BS
Brittany Salaam
  • Durham, NC

High School Student Brittany Salaam Learns how to Promote Green Living Through Wake Forest University Program

2011 Jul 26

Brittany Salaam from Durham, NC was one of 23 high school students from as far away as California that have been on the Wake Forest University's Reynolda Campus exploring challenges related to sustainable initiatives. With the help of professors, renowned experts, owners of green businesses and one another, these students have confronted these and other complex issues from ecological, economic, political, social, and legal angles - to name a few - through Wake Forest's LENS program.

In its second year, the highly-selective LENS @ Wake Forest (Learn, Experience, Navigate and Solve) program is geared toward students who want to implement positive change in their communities.

"The most difficult problems we face in the world today can only be solved by studying them from a variety of perspectives," says Lucas Johnston, assistant professor of religion and environmental studies and co-director of the program. "The LENS program is designed to help students understand that broad academic knowledge coupled with input from people with different life experiences, concerns and opinions is a powerful problem-solving tool."

Students visited Yellow Wolf Farm to learn about sustainable farming operations and a farmers market to purchase locally grown foods for a group meal. They also visited the Yadkin River, Forsyth County's primary water source, to meet with a representative from the local Riverkeepers chapter.

Improving writing skills to communicate, test ideas and persuade others is another component of the program. Co-director Ryan Shirey, interim director of the Wake Forest Writing Center, provided one-on-one writing tutorials and collaborative workshops to help students translate their ideas into proposals for community action.

"What separates Wake Forest's program from other similar programs is the goal of having students leave with the confidence and the tools to envision and implement their own sustainability success stories at home," Johnston says.