Let’s be real, shall we? A world rocked by climate change, toxic pollution, devastated biodiversity, and persistent environmental injustice demands change. The folks in charge? While some have their hearts in the right place, and others even know full well there’s a crisis ongoing around us that demands immediate action, the fact is they’re not getting it done.
So who is going to do it? Who’s going to actually get off their duffs, get us out of collective fossil-fuel guzzling garbage-spewing junk-food-eating rut, and create healthy sustainable future for people and the planet? Everyone has a stake in this, of course, particularly the current generation of college students (of all ages). Here @RooseveltU, creating a sustainable future isn’t just a cool and fun thing to do with like-minded folks (though it certainly is); it’s an obligation mandated by our social justice mission.
Education, experiential learning, and activism are key parts of the struggle to create a truly sustainable planet (not to mention college campus), and that’s where SUST courses come in. RU students should look over the Fall 2023 schedule using this Coursefinder, (2) check the remaining course requirements in Degree Works, and (3) email or call your assigned academic advisor with your planned schedule and any questions you have about your upcoming classes. Your advisor will provide you with an RU Access registration code so you can register. Click on selected titles below for detailed course previews!
Sustainability Studies courses still open for enrollment this Fall 2023:
SUST 101 Humans & Nature (TTh 11am-12:15pm, Ideas, Prof. Bryson)
SUST 362 Climate, Cities & Justice (W 2-4:30pm, Prof. Farmer)
SUST 390 Environmental Crime (MW 12:30-1:45pm, Prof. Green)
Ideas = Ideas of Social Justice course (CORE gen ed credit)
EXL = Experiential Learning course (ditto)
For additional useful info, see this Advising Resources page on Prof. Mike Bryson’s faculty website as well as this Registration page on the RU website.
Students of SUST 250 Sustainable University (April 2022) after their team presentations of campus sustainability projects
As I entered the final week of my summer online gen ed seminar at RooseveltU called “Humans & Nature,” I wrote the following note to my students in our Writing Workshop discussion forum. Their final assignment was to compose a Creative Nature Essay of approximately five pages in which they reflect on their personal connection (or lack thereof) to the natural world and discuss at least two of our required readings. The instructions for the assignment are appended below.
On the subject of possibly giving in to the temptation to use ChatGPT4 or any other AI-based tool to draft or edit your Creative Nature Essay, your nature outing reflections, or any and all posts to our discussion forums in Blackboard . . .
First, and I can’t say this strongly enough: don’t do it!
The writing you do for this key assignment in our class, from the brainstorming to the drafting to the revision to the final editing stage, must be your own. I say this for many reasons, but most importantly these:
I don’t care what a chatbot thinks about nature, humanity, and our course readings. I want to know what you think about it. The only way you can do that is through your own thoughts and words, not a AI robot’s.
Using AI to assist your writing might seem efficient and fast, and thus far easier (sorta kinda) than doing your own hard work. But I’m not interested in reading things that are efficient and easy and quick. The only way you can grapple with what you know and think is to go through the difficult and, yes, sometimes painful process of writing, reflecting, reconsidering, and rewriting. That’s how we learn and grow.
AI-generated text might use a lot of big words and be structured in a superficially logical way and thus sound knowledgeable, but it’s usually boring, predictable, and highly mechanical. It lacks soul and feeling. It’s often embarrassingly cliché. It’s pretty much devoid of humor or wit. In short — it’s not good writing.In fact, it often sucks, as I found out recently when I asked ChatGPT to write an urban nature poem set on Chicago’s South Side.The result was indeed poetry — but of the doggerel variety.
Most profs can spot this kind of seemingly-good-but-actually-bad writing a mile away, because we’re read thousands upon thousands of papers, emails, blog posts, and discussion board entries by college students over years (in my case, decades) of teaching, and I have a very good sense of the normal range of writing ability in undergraduates.
Last but not least: using AI to write a discussion board post, a term paper, a creative essay, a song, a love letter, etc. is technically and quite obviously plagiarism, and thus academically dishonest.
