling College has focused on learning about and engaging with the natural world. Under a bold, 10-year initiative released earlier this month, Sterling College—among the first in the country to divest from fossil fuels—will focus its programs on advancing ecological thinking and action. Sterling believes that neither the narrow technician nor the uninformed idealist alone will be ready to address the critical issues facing humanity; but now the stakes for humanity and the natural world are at a crisis point.

The college’s new strategic initiative—unanimously endorsed by trustees and faculty—names the forces leading to climate apocalypse: fossil fuel dependence; destruction of biodiversity; promotion of harmful agricultural practices; persistence of structural oppression that impacts human and natural communities; and the deterioration of civil society through estrangement from community, nature and place.

“Students know that they will face the consequences of inaction on climate change, and they are losing patience,” Derr says. “The Extinction Rebellion, Youth Strike 4 Climate, and the powerful voices of student leaders like Greta Thunberg should inspire higher education leadership to join their efforts to halt the reckless and destructive expending of the planet’s resources. Failure to do so will relegate colleges and universities around the world to irrelevance.”

Among the critical issues Sterling is now addressing is the promotion of harmful agricultural practices that threaten human and natural communities. With support from a $3.5 million challenge grant from the NoVo Foundation, Sterling and its partner, The Berry Center, have launched the Wendell Berry Farming Program in Henry County, KY, to prepare a generation of farmers who understand how to build soil and build community—to re-make agriculture from one of the most destructive of human activities to one that is regenerative.

Sterling’s vision includes serving a larger and increasingly diverse student population. The college will do so through programs on campus in Vermont, and by expanding critical place-based projects like the Wendell Berry Farming Program. Sterling will increase access to learning opportunities through online resources, through established partnerships like those with the Berry Center and Chelsea Green Publishing, and by collaborating with other not-for-profit organizations that can help to exponentially expand the reach of its critical mission.

This is a climate emergency, Derr says. “The crisis is real and urgent, and it is time for higher education to show up and join the movement taking place all around them.”

An opinion piece by President Derr reflecting these concerns has been published on Medium.com: Greta is Coming: An Open Letter to Higher Education Leaders in the United States

About Sterling College
Sterling College advances ecological thinking and action through affordable experiential learning. We prepare knowledgeable, skilled, and responsible leaders to face the ecological crises caused by unlimited growth and consumption that threatens the future of the planet. Our motto is “Working Hands. Working Minds.” We are one of only nine colleges and universities recognized by the U.S. Department of Education as a “Work College.”

Featured

  • Round Rock ISD Completes New Early College High School

    Round Rock ISD near Austin, Texas, recently announced that construction is complete on a new, 46,500-square-foot campus for Early College High School, according to a news release. The new facility will allow the school’s students and staff to move from portables into a permanent building and increase its enrollment to 500.

  • Houston-Area High School Breaks Ground on 117,000SF Multi-Use Facility

    North Shore Senior High School, part of Galena Park ISD in Houston, Texas, recently broke ground on a new multi-use facility for student extracurriculars, according to a news release. The North Shore Multi-Use Facility will include dedicated practice and training space for the school’s athletics and fine arts programs.

  • Harvard Announces Replacement Facility for Native American Program

    Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass., recently announced that construction will begin this spring on a new home for its Native American Program, according to university news. The 6,500-square-foot, all-electric building will stand three stories and serve as the central hub for the Harvard University Native American Program (HUNAP).

  • California K–12 District Finishes Renovations on Multi-Sport Stadium

    The Alameda Unified School District (AUSD) in Alameda, Calif., recently announced the completion of a renovation project on the Encinal Jr. & Sr. High School stadium, according to a news release. The district partnered with Quattrocchi Kwok Architects (QKA) and Bothman Construction on the facility, and funding came from Bond Measure B.