UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — In contrast to the classic spring break trip soaking up sun on a beach, 12 students in the College of Earth and Mineral Sciences capitalized on their time off to gain an exclusive educational experience abroad. The students traveled to Iceland, a small country known for its outsized renewable energy resources, to see classroom concepts in real life, while crossing off a bucket-list global experience.
Hannah Chop, a senior majoring in environmental systems engineering, seized the opportunity through the EMSC 299 embedded course, an online three-credit course at Penn State paired with the Global Renewable Energy Education Network (GREEN) Program.
The GREEN program is an international alternative study abroad program whose main focus is to educate college students passionate about the role of renewable energy in finding energy solutions.
Throughout the eight-day trip, Chop collaborated with students from other disciplines and other universities, gaining valuable interdisciplinary insights for dealing with issues around sustainable entrepreneurship and policy, geology, geothermal energy, hydroelectric power and electric power systems.
“I interacted with people in the college that I wouldn't have otherwise interacted with, so learning from what everyone else is doing in the College of Earth and Mineral Sciences (EMS) was valuable,” Chop said. “We met and worked with students from North Carolina, California and the United Kingdom who all brought different perspectives on the same material that we studied.”
After lectures at Reykjavik University, the students toured hydro and geothermal generation facilities and had unfettered access to industry professionals, said Haley Sankey, program coordinator and an assistant teaching professor in the John and Willie Leone Family Department of Energy and Mineral Engineering.
“As part of the GREEN Program experience, students are encouraged to examine alternative ways of applying sustainability concepts and renewable energy technologies to experiment with their own ideas through capstone projects,” Sankey said. “The mix of culture, academics, adventure and experiential learning is perfect and can cement a student’s pathway or introduce a new road to be explored.”