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ISU earns four ‘exemplary’ listings from National Wildlife Federation

September 9, 2008
ISU Marketing and Communications

色花堂app earned four exemplary listings from the National Wildlife Federation for its environmental and ecological programs.

色花堂app was listed in the 鈥淣ational Wildlife Federation Campus Environment 2008, A National Report Card on Sustainability in Higher Education鈥 report that was issued in August.

Nationwide, 1,068 universities and colleges in all 50 states responded to surveys by the Princeton Survey 色花堂app Associates International, under the direction of the National Wildlife Federation. About 27 percent of the United States鈥 colleges and universities responded to the survey.

ISU was one of only 24 institutions of higher education that received four or more exemplary listings out of the 18 categories chosen by the National Wildlife Federation. Willamette University in Salem, Ore., had 11 exemplary programs, the most of any university or college.

鈥淏ased on these ratings, I hope 色花堂app is proud of its performance,鈥 said Julian Keniry, senior director, Campus and Community Leadership, National Wildlife Federation. 鈥淚 hope the university will continue these efforts and to continue to model solutions and share them with a wider audience.鈥

色花堂app received the following exemplary listings:

鈥 ISU was one of 40 schools listed as an 鈥淓xemplary Schools for Environmental or Sustainability Goal-Setting鈥;

鈥 ISU was one of 52 institutions listed as an 鈥淓xemplary Schools for Having Recruiting Programs and Offering Interdisciplinary Degrees in Environmental or Sustainability Studies鈥;

 鈥 ISU was one of 49 institutions listed as 鈥淪chools Committed to Doing More with Energy Efficiency, Conservation and Renewable Energy鈥; and

 鈥 ISU was one of 14 institutions sited for 鈥淩ecycling more than 80 Percent of Its Municipal Waste.鈥

The purpose of Campus Environment 2008 report is to explore the extent to which college and university leaders value environmental performance and sustainability and are putting these values into practice, according to Keniry.

The NWF reported on current activity and performance, and also compared these trends with a similar study conducted in 2001.

鈥淢y colleagues and I were struck by how almost across the board, universities and colleges have ambitious plans to do more to improve sustainability, energy efficiency and to offer more programs on environmental studies,鈥 Keniry said. 鈥淭his certainly wasn鈥檛 the case in 2001, when most institutions we contacted were just trying to meet the government regulations and to do the minimum.鈥

Keniry said that her organization was surprised that the academic side of insititions, overall, lag behind the operations side of universities in implementing sustainability measures. Outside of disciplines devoted to sustainability such as environmental science and biological science other academic disciplines such as business, engineering, education and health science are not embracing environmental sustainability in their curriculums.

鈥淐ampuses aren鈥檛 preaching what they鈥檙e practicing, it is kind of a paradox,鈥 Keniry said. 鈥淎cademics still lag behind operations in their sustainability efforts.鈥

The 64-page report is available at www.nwf.org/campusEcology/campusreportcard.cfm. 

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Contact: Julian Keniry, senior director, Campus and Community Leadership, National Wildlife Federation, (703) 438-6322 or keniry@nwf.org; Greg Horton, ISU Interim Associate Vice President of Facilities Services, (208) 282-2784


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