
California State University at Chico takes sustainability seriously. Yahoo listed it last year as one of the top five 'green' colleges in America. The university has made creating "environmentally literate citizens" an official strategic priority, and it has elaborated its general education program to include a "sustainability studies" track. Leaders of this campus movement have made it clear that they seek "sustainability across the curriculum," with all lines of academic inquiry leading to sustainability. But there are problems with all this.
Course descriptions for some of these seem to reveal an overt agenda; for example, "The American Indian" focuses on "Indian-white relations" and "the disruption of the Indian way of life." This appears to involve a spin on the Rousseau's notion of the "noble savage." If so, it would have to avert its eyes from the rather destructive ways in which some Native American societies exploited natural resources, from driving whole herds of buffalo over cliffs to setting forest fires.
"The Good Life" surveys "different theories of happiness and meaning, including discussion of the roles of moral values, mental health, art, music, and food and drink in living well." Given its categorization as a green course, this appears to be a handy springboard for discussing whether a good life is possible without plastic water bottles, 15-minute showers, disposable grocery bags, bacon, or having children.
Including "African history" as a green course is odd.
Presumably it will focus on the Sahara Desert--long ago a lush and verdant part
of the continent--or in historic times, the loss of fertile land south of the
Sahara to desert, likely because of over-grazing. But why should
And what do mysticism, justice, world religions, or American Indian literature have to do with greenness?

This list raises a number of questions. First, why is Great Books and Ideas a discrete pathway? Will students who opt for other pathways be kept at a safe distance from great books and ideas?
The Sustainability Studies pathway, writes coordinator Jim Pushnik, aims to mold each student into a "socially-responsible and environmentally-minded citizen." One of Professor Pushnik's courses, "Environmental Literacy," is part of the sustainability pathway. A main text for the course, for which the latest syllabus available is spring 2009, is called Earthscore, a sort of environmental audit that awards positive points for fluorescent lights and exponentially negative points for having two or more children.
Students are urged "to recognize that your life is dependent upon the environment, and that your personal decisions affect the environment." Leaving no doubt that political advocacy, not just learning, is expected of the class, Professor Pushnik requires essays to be written "from the developing perspective introduced in the class." In other words, this class should change your personal habits and the only correct perspective for you to take is the one projected by the course.
The university does its best to turn its philosophy into practice, tracking its employees' mileage on business trips, for example, and urging students to "say no to plastic straws." And of course it builds LEED-certified buildings, integrates solar power, and recycles.
Saving university funds and conserving energy and water are
worthy goals. If
We here at the National Association of Scholars have been paying close attention to the campus sustainability movement for several years. Our interest is in keeping higher education focused on liberal learning, scientific inquiry, and reasoned scholarship. We are not opposed to environmentalism in general or "sustainability" in particular. But we are worried that the sustainability movement has a tendency to tip over into the sort of advocacy that compromises the deeper purposes of higher education.
A Goal of Transforming Universities
The advocates are pretty clear that they see few if any limits to advancing their program on campus. The mission of the sustainability group Second Nature is to "make the principles of sustainability fundamental to every aspect of higher education." In a roundtable discussion published by Sustainability: The Journal of Record, Paul Rowland of AASHE (Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education) said we need to "transform universities"; former Unity College president Mitchell Thomashow urged faculty members to "radically transform the curriculum"; and Jim Elder, director of the Campaign for Environmental Literacy, argued that we need to "change how they [faculty members] think, how they teach, how they do their research."
Those are steps too
far. Colleges and universities might legitimately practice some forms of
sustainability, but the "every aspect of higher education" standard toward
which Chico seems to be moving is an exercise in uncritical endorsement, and
the goal of "transforming" universities to advance the sustainability program
amounts to a betrayal of the university's indispensable role as the place for
intellectually free examination of competing ideas.
Ashley Thorne is Director
of the Center for the Study of the Curriculum at the National Association of
Scholars.