Lately I’ve been thinking quite a bit about the 1968 movie, 2001: A Space Odyssey, which was based on the novel of the same title by Arthur C. Clarke. The film is slowly paced, even ponderous, but complex and and somewhat inscrutable; consequently, people usually love it (me) or hate it (the rest of my family). Notably, pretty much everyone agrees that the best character in the movie is an AI-powered supercomputer, who (which?) is truly one of the great villians in movie history: HAL 9000, the all-powerful guidance computer system aboard the interstellar spacecraft “Jupiter.”
HAL was developed by computer scientists at the University of Illinois in 1992 and represents state of the art computational speed and acumen circa 2001, or so the story goes. As the quintessential embodiment of Artificial Intelligence, HAL carries on deep conversations with the human crew members of the spaceship, which is on a secret and important mission (about which we don’t know hardly anything).
A key plot point of the story is that HAL goes haywire: it becomes concerned that the human crew leaders falsely suspect it of malfunction, and thus are jeopardizing completion of the ship’s mission. So HAL, since it controls everything on the ship, goes on a killing spree, eliminating the crew one by one. Eventually the mission leader, Dave, is the only one left. Iin this scene, he’s outside the main ship in a small “pod,” trying to dock with the main ship and return safely.
2001 was a prescient story about, among many other things, the profound and often unforeseen dangers of technology and, more specifically, the possibility that AI could pose a danger to those who created it, by dint of its acquiring various aspects of human intelligence and, by extension, behavior.
In the decades since 2001 was released in 1968, computer technology and AI research has increased exponentially and at shocking speed. 2022/23 will go down in history as an important milestone in the development of this technology, which up until recently had advanced in comparative fits and starts. Right now, in real time, we’re witnessing an explosion of AI search tools, chatbots, and more — with global tech giants racing each other to advance and market the newest development. All this has had profound consequences for untold aspects of social and economic life, including education.
AI-generated writing is in the process of shaking up the entire education establishment, as students grapple with when to use / not use these powerful tools, and faculty strive to figure out how to account for them in their assignment design. Policies and procedures for using and/or prohibiting AI writing are going to evolve over the next several months and years, as the use of such tech tools grows.
Honestly, I have no idea where this is going to go — but I hope I don’t end up like the professor equivalent of Dave in 2001, begging HAL to let him back on to the ship and then realizing he’s really “up a creek,” as my grandma would say.
Right now, for SUST 101, we’re hewing closely to the title of our course: Humans & Nature. May all of your text for this class be human-generated, warts and all.
Questions and comments are welcome in this thread. Meanwhile, I encourage you to carefully review the Academic Honesty statement in our SUST 101 syllabus: SUST 101 Assignments 2023Sum.pdf
Prof B*
*I certify that 100% of the text above was human generated by me, Michael A. Bryson, a flesh-and-blood person, on 26 June 2023 and slightly updated on 14 Aug 2023. I am not a bot, but a flawed human being who makes various kinds of mistakes and unforced errors on a daily basis, as my wife and daughters would freely attest.
Hey there, RU students! Looking for an Ideas of Social Justice course to take this summer to make progress on your CORE gen ed requirements? Here’s a great option: a 5-week fully online seminar, SUST 101 Humans & Nature, taught by Prof. Mike Bryson of the Sustainability Studies Program at Roosevelt from 5/30 to 7/10.
To register for this class: please visit RU’s Registration page for info and contact your academic advisor for your summer (and fall!) registration code(s). You can find the name of your advisor in Degree Works.
SUST 101 (CRN 31950) features interactive online discussions on Bb and three self-directed “nature outings,” wherever you are, that give you a great excuse to get outside and enjoy summertime while earning credit for this unique learning experience. For more information on that, just email Prof B (mbryson@roosevelt.edu).
Detailed info for those who want to learn more:
This summer 2023 section of SUST 101 Humans & Nature takes place fully online on a compressed five-week calendar from 5/30 to 7/10. We’ll be using the virtual learning environment of Blackboard (hereafter referred to as “Bb,” for short). The key thing to understand about online courses, like this one, is that they’re interactive — just as my on-campus students read assignments, write papers, construct arguments, do research, and come to class to engage in lively discussion, so too will you share ideas and interact in virtual time. Bb gives us the web-based tools to do just that.
For the vast majority of our interaction, we’ll use threaded discussion forums, which are asynchronous (i.e., not in real time) means of communicating, to exchange ideas and materials on a weekly basis. Reading and posting to the discussion board is like coming to class, except that you can do it any time of day throughout a given week.
