The Princeton Review’s Guide to 311 Green Colleges

 

I picked up a copy of this at the PBL National Convention today.   Some of you may want to check it out!

The Princeton Review’s Guide to 311 Green Colleges profiles 308 institutions of higher education in the United States and three in Canada that demonstrate a strong commitment to sustainability in their academic offerings, campus infrastructure, activities, and career preparation.  The 220-page guide is the only free, comprehensive, annually updated guide to green colleges.

The Princeton Review’s Guide to 311 Green Colleges.

A New Wave of Graduates Prefers Green Jobs

Suddenly, “sustainability” seems to resonate with the sex appeal of “dot com” or “start-up,” appealing to droves of ambitious young innovators. Amelia Byers, operations director for Idealist.org, a Web site that lists paid and unpaid opportunities for nonprofit groups and social enterprise companies — some 5,000 of which are environmental organizations — said the number of jobs related to environmental work has roughly tripled in the last three years. “A lot of new graduates are coming out of a world where volunteerism and service has been something that has helped define their generation,” she said. “Finding a job with meaning is an important value to them.”

A New Wave of Graduates Prefers Green Jobs