A Practitioner’s Education

At Sterling, students live experiences, learn from those experiences, and in many cases become practitioners in a related field. As a freshman, you might embark on a project that’s unfamiliar. As a senior, you may become a teaching assistant in the same project area, having developed your interest and skill during the course of your Sterling career.

Over a Sterling career, students move from introductory skill-building and coursework to higher- order thinking, sophisticated skills development, and providing leadership as teaching assistants and student facilitators. Instead of a thesis, students complete a three-semester Capstone project that brings your cumulative learning and personal interests together.

Before graduation, you design and produce a multimedia, professional portfolio showcasing your knowledge and experience. It’s a graduation gift to yourself, one to help you forward your career goals once you leave Sterling.

As a residential college, Sterling students live in community, a concept you investigate philosophically while personally experiencing what that means.

Bridging Curriculum

  • Overview

    All students study 15 subject areas organized into three domains: Understanding the Natural World, Humans in the Environment, and Creating Community. These pillars are brought to life, sometimes while paddling a canoe or scaling a rock wall and other times through grappling with ethical questions through writing and philosophical discourse with your peers. Electives let you make your education your own by adding breadth and depth to your studies and helping you develop focus based on your interests and aptitudes

  • Scaffolding Seminars

    Sterling prepares you for school and life through mentorship, support, and by being a place where faculty and other students are accessible. College is a time to discover who you are in the world, and who you want to be. Sterling is a safe place to try on different identities, learn skills you may have never considered relevant, and get your hands dirty while sometimes making mistakes.

    Seminars are key to the Sterling experience. Faculty-led and mentored, they support students in the pursuit of excellence. Here Sterling provides a structured learning environment that fosters intelligence, reflection, and the mastery of life skills, from independent living to career readiness.

    Scaffolding seminars help students develop skills and fluency critical to navigating life, work, and continued study. First-year scaffolding seminars support students living independently for the first time, while third-year seminars let you take the reins of your studies as you design and produce a Capstone project, develop a multimedia portfolio, and prepare for life after Sterling.

    Other key Scaffolding Seminars teach financial literacy, conflict resolution through empathy and depolarization, reading scientific literature, career planning, managing information overload and digital life, and fine-tuning your abilities to move through the world intentionally.

  • Experiential Endeavors

    Experiential endeavors are a unique element of Sterling education, spanning 14 weeks each and allowing for 150 hours for students to apply what they know. Endeavors are project-based learning opportunities that combine instruction, practice, and reflection. Students work with each other and faculty to set personal goals and objectives for the endeavor and are asked to self-evaluate.

    To successfully complete an endeavor, students must consistently and meaningfully participate, and you must demonstrate that you’re learning over the course of the project. Endeavors provide students an arena for building your teamwork and leadership skills, and they challenge you to hone your communication and problem-solving skills.

    Depending on which endeavor you choose, each has content-specific course elements. These could include charting history relevant to the endeavor, building pertinent athletic or artistic ability through experimentation, economic and social impact analysis, developing communication skills, including cooperation, leadership, and listening, and exploring creative solutions to community challenges.

  • Capstone Project

    Required to earn a bachelor of arts degree from Sterling, a Capstone is a final project that pursues a particular question in significant depth, involving independent design, research, synthesis, and a means to communicate results. The Capstone spans three semesters; total credits awarded will vary from 7-13, depending on the project.

    Recent projects include:

    Olivia Bates ’22: Recipes for The Earth and Her People: A Cookbook

    Eric Bailey ’22: Paddlers’ Impacts on Wildlife and Surrounding Areas of the Northern Forest Canoe Trail

    Bryan Emery ’22: Professionalizing Green Bikes

    Paige Harris ’22: Ethical Slaughter and Value-Added Meat Production

    Conner Quinn ’22: Research in Aquatic Hyphomycete Associations with Vegetation

    Anushka Saraswat ’22: The Causes and Aftermath of Global Immigration

    Amelia Zenerino ’21: An Illustrated Guide to the Vascular Flora Along Cane’s Run

    Jennifer Palmer ’21: Seed Saving for the Market Garden

    Niveditha Raju ’21: Ecosomatics: Literature Review, Embodied Research, and Program Design

    The Capstone is a substantial self design opportunity where a student can tie together their prior learning and further specialize in their area of interest. Projects require pre-approval from the faculty and should build upon and apply the skills and knowledge already developed by the student. The Capstone is supported by a primary advisor, with input from a second advisor; students are also encouraged to seek the input of a sponsor outside Sterling College.

    Starting in the second semester of their junior year, students use their scaffolding seminar time to develop a Capstone project concept as a means to find emphasis within Environmental Studies. The concept comes to life in the first semester of the fourth year. The final semester is spent synthesizing the work and preparing a culminating body of evidence of the learning.

    In their final year, students also produce a professional portfolio: a collation of evidence of their competencies that will support them in pursuing their desired career pathways upon graduation. Portfolio development is supported by a scaffolding seminar.