About Sterling

Mission and History
Location
Faculty Profiles
Student Profiles
Community Life
The Work College Program
Sustainable Sterling
Directions & Map
Affiliations
Articulation Agreements
Board of Trustees


Sterling College Diversity Commitment

We believe that all people deserve to be treated with respect and dignity and that our community is strengthened through differences.

Sterling College is committed to creating and maintaining an environment and a community that:

• Values different perspectives;

• Is free from racism, sexism, homophobia, and other prejudices;

• Is free from the weight of hate, discrimination, and fear;

• Promotes and fosters physical and emotional safety;

• Fosters civil and respectful dialogue.

 

 

 

 

 


 

 


Our Mission Statement
The Sterling College community combines structured academic study with experiential challenges and plain hard work to build responsible problem solvers who become stewards of the environment as they pursue productive lives.

Sterling College—A Brief History
Sterling was founded by Norman Rioux in 1958 as a boys’ college preparatory school. It was named after Margaret Sterling, the deceased wife of Douglas Field. Mr. Field was one of several Berkshire School (MA) faculty members who came here with Mr. Rioux.

Sterling's educational philosophy soon became rooted in the precepts developed by the founder of the Outward Bound, Kurt Hahn. His compelling educational pillars included combining academics, physical challenge, craftsmanship, and service to others. In the early 1960s, these found solid footing in the Northeast Kingdom under the leadership of new Headmaster W.E. “Ted” Bermingham. In late November 1964, the first Winter Expedition bivouacked at the base of West Mountain near the Canadian border. Winter Expedition is still a signature element of the Sterling experience and serves as the culmination of the fall semester.

When the alternative preparatory school market waned in the early 1970s, Sterling was well positioned to respond creatively. First came the Academic Short Course in Outdoor Leadership, a 21-day program for 13 to 16 year olds. It brought hundreds of young people to Sterling for an intense winter learning experience. The Short Course solidified women’s presence on campus to share equally in the benefits of a Sterling education. An extension of this idea became the year-long Grassroots project, an immediate success that led Sterling into the world of higher education. Sterling’s first Associate of Arts Degree in Resource Management was awarded in 1982. Full accreditation by the New England Association of Schools and Colleges was granted in 1987. Several members of the Grassroots Faculty continue to teach at the College today.

John E. “Jed” Williamson became President of Sterling College in 1996. He led the College through reaccreditation in 1997, including development of a baccalaureate program. The newly developed Junior and Senior Year curriculum builds on strengths of the two-year program, including Grassroots Year and the second-year internship program. During Junior Year many students pursue field studies across the globe in places such as Belize, Japan, Scandinavia, Nepal, and India. During Senior Year, students build upon these experiences as they develop a comprehensive Senior Applied Research Project.

Sterling also incorporates many of the traditions of the New England family farm, where everyone takes a hand at doing the chores. In 1999, Sterling College gained eligibility to join the Work Colleges Consortium, a national organization lending support to the College’s longstanding motto, Working Hands – Working Minds. When Sterling joined the federally funded Consortium, students became eligible to earn tuition stipends for their work on campus and service to the larger Craftsbury community.

While Sterling College was developing in Craftsbury, a small group of scholars in nearby Wolcott recognized a pressing need for courses and research on northern regions. In 1971, they founded the Center for Northern Studies (CNS), offering comprehensive, integrative programs in Northern Studies. Over several decades, CNS developed a junior year curriculum attended by students from around the world. During the 1990s, with Steven B. Young as Director, CNS joined other educational institutions across the circumpolar North to form the University of the Arctic, a cooperative network committed to higher education and research in the North. Their goal is “To create a strong, sustainable circumpolar region by empowering northerners and northern communities through education and shared knowledge.” In the fall of 2003, as Steve Young retired from the directorship, CNS merged with Sterling College, and new opportunities were created for students at both institutions.

Facilities on the hundred-plus acre Sterling College campus include fourteen residential, administrative, and classroom buildings, a woodworking shop, and library. Outdoor teaching facilities include a managed woodlot, a challenge course, a 30-foot climbing tower, organic gardens, and a working livestock farm with two solar/wind powered barns. Much of what is grown and raised is consumed in the dining hall. The Center for Northern Studies at Sterling College includes a 300-acre boreal wetland and a building containing a library, science lab, seminar rooms, offices, and central lounge.

Sterling College attracts faculty dedicated to undergraduate teaching, interdisciplinary curriculum, and diverse learning modes. Mottoes of the original school—Fovette Stirpes (Nourish the Roots)—and of the College—Working Hands – Working Minds—epitomize the core values of this unique, dynamic, forward-looking institution.

Sterling College—Board of Trustees
The governance of Sterling College is vested in the Board of Trustees, a self-perpetuating volunteer group elected to three-year terms. The Trustees’ major responsibility is the fiscal and educational integrity of the institution. The President serves in cooperation with the Trustees and acts on their behalf in all instances not reserved for direct action by the Board.

Chairwoman
Susan C. Bryant P'00
Head of the Chestnut Hill School, Massachusetts (Retired)

Vice Chairman
Jackson Kytle, Ph.D.
Deputy Provost, New School University, New York

Treasurer
Mark Schroeder, Ph.D.
CEO, Oliver Grain and Seed (Retired)

Secretary
Abigail (Apple) Faulkner '84
Homemaker

Trustees
Reid Bryant ’00
Teacher at The Farm School, Athol, Massachusetts

Kate Clark, J.D. '88
Attorney, Massachusetts

Philip Edgerton
Engineer (Retired)

Dean Engle
Vice President, JP Morgan Chase & Co.

Fred Filios
President, WGI Inc.

Linda Friehling, M.D.
Pediatrician

Bruno Frohlich, Ph.D.
Department. of Anthropology, Smithsonian Institute

Richard Gaffney, Ph.D. P'02
Professor of Philosophy, Siena College, New York (Retired)

Andrew C. Harvard, J.D.
Director of Outdoor Programs, Dartmouth College

David McLean, J.D.
Attorney, Paul Frank and Collins, Burlington, Vermont

Ed Nef, A.B.
Founder of school in Mongolia

Eleanor Ott, Ph.D.
Faculty, Vermont College of Union Institute

Bob Rheault
Colonel (Retired) and Program Director, Outward Bound

Christopher Shaw, Ph.D.
Instructor of Economics and History, Phillips Andover School, Massachusetts

Robert Shelton, J.D.
Attorney, Baltimore, Maryland

David Stoner (Retired)

Ross Virginia, Ph.D.
Professor of Environmental Studies, Dartmouth College, New Hampshire

Trustees Emeriti
David Behrend '60
CEO, Career Planning Services

Marvin Brown P'85
Investment Banker, BLFG Financial Group (Retired)

Lewis Cohen P'96
CEO, OzVision America

George Hill, M.D. P ‘85
Research Coordinator, St. Barnabas Medical Center, New Jersey

Peter Albert McKay, J.D. '63
Attorney, New York

Virginia de Ganahl Russell
Owner and CEO, Natural Elegance

Advisory Council
Caroline Alexander, Ph.D.
Classics Scholar and Author

Peter Fairbanks '64
Owner of Montgomery Art Gallery, San Francisco, Califonia

John Graham
Executive Director, The Giraffe Project

Paul Hawken
Author and Entrepreneur

Susan J. Herman, Ph.D.
Professor, Keene State College, New Hampshire

Gary Peter Kofinas, Ph.D.
Professor, University of Alaska, Fairbanks

Marcia Stone
Development Consultant

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