Learning Objectives
Students who complete SUST 101 successfully should be able to:
Understand how different individuals, whether political theorists, philosophers, artists, activists, scientists, and/or writers, have characterized the relationship between themselves and nature (and, more broadly, between the human species and the non-human environment)
Appreciate the complexity of the physical and biological world, and understand the various impacts humans have upon local and global ecosystems
Draw connections between their own life experiences as they evaluate and expand upon their understandings of the texts of this course
Articulate ways in which the course themes embody or illuminate ideas of social and environmental justice
Demonstrate skills in foundational academic skills: close analysis of texts, idea-centered dialogue, and essay writing
Become a better communicator by honing one’s writing and discussion skills, using words powerfully and strategically, and gaining confidence in the mastery of these skills
SUST Program Learning Objectives addressed in SUST 101:
Understand the relationships among social justice, environmental justice, and corporate social responsibility; and analyze sustainability issues in light of this ethical framework.
Apply knowledge about sustainability to areas of personal, educational, and/or professional interest through applied research, community service, environmental activism, project management, or related activities.
Required Textbook
The selections in our textbook comprise the bulk of our assigned readings for this semester. It is available in print from the RU bookstore as well as a free e-book from the RU library. Make a note of the ISBN # so you get the correct edition when ordering. Additional reading selections will be available to you on our course Blackboard (Bb) site.
Deming, Alison, and Lauret Savoy, eds. The Colors of Nature: Culture, Identity, and the Natural World. 2011. Milkweed Editions. Paper. ISBN 9781571313195.
Requirements and Key Assignments
This class is five weeks in duration (running from 6/1 through 7/5) and has a distinct weekly rhythm. Required readings will include selections from our assigned textbook, supplemented by assorted websites related to each week’s topic, student-selected readings and videos, and/or other documents (usually pdfs) available in the Readings section of our Bb site. Key course requirements include:
Class Participation: regular and engaged participation during our weekly online discussions of assigned readings
Discussion Leadership: an assigned week during which you select and lead discussion on one selection from our anthology (this is on top of your regular class participation for that week)
Nature Outings: three self-directed nature excursions (30 minutes or more) in which you observe and experience nature in whatever context is appealing and available to you, then post your reflections about it on the DB
Creative Nature Essay: a 4-5 page paper that creatively engages and explores your relationship with the natural world, as well as critically reflects upon two of our course readings
Looking for an out-of-the-ordinary summer class? Get some fresh air and dirt under your nails in RU’s Sustainability Studies program innovative special topics course, SUST 390 Rooftop Garden, at the Chicago Campus! The class will utilize RU’s unique 5th-story rooftop garden on its LEED Gold-certified Wabash Building as a living classroom for a hands-on, place-based, get-your-hands-dirty learning experience. This hybrid / experiential learning class is quite flexible, so it can fit into your summer schedule!
Semester offered: Summer 2023 (from May 30 thru Aug 14)
Location: Chicago Campus
Day/time: Online learning commences 5/30, with garden workdays and field trips to selected urban farms/green rooftops in the Chicago region scheduled by the instructor according to students’ availability
Pre-req: ENG 102
SUST majors and minors may take this class to fulfill an upper-level SUST 3xx requirement, but 390 also is open to students at large seeking an experiential learning course, needing a general education course, or desiring elective credit.
It’s Earth Week 2023 @RooseveltU! Students in the RU Green club and the SUST 210 Sustainable Future course have a whole bunch of cool stuff planned today 4/19 through Fri 4/12. Please attend and spread the word!
Wed 4/19 from 5-6:30pm (WB 1111) — Powerlands film screening: Join RU Green for a viewing of the documentary Powerlands, in which a “young Navajo filmmaker investigates displacement of Indigenous people and devastation of the environment caused by the same chemical companies that have exploited the land where she was born.” A short discussion will follow the film, and snacks will be provided!
Th 4/20 from 11am-1pm (WB 5th Floor Fitness Center) — WB Rooftop Garden Clean-up (waiver required; see below). Get some fresh air and your nails dirty by helping to clean up the garden and prepare it for the spring planting season!
