I have to say that I am impressed with the research done by those commenting on this thread who have taken the trouble to find out details about San Domenico School.
My children went to a parochial school in Marin County; but I have several friends who sent their children to San Domenico, and I had occasion to be on the campus - though not for about six or seven years now.
When I was last on the campus, Sister Gervaise was head of school. The current head of school Cecily Stock writes of Sr, Gervaise: “Sr. Gervaise’s far-thinking mind, gentle spirit and intelligence give us a legacy that is ever-giving. She has lived on campus and dedicated her life to SD and her students for 50 years.”
The day that I met Sr. Gervaise I ran into her in the Upper School dining hall during a short school break so it was quiet on campus - only international boarding students were in the hall that day. My husband and I were there with a group doing a bird survey. I was looking for a restroom. Upon finding out that we were birding, Sister launched into an enthusiastic description of the school’s sustainability program. She was amazing - captivating really.
I think that what is wonderful about SD is demonstrated on this web page titled:
Institutional Sustainability at San Domenico School
Exploring the relationship of Ecology & Spirituality
earthlight.org/sandomenico23.html
An excerpt:
San Domenico’s head of school, Sister Gervaise Valpey, O.P., and the faculty and staff have earnestly begun the difficult and essential work of transforming San Domenico into a sustainable institution. As a Dominican, Sister Gervaise finds strong support for such work within her order’s eight centuries of experience in developing self-reliant monastic communities. Furthermore, the school’s value-based mission statement celebrates the diversity of life and recognizes “what it means to be human in a global community and respond with integrity to the needs and challenges of our time.”
For many years, Sister Gervaise has been deeply inspired by the life and work of Dominican Sister Miriam Therese MacGillis, founder of Genesis Farm, and Father Thomas Berry, the Catholic “geologian” and author of The Dream of the Earth. MacGillis, Berry, and many other contemporary religious thinkers have begun to articulate a theology of continuity between the human community and the interpenetrating natural communities upon which it is entirely dependent. This continuity - or sacred ecology - has profound implications for our economic, political, religious, and educational institutions.
In 1994, Sister Gervaise, working with Sim Van der Ryn of the Ecological Design Institute, was able to secure a one-year grant from her religious community to launch the Sustainable San Domenico Project. From the beginning, the Project has had a twofold purpose: to introduce sustainability into the curriculum at all grade levels and across all disciplines; and to make the school’s operations, maintenance, buying practices, and buildings reflect the principles of sustainability. Underlying both efforts is the notion of ecological design, a comprehensive strategy for minimizing negative environmental impacts.