Sign-up and post on Iberkshires today.It's Free!
Already a member? Log In
32°  H- 93%
The Berkshires online guide to events, news and Berkshire County community information.
Wednesday January 7, 2009
 Make us your homepage!
 

Daily Digest

Yuck!
There's a winter storm warning in effect until 7 a.m. on Thursday with 2 to 4 inches of snow expected. Be prepared for a messy morning commute as freezing rain and sleet move through the region. The morning commute will be slippery — drive careful!

Some New York schools, including Hoosick Falls Central School and St. Mary's Academy in Hoosick Falls have already canceled classes.

All North County schools are closed; Pittsfield, Lanesborough, Berkshire Hills, Southern Berkshire and Central Berkshire school districts are closed.
Duff'em If You've Got'em
North Adams Regional Hospital went smoke-free Monday — so did all its sister sites, from Sweet Brook to Northern Berkshire Family Practice to the Women's Exchange. No ashtrays, no smoking: No butts about it.

Wanted: Eagle Eyes
MassWildlife's annual eagle count runs Dec. 31 to Jan. 14. Anyone sighting one of the regal birds in Massachusetts is asked to participate.

Send date, time, location and town of eagle sightings, number of birds, whether juvenile or adult and observer's contact information to Mass.wildlife@state.ma.us.
How much is heating oil this week?
How to get heating help
Need to contact iBerkshires? Here's how.
Like to Write?
iBerkshires accepts submissions about local events, news and opinion pieces. There are openings for freelance work, too, for qualified candidates. E-mail tdaniels@iberkshires.com to find out more.

Obituaries


India, Presidential Cat, Dies at 18
Marjorie E. McLain, 80
Barbara Mahon, 81
Kevin B. Finnerty, 71
Joseph L. Crowley, 82
More obituaries

Region

Pownal Gets Affordable Housing Grant
Brace of Storms Boost Ski Areas
Bennington Firm Lays Off 28
Hairpin Turn Could Be One of a Thousand 'Great Places'
Houses of Faith in Need of Repair
Turkey Hits Bus
No Free Oil 4 Joe
Vt. Road Aid Frozen

Songs From St. James (Vt.)

What's Playing


Adam Sandler experiences "Bedtime Stories" that come true.
Movie schedules and times

Sales Fliers

 
 

Columnists

That's Life

O Christmas Tree

Independent Investor

Take Your Required Minimum Distribution

Pick of the Week

Amy Grant

Other Stuff

Digital TV Subsidy Program Running Out of Money
Couple Doubles B&W Twins
Mars Rovers Mark 5 Years
Spirit
and Opportunity have been trekking the red planet for half a decade. Spirit hit the 5-year mark on Sunday; Opportunity will on Jan. 24.

 Search: 
 for    

Obama Transition

Your Seat at the Table
Track who's meeting with the Obama transition team and what they're proposing.
Federal government has 8,000 job openings
Are you going to the inauguration? We'd like to hear from you. E-mail to info@iberkshires.com.
The president-elect's new Web site
www.change.gov
Essay Winners Will Get Inaugural Tickets

Related Stories

 
Printer Friendly Version
   Recommend this story to a friend

Williams College'S Center For Environmental Studies Recycles A Professor

- November 27, 2007

When Williams College invited Thomas C. Jorling to return as a Visiting Distinguished Professor of Environmental Studies (http://www.williams.edu/CES/), the retired educator, government administrator and corporate executive knew he would find major changes in the classroom after 20 years away from college teaching.

Interviewed this fall at his Kellogg House office on the Williams College campus, Jorling said, "I was more apprehensive now than I was back when I first began teaching in 1972. Part of that is because the expectations of students, faculty, and the institution are very different now with respect to everything that's encompassed in the electronic revolution."

He was prepared for big changes involving the arrival of high-tech teaching tools in the classroom when he agreed to teach the Introduction to Environmental Studies lecture course to 49 students, mostly first year students. But he also told the college he would prohibit laptops, Blackberries, and similar devices in the classroom because "when they're in a wireless environment, they're all over the world." He encountered no opposition from students or from the college to his requirement.

Jorling, a Cincinnati native who's now 67, served as the director of Environmental Studies at Williams College from 1972 to 1977 after a stint as minority counsel to the U.S. Senate Committee for Public Works. He headed New York State's Department of Environmental Conservation and worked as assistant administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (http://www.epa.gov/), returning once before to Williams from 1980 to 1986. He spent 10 years as vice- president for environmental affairs at International Paper, retiring in 2004.

Another change, he noted, stems from the students' access to "an unbelievable amount of information, instantly." The major challenge is helping students sort through the deluge of information available electronically. He's concerned about an "attention-span issue" - students are accustomed to a deluge of stimuli from different sources, leading them to require a rapid-fire approach in the classroom.

"I think there's a tendency to be too uncritical of the information flood; they tend to believe almost anything they read or gain access to," Jorling observed, although he pointed out that students arrive better-equipped with knowledge about the environment thanks to high- school courses.

When climate change comes up in the classroom, Jorling emphasizes that while scientific consensus has emerged on the dimensions of the problem, workable solutions are far more elusive. He cites the development of wind-power technology as a "very important part of the solution," part of a long list of alternative power sources, but opposes the use of nuclear energy to curb greenhouse-gas emissions.

"The key to it - and where we're stuck right now - is a social commitment to wean ourselves from fossil fuels," he said, citing a "substantial wing of the Democratic party" that's committed to clean coal technology (http://www.technologyreview.com/Energy/18398/) that requires a "huge new demand for energy, something like 20 percent more to operate cleanly."

But he foresees a bipartisan approach emerging on Capitol Hill to tackle the climate-change crisis; he has viewed the environmental movement as hampered by its close identification with the Democratic Party, an impediment to meaningful consensus in Congress.

Jorling says his teaching technique has not changed over the years. "Then, as now, I consider the basic objective of teaching as helping students to learn how to think seriously about a problem, not a right answer or wrong answer, but giving them the confidence that they can think through these things deeply and learn how to use the tools they have available."

He urges students to consider opposing views, not to demonize those who disagree; an example is a classroom exercise to think through why someone would support going slow on climate change.

"If there is a lesson that I've learned," Jorling explained, "it's that most people want to do the right thing, but they have a different history and a different perception of what the right thing is. They're not evil if they disagree with you."

Looking ahead, Jorling hopes to teach a seminar that would draw upon his experience in academia, government, and the private sector - "all of them have important roles...and they've all been rewarding."
Your Comments
Post Comment
No Comments


iBerkshires.com Text Ads
www.papyribooks.net
www.iberkshires.com
www.iberkshires.com
www.ateffinejeweler.com
Advertise on iBerkshires.com



Essentials
Berkshire Nightlife
Berkshire Photos
Berkshire Wallpaper
Borrow Movies
Class Reunion Page
Columnists
Dannyoart.com
Movie Times
Obituaries
Randy Trabold

Enter your email address below to receive our FREE iBerkshires.com Newsletter

| Home | A & E | Automotive | Business | Community News | Dining | Lodging & Travel |
| Real Estate | Schools | Sports & Outdoors | Berkshires Weather | Weddings | Berkshires Map |
Advertise | Recommend This Page | Help
Contact Us | Privacy Policy| User Agreement
Execution Time: 266 ms