Th 4/20 from 11:30am-1pm (WB Dining Center) — Ice Cream Social! Calling all Roosevelt Students! We need your help spreading the word about LakersDay. Come to the LakersDay Ice Cream Social on Thursday, April 20, take a picture in our photo booth, and post to social media using the #rulakersday. You will receive $20 in LakersDay bucks to place in the college fund of your choice.
Th 4/20 from 12:30-1:45pm (WB 616 / Dining Center) — Students in SUST 210 Sustainable Future are staging two good-old-fashionedenvironmental happenings as part of the WorldWide Teach-In for Climate & Justice. A team focused on the sustainability in our Dining Center will be staffing an info/outreach table in the caf, while six other teams will present a provocative series of lightning talks on Athletics, Environmental Justice, Food, Transportation, Waste, and Water!
For more info, email Prof. Mike Bryson (mbryson@roosevelt.edu), SUST 210 Instructor and Dedicated Composter, and/or Natalie Seitz (nseitz@mail.roosevelt.edu), RU Green president. Keep using those green bins for your banana peels!
You are receiving this email because you registered and/or kindly participated in a prior WeDigBio event, Meet a Scientist, Members Night, etc. If you no longer wish to receive these emails, you will find instructions to unsubscribe after our signatures.
Be a part of a global effort to digitize centuries of data about life on Earth! Organisms may include ferns, fungi, mosses, lichens, insects, and mammals. Participants will have an opportunity to meet scientists and join in behind-the-scenes tours or talks about the significance of the scientific collections!
WeDigBio will be held online daily from Thursday, April 13th – Sunday, April 16th.
The Field Museum is kindly welcoming a small group of volunteers to work in-person to assist with the curation process of the botanical collections. This opportunity is on a first-come, first-served basis so please fill out the registration form below. NOTE: The Field Museum will not be offering free parking at this time, only free admission. If you are a docent/volunteer with the museum, you will still be able to use your badge for parking at the West Lot. We are sorry for the inconvenience!
WeDigBio is ideal for teens aged 15+ and adults. However, families are welcome as it is a great opportunity for all age groups to work together.
For educators with classes, please contact us directly.
Details for all WeDigBio days:
A Zoom link will be emailed the daybefore each session starts regardless if you are participating online or in-person.
Check-in will start at 9:30am CDT (10:30am EDT/8:30am MDT/7:30am PDT)whether you are volunteering online or in-person.
For in-person volunteering at the Field Museum, volunteers will be checked in at the East Entrance of the museum and must be masked when behind-the-scenes – in compliance with Museum policy.
Each event will begin at 10:00am CDT until 1:00pm CDT (11:00am–2:00pm EDT/9:00am–1:00pm MDT/8:00am–12:00pm PDT).
Talks and behind-the-scenes tours will be scattered throughout.
Thank you everyone for considering participating in this event!
The WeDigBio Team
Matt, Jessica, Miranda, and Yarency
Questions? Reach out to:
Matt von Konrat, Ph.D., FLS
Head of Botanical Collections, Gantz Family Collections Center
Dear RU students — This is a message from the president of Roosevelt University’s student environmental organization, RU Green. In the spirit of disclosure, I must admit that I fully support and am inspired by this petition. I encourage you to read it and, if you agree with its spirit and are persuaded by its argument, please sign it. Add a comment if you are so moved. And share it with your fellow students for them to read and consider. Thank you. ~ Prof. Mike Bryson
Hi all!
If you haven’t heard already, this semester we have begun establishing a campaign to urge Roosevelt to establish an Office of Sustainability! In each of our meetings so far we have brainstormed ways to not only bring attention to RU’s lack of investment in sustainability efforts, but also ways to fix this. It has been so exciting hearing from everyone and seeing how much support RU Green has from students and faculty.
This week, we released a petition to show just how much the student body wants to see this change made. We would love it if you read our petition statement and considered signing to join us in this campaign! Here is the link:
https://chng.it/WZ5sZY22Mz
Feel free to share it with others and spread the word! We appreciate all of our members so so much. 💚
Best, Natalie Seitz (she/her) RU Green President (BA ’23)
Mike Bryson, Professor of Sustainability Studies at Roosevelt University, joins Green Sense WBBM radio host / postcaster Robert Colangelo again to share his thoughts on what role the arts and humanities play in changing hearts and minds about climate change, water conservation, and sustainability. We discuss the current economic conditions and the job market for students working in the field of sustainability.
