Aequitas Fellows Program in Sustainability

Wheaton College IL Students on Black Hills Field Trip

Growing pressures on environmental resources and a shifting global climate present grand challenges to societies across the globe for the next century and seriously threaten sustainability, defined as “the ability to meet the needs of the present without diminishing the capability of future generations to meet their needs.” Decisions being made now about how to address these challenges will change social and environmental structures, and Christians face an urgent call to responsibly participate in these decisions as stewards of creation. 

The Aequitas Fellows Program in Sustainability offers Wheaton College students a unique, multi-disciplinary opportunity to directly relate their robust Christian liberal arts education to the needs of contemporary society, to develop a personal ethic of creation care, and to practically address global environmental degradation. Aequitas Sustainability Fellows live and learn in community with a cohort of similarly-motivated students while (1) exploring the principles of sustainability in unique coursework, reading groups, and field experiences; (2) undertaking practical, hands-on group sustainability projects; (3) participating in an eight-week intensive summer program in the Black Hills of South Dakota; and (4) developing into a leader in sustainable action through an independent project. 

Program Courses and Experiences

Year One

  • AQTS 131 Introduction to Aequitas Sustainability
  • ENVR/GEOL 212 The Dynamic Earth and Environment
  • Sustainability Summer at the Wheaton College Field Station
    • ENVR 332 Principles of Environmental Sustainability
    • ENVR 333 Environmental Sustainability Practicum

Year Two

  • HNGR 114 Poverty, Justice and Transformation OR URBN 114 Social Life of Cities
  • AQTS 231 Aequitas Reading Group in Sustainability (repeated both semesters, 2 credits total)

Year Three       

  • AQTS 331 Aequitas Cohort Project in Sustainability (2 credits) OR AQTS 332 Aequitas Service Learning in Sustainability (2 credits)

Year Four         

  • AQTS 431 Aequitas Leadership in Sustainability (0 credits)

Students complete 8 additional credit hours from the approved elective list below:

Social Sciences

  • ANTH 342 Food, Farms, and Culture (4 Credits)
  • ECON 365 Economic Growth and Development (4 Credits)
  • ENVR 231 Environmental Law, Justice, and Development (2 Credits)
  • IR 318 Environmental Politics (4 credits)
  • PHIL/ENVR/BHS 305 Environmental Ethics (4 credits) OR PHIL 107 Food and Philosophy (4 credits)

Natural Sciences

  • BHS 338 Economic Botany (4 Credits)
  • ENVR/GEOL 341 Quantitative Methods for Environmental Analysis and Problem Solving (4 Credits)
  • ENVR/GEOL 371 Introduction to Geographic Information Systems (2 Credits)
  • ENVR 381 Environmental Pollution and Toxicology (4 Credits)
  • ENVR 422 Sustainable Agriculture (2 Credits)
  • ENVR 432 Introduction to Environmental Engineering (4 Credits)
  • GEOL 307 Water the Essential Natural Resource (4 credits)
  • GEOL 308 Energy and Climate Change (4 credits)

Experiential

  • ENVR 395 Environmental Science Research (2-4 credits)
  • BHS 495 Biological Research (2-4 credits, if not used to satisfy AQTS 431)

 

Sustainability Theme Coordinator

Katherine ManeiroDr. Kathryn Maneiro serves as the Theme Coordinator for the Aequitas Fellows Program in Sustainability. Dr. Maneiro is a geochronologist who uses the mineral garnet to study some of Earth’s oldest rocks and explore questions about how plate tectonics operated early in Earth’s history. If you visit her office, you can hold some of Earth’s oldest rocks too! She loves teaching a wide variety of courses in the Department of Earth and Environmental Science – from a combined introductory geology and environmental science course where students play a semester-long game of Survivor and learn their sustainability habits through upper-level coursework teaching geology students about minerals, rocks, and fieldwork. Dr. Maneiro has been heavily involved in developing sustainability opportunities at Wheaton College, serving as the adviser for Wheaton Student Government’s EVP of Sustainability and co-advising the Garden Prairie Project ministry that oversees Wheaton’s community garden.