Essentials Magazine | Vol. 73 No. 4 | Page 6

GREEN IS BETTER The Growing Popularity of Green Schools is Opening New Markets By Bob Stimolo | School Marketing Research Institute (SMRI) W ant to enhance your image among educators? Going green is a way to distinguish you from the crowd. It’s popular with all teachers and especially important to some. GREEN IS GROWING Green teachers and schools are growing in popularity. The American University in Washington, D.C., is in its fourth year offering a Green Teaching Certificate and recognizing a Green Teacher of the Year. According to the Center for Green Schools in Washington, D.C., green schools increase teacher retention. “Teachers in green schools report they are more satisfied with their school envi6 essentials | FALL 2013 ronments than teachers in conventional schools, helping to improve teacher retention. They cite indoor air quality, access to daylight and views and better acoustics as reasons they prefer these high-performing schools.” The Center makes the point that retaining teachers saves money. “A 2010 report by the National Commission on Teaching and America’s Future (NCTAF) estimated that the nation’s school districts spent at least $7.2 billion a year on teacher turnover. Increasing teacher retention helps to lower a school district’s personnel replacement, recruitment and training costs. In the four years since Great Seneca Creek Elementary School in Germantown, Md., opened as the first LEED-certified green school in the state, only one teacher made a lateral transfer to another school. (LEED certified is the rating system of the Green Building Council’s Leader in Energy and Environmental Design.) In a recent survey, every member of the 100-person staff said they worked in a safe and healthy environment and that they would recommend the school to a friend for employment.” The Center also reports that green schools enhance learning. “The quality of educators and curriculum are the most important factors in a student’s scholastic performance, but the quality of school facilities – where students learn – is often overlooked. School buildings can enhance a student’s ability to learn by keeping them healthy, attentive and present. According to the Department of Education, more than 20 percent of public schools in the U.S. report having unsatisfactory indoor