Listen to the full episode on your preferred streaming platform by visiting the Green Sense website
The Mansfield Institute’s Fellowship for Activism and Community Engagement (FACE) program will support 15 undergraduate Fellows over Summer 2023. This cohort-based summer fellowship includes funding for a 3-credit Social Justice in Action internship-based course in May 2022. In addition to tuition for this course, Fellows will receive a stipend of $2,500.
Following their course work in late May, Fellows will work in a social justice–focused community-based organization in or around Chicago for 9 weeks (11 hours/week) over the summer starting in early June. Fellows will have an opportunity to meet and work with past Fellows, attend University events together, and potentially present work at conferences. Applicants should have sophomore or junior standing with an interest in social justice and at least a 2.0 GPA (see below). Students receive a $2,500 stipend and 3 credits tuition-free for this experiential social justice-focused, cohort-based Fellowship.
2022 Mira Cameron — Sustainability Studies and English, 2024
Jada Campbell — Criminal Justice, 2023
Logan Cofield — Psychology, 2025
Destinee Gorss — Criminal Justice, 2025
Lucas Jordan — Criminal Justice, 2023
Ralph Maranon — Music Performance, 2023
Emily (“Mily”) Martinez — Political Science, 2024
Alexia Mendoza Lagunas — Elementary Education, 2024
Sophia Peters — Psychology, 2023
Kaitlin Ryndak — Social Justice Studies, 2023
Karime Sepulveda — Sustainability Studies, 2023
Giselle Solano — Political Science, 2023
Delaney Spielman — Music, 2023
2021 Rose Bais — Criminal Justice and Psychology, 2024
Alicia Callejas — Sustainability Studies and International Relations, 2022
Graham Faeh — Psychology, 2022
Autumn Ford — Psychology, 2022
Jessica Garcia — International Studies, 2023
Miranda Gomez — Psychology, 2022
Caitlynn Liquigan — Psychology and Criminal Justice, 2022
Mia Moore — History, Economics, and Social Justice Studies, 2024
Kayla Nelson — Psychology, Sociology, and Gender Studies, 2023
Katey Parry — Musical Theatre, 2023
Nick Pietrorazio — Acting, 2023
Diosmery Roque — Sociology and History, 2022
Katherine Saez — Sustainability Studies, Biology, and Environmental Science, 2022
Olivia Salazar — Political Science, Economics, and Legal Studies, 2022
Natalie Sietz — Sustainability Studies and Political Science, 2022
Want to Know More?
Contact Drs. Heather Dalmage (hdalmage@roosevelt.edu), FACE Director & SOC prof; LaDonna Long (llong@roosevelt.edu), FACE Evaluator & CJ prof; and/or Mike Bryson (mbryson@roosevelt.edu), FACE Program Coordinator & SUST prof
The Environmental Sustainability Committee @RooseveltU will have its next strategic sustainability planning meeting of the 2022-23 academic year on Friday, 3/17, from 3pm to 4:30pm on Zoom (see login info below).
The ESC is an open committee formed in 2010 that welcomes participation and encourages collaboration across colleges and departments from all members of the RU community: students, faculty, staff, administration, alumni, and friends. Our key task this spring is to finish the Strategic Sustainability Planning effort begun in Fall 2022 and produce a revised Plan for 2023-28 by the end of this Spring 2023 semester.
This planning meeting will focus on reviewing and analyzing feedback from the Fall 2022 campus planning workshops, events, and presentations as well as the ongoing surveys of current students and employees/alumni. From this foundation, we will develop consensus on RU’s campus sustainability goals for the next five years and prioritize concrete initiatives to achieve said goals.
Updated information will be posted to this Events page on Inside Roosevelt, at the above planning website, and via email prior to the 3/17 meeting for the RU community’s review and input. Everyone’s ideas, perspectives, and constructive criticisms are needed and valued in this process.
Also note that Roosevelt’s just-renewed annual membership in the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education (AASHE) provides anyone with an active RU email address full access to AASHE’s online resources. Take advantage and avail yourself!
To RSVP and get a Zoom link for the meeting (and/or for questions), please email Mike Bryson (mbryson@roosevelt.edu), professor & director of Sustainability Studies; chair of the Dept of Sociology & Sustainability, CAS; and chair of the ESC.