Almost annually since 1991 I’ve made one or two treks “up north” to the Au Sable Institute of Environmental Studies northeast of Kalkaska, Michigan. Last week was my first time this year. Perched on a wooded hillside above Louie’s Pond, the institute has been providing environmental education for some fifty years—first as a youth camp, later as a boys’ science camp, and after 1980 as a provider of college-level courses.
Au Sable’s primary mission is to supplement the curricula of Christian colleges that typically do not have enough students to support the teaching of various specialized subjects. So students from colleges all over the country can take these often hard to find courses at Au Sable in a short
May session or two longer summer sessions and receive academic credit at their own college or university. Here’s just a sampling of courses offered this academic year: winter stream ecology, conservation biology, environmental chemistry, and watershed stewardship. Even if they can obtain a similar course on their college campus, a number of students will take their classes at Au Sable because of small class size, the availability of field studies, and the accessibility of their professors. It’s a wonderful place—a place that has made a life-changing difference in the lives of most of those who have taken classes there.
Of course, as a former college instructor and adjunct professor, I enjoy visiting Au Sable when the students are present. It’s always an encouragement to me to see the enthusiasm and dedication of both the students and the visiting professors—many of whom hold respected professorships in major universities in the United States and Canada. The studen
ts would be the first to tell you that although they are housed in a beautiful setting, the courses they’re taking definitely are not what we used to call “crip courses.”
The value of the education they receive is reflected in the fact that many Au Sable students have gone on to become college professors themselves. One of those students, Garrett Crow, has in fact come full circle. As a student at Taylor University in 1963, he came to Au Sable Trails in the summer where he taught outdoor education to the boy campers. He went on to gain his PhD. at Michigan State University and had a long and successful professorship at the University of New Hampshire, from which he recently retired. This summer finds him back at Au Sable guiding graduate students in directed research projects.
The philosophy of the Au Sable Institute is one that I give a hearty “amen” to:
The board, faculty, and staff confess that God is exclusive owner of all and that human beings are trustees of that over which they have responsibility. The task and responsibility of human beings is that of stewardship; stewardship is the responsible care and use of the Creation and all its creatures. Stewards of the Creation must have ecological awareness and knowledge. They must know and understand the interrelationships between living creatures and their environments. They must know the nature and impacts of its use by human beings. Stewards of the Creation must have knowledge and skills for acting responsibly in the sustaining, renewing, and preserving of the Creation and its rich diversity.
Also take a look at the more comprehensive overview of this philosophy found in “The Au Sable Idea.”
See you outdoors!
Dean



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