Higher education publications recognize Notre Dame for sustainability progress
Notre Dame’s commitment to sustainably-minded initiatives is steadily receiving recognition among higher education institutions and ranking systems. For the 15th year in a row, Notre Dame has been recognized by The Princeton Review Guide to Green Colleges, ranking 94 out of 511 schools for the 2025 edition. Earlier this academic year, the University was also recognized in AASHE’s Sustainable Campus Index (SCI) for a third year in a row. This year, Notre Dame was recognized in SCI’s Engagement section for its partnership with Crossroads Solar: a local solar panel company whose workforce consists of returning citizens.
What do these recognitions mean?
Princeton Review Guide to Green Colleges
Schools are selected for their exceptional programs, policies, and practices related to sustainability and the environment. Among more than twenty-five data points, the Princeton Review’s Green rating methodology includes the following criteria:
-
Whether students have a quality of life on campus that is both healthy and sustainable.
-
How well a school is preparing students for employment in the clean-energy economy of the 21st century, as well as for citizenship in a world now defined by environmental concerns and opportunities.
-
How environmentally responsible a school's policies are.
AASHE’s Sustainable Campus Index
SCI recognizes top-performing colleges and universities in 17 impact areas within sustainability, in accordance with the Sustainability Tracking, Assessment & Rating System (STARS). Used by hundreds of colleges and universities, STARS helps institutions measure, report and strengthen their contributions to global sustainability. An Institutional Highlights section recognizes high-impact projects and initiatives. Notre Dame is currently ranked as a STARS Gold University and is up for reevaluation later this academic year in the recently revised STARS version 3.0.
Why these recognitions matter
Visibility of our sustainable endeavors is ever-important in a rapidly changing world. As the threats of climate change become more imminent across the globe, prospective students strongly consider how universities are positioned to address the climate crisis. Such institutional decisions and actions can determine their choice when selecting a school. According to the QS Student Sustainability Survey 2023 (n = 110,000), 79% of students think that it’s important for universities to reduce their impact on the environment, and 51% report that they would consider paying higher tuition fees for a school that has sustainability initiatives. Through recognition, we stand out as a university that is in step with modern prospective students and their desires to attend sustainability-minded universities.
Thank you to our partners
These recognitions and rankings would not be possible without the members of the Notre Dame community actively involved in caring for our common home. Together, we’re making campus a more sustainable and healthy place to work and live today, and for future generations.
Originally published by green.nd.edu on November 11, 2024.
atLatest Research
- Notre Dame researchers pioneer the use of “bridge” nanoparticles to fight esophageal cancerThe gold-dotted silica nanoparticles…
- College of Science Announces 2024-25 Faculty AwardsSantiago Schnell, D.Phil., the William K. Warren Foundation Dean of the College of Science, has announced several faculty awards for the 2024–2025 academic year. Father James L. Shilts, C.S.C./Doris and Gene Leonard Teaching Award This award, bestowed annually on a faculty…
- Innovation and dignity: Keough School graduate leverages digital technologies to make a differenceFatima Faisal Khan, a 2024 graduate of the Keough School’s Master of Global Affairs program, works as an associate for ecosystem trust and safety at the Institute for Security and Technology, a think tank that provides impactful solutions to pressing technological issues. In this conversation, she shares how her experience and education at the Keough School prepared her to make a difference in her current role.
- Fighting drug resistance in cancer and bacteriaDrug resistant bacteria is something that is of grave cause of concern for scientists. The fear is that without the development of new antibiotics that work different from what we already have, we could face infections that are resistant to all existing treatments. Similarly, drug resistance in cancer…
- Gravino Awarded NSF Graduate Research Fellowship, Murray Receives Honorable MentionMarla Gravino Marla Gravino, a second-year graduate student in the Department…
- Rev. Robert A. Dowd, C.S.C.: Charge to Class of 2025(Remarks as prepared) We have heard many speeches today — and I do not have much more to add.…