Results/Conclusions My course begins with a discourse model to articulate 5 major environmental issues/challenges currently of importance to my students. Examples include climate change, fisheries collapse, Gulf Oil Spill, mountaintop coal mining, beach erosion, fracking, or environmental injustice regarding a nearby incinerator. Next, students form groups to take the lead in researching, organizing, and directing 6-8 classes, during which they present the ecological/environmental/policy background of the issue, and design daily activities and groupwork (readings, videos, discussions) for their peers. My role is that of an instructor in a "guided inquiry" – meet with the leader group to discuss their content, delivery methods, and peer engagement, step in during class to make sure that the science is contextually sound and correctly presented, intervene regarding the scientific validity of politically motivated or corporate-funded pseudo-science, and with input from the leader group, I write and grade the summative unit exams. Evidence I will present indicates that my students, all of whom comprise what has been called the 99%, engage, take ownership, and otherwise benefit in their understanding of the complexities and necessity of environmental problem solving. And for me, this course model renews my hope that teaching matters in the sustainability education of the next generation.