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Overview and Learning Goals

Overview

From its inception, the Environmental Studies Program (ES) at ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø±¬ÍøÕ¾ anchors students in both interdisciplinary environmental studies and a recognized academic discipline. With the pairing of a department or program as a coordinate major, environmental studies students are trained to embrace interdisciplinary breadth and disciplinary depth. This combination underscores the mission of ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø±¬ÍøÕ¾ as a liberal arts college. ES graduates have long found that the coordinate major translates into success after ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø±¬ÍøÕ¾ in graduate or professional school, plus a wide range of professional opportunities.

Learning Goals

The program's mission is to help students understand and respond wisely to environmental challenges facing the planet through rigorous training in the natural sciences, social sciences, and the humanities and arts.

Content

Students should demonstrate fluency in basic principles of the social sciences, humanities and arts, and natural sciences as they relate to environmental inquiry.

  1. Engage principles and methods of the humanities and the arts to consider ethical, cultural, historical, literary, and artistic dimensions of environmental questions (·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý1101 Introduction to Environmental Studies: Interdisciplinary Approaches, ·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý2403 Environment and Culture in North American History)
  2. Engage principles and methods of the natural sciences to understand the physical, chemical, and biological processes that characterize natural and human systems (·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý1101 Introduction to Environmental Studies: Interdisciplinary Approaches​,Ìý·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý2201 Perspectives in Environmental Science)
  3. Engage principles and methods of the social sciences to analyze and evaluate political, economic, psychological, anthropological, and sociological dimensions of environmental questions (·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý1101 Introduction to Environmental Studies: Interdisciplinary Approaches, ·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý2330 Environmental Policy and Politics)
  4. Synthesize these disciplinary perspectives to understand the complexities of environmental questions (·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý1101 Introduction to Environmental Studies: Interdisciplinary Approaches, ENVS courses numbered 3900–3999 (ENVS advanced seminars))Ìý

Skills

Students should acquire and refine the following skills as part of their coordinate major in environmental studies:

  1. To locate and critically assess varied sources of information, data, and evidence (·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý1101 Introduction to Environmental Studies: Interdisciplinary Approaches,Ìý·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý2201 Perspectives in Environmental Science,Ìý·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý2330 Environmental Policy and Politics, ·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý2403 Environment and Culture in North American History)
  2. To identify appropriate methods of inquiry to address research questionsÌý(·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý2201 Perspectives in Environmental Science, ·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý2330 Environmental Policy and Politics, ·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý2403 Environment and Culture in North American History)
  3. To gain exposure and practiceÌýin quantitative, qualitative, statistical, and spatial analyses (·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý1101 Introduction to Environmental Studies: Interdisciplinary Approaches,Ìý·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý2201 Perspectives in Environmental Science,Ìý·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý2330 Environmental Policy and Politics,Ìý·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý2403 Environment and Culture in North American History)Ìýand to work toward developing competency and fluency in these areas
  4. To understand the importance of place and locality in environmental inquiry and evaluate its significance and applicability to other contexts (·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý1101 Introduction to Environmental Studies: Interdisciplinary Approaches,Ìý·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý2201 Perspectives in Environmental Science Ìý·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý2330 Environmental Policy and Politics, ·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý2403 Environment and Culture in North American History)
  5. To understand the importance of temporal and spatial scales in environmental inquiry (·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý1101 Introduction to Environmental Studies: Interdisciplinary Approaches, ·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý2201 Perspectives in Environmental Science, ·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý2330 Environmental Policy and Politics, ·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý2403 Environment and Culture in North American History)
  6. To discern underlying values and criteria used to evaluate alternatives for addressing environmental problemsÌý(·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý1101 Introduction to Environmental Studies: Interdisciplinary Approaches, ·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý2330 Environmental Policy and Politics, ·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý2403 Environment and Culture in North American History)
  7. To work collaboratively and communicate across disciplines, while acknowledging and seeking out diverse perspectives (·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý1101 Introduction to Environmental Studies: Interdisciplinary Approaches and ENVS courses numbered 3900–3999 (ENVS advanced seminars))
  8. To develop the ability to identify and engage various communities, while acknowledging questions of equity and power (ENVS courses numbered 3900–3999 (ENVS advanced seminars))Ìý
  9. To research, write, and present within multiple disciplines (·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý1101 Introduction to Environmental Studies: Interdisciplinary Approaches, ·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý2201 Perspectives in Environmental Science, ·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý2330 Environmental Policy and Politics, ·¡±·³Õ³§Ìý2403 Environment and Culture in North American History)

Options for Majoring or Minoring in the Program

Students may elect to coordinate a major in environmental studies with any other department/programÌý major. Students pursuing coordinate majors may not normally elect a second major. Non-majors may elect to minor in environmental studies.Ìý

Program Website


This is an excerpt from the official ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø±¬ÍøÕ¾ College Catalogue and Academic Handbook.