The material on this page is from the 1999-2000 catalog and may be out of date. Please check the current year's catalog for current information.
Professors Straub (Religion)(on leave, winter semester and Short Term) and Wenzel (Chemistry); Associate Professors Kinsman (Biology), Costlow (Russian), Smedley (Physics), Richter (Political Science), Chair, and Hughes (Economics); Assistant Professors Ongley (Geology), Austin (Chemistry)(on leave, 1999-2000), and Bohlen (Environmental Studies); Mr. Rogers (Environmental Studies) Winter 2000 Environmental Studies Addendum Notes Short Term 2000 Environmental Studies Addendum Notes Environmental studies encompasses a broad range of problems that arises from the interaction of human beings with the natural world. The solutions to these problems often require multidisciplinary understanding. Recognizing the relevance of social, aesthetic, ethical, scientific, and technical perspectives, the environmental studies curriculum provides a framework for an interdisciplinary major that blends coursework in the disciplines with interdisciplinary environmental studies courses. Major Requirements. A student majoring in environmental studies must fulfill "core" course requirements, as well as the requirements of a "track." Students may choose one of the following four tracks: Culture, Society and Environment; Earth and Ecosystems; Environmental and Natural Resource Policy; or Geochemistry. Course offerings change periodically and the program updates which courses are available each year. Students should contact the program chair or another member of the Committee on Environmental Studies for further information and help in selecting courses. Pass/Fail Grading Option: Pass/fail grading may not be elected for courses applied towards the major except for Environmental Studies s46. Added 11/5/99. Effective beginning with Winter 2000 semester. Students should note that there may be flexibility in requirements due to changes in the curriculum. Core Requirements
Courses 107B. Chemical Structure and Its Importance in the Environment. Fundamentals of atomic and molecular structure are developed with particular attention to how they relate to substances of interest in the environment. Periodicity, bonding, states of matter, and intermolecular forces are covered. The laboratory involves a semester-long, group investigation of a topic of environmental significance. This course is the same as Chemistry 107B. Enrollment limited to 60 per section. Not open to students who have received credit for Chemistry 107. T. Wenzel. 108B. Chemical Reactivity in Environmental Systems. A continuation of Chemistry/Environmental Studies 107B. Major topics include thermodynamics, kinetics, equilibrium, acid/base chemistry, and electrochemistry. Examples developed throughout these topics relate to chemical processes that occur in the environment. The laboratory involves a semester-long, group investigation of a topic of environmental significance. Prerequisite(s): Chemistry 107A or Chemistry/Environmental Studies 107B. This course is the same as Chemistry 108B. Enrollment limited to 60 per section. Not open to students who have received credit for Chemistry 108. K. Covert. 181. Working with Environmental Data. This course uses lectures, problems, and projects to introduce students to experimental design, data collection, and data analysis. The course introduces basic principles of statistical thinking and trains students to be informed consumers of statistics commonly encountered in environmental science and policy contexts. The course covers basic concepts in probability and statistics, principles of experimental design, measures of location and dispersion, statistical estimation, and testing of hypotheses. Recommended background: a working knowledge of algebra. Required of all majors. C. Bohlen. 202. Introduction to Environmental Studies. This course provides an interdisciplinary introduction to environmental studies. Perspectives from the natural sciences, social sciences, and humanities are used to explore the human-environment relationship. Lectures, discussions, laboratory exercises, and field trips are used to provide a technical understanding of selected environmental issues and to provide an analytic framework for examining environmental problems as reflections of underlying social, economic, and political processes. The course addresses human population and resource consumption as drivers for environmental change and examines the effects of environmental change on human economic and social systems. Course content varies to reflect current issues. Recommended background: Economics 101. Prerequisite(s): Environmental Studies 181 plus two additional environmental studies core requirements. C. Bohlen. 204. Environment and Society. This course provides an introduction to the ways in which people interact with the natural environment. It concentrates on two main issues: 1) How do people think about the relationship between the environment and society? 2) What are some key empirical issues in the environment-society relationship that illustrate the various ways of thinking about the environment? Open to first-year students. P. Rogers. 205. "Nature" in Human Culture. The course aims to introduce students to the dynamics between the natural environment and human culture. First, it seeks a theoretical framework for appreciating how cultural traditions screen human perceptions and hence grant human meaning to the natural world. Second, it studies selected interpretations of nature from the traditions of indigenous peoples, Asian cultures, and the Western experience. Third, the course considers the prospects for moving beyond inherited perspectives to fresh envisagements of the lands, the seas, and other living creatures. Open to first-year students. Enrollment is limited to 30 per section. C. Straub. 212. Literature and the Environment. How is the world of nature made present to us in works of fiction and poetry? What visions of human/natural relationships do such works offer? How can we learn from others' visions and needs to better understand our own and our society's relationship to the natural world? This course offers a cross-cultural perspective on environment and the literary imagination. Through reading works from various cultures (including East Asian, Russian, and American), students explore the complex ways in which authors have come to know and express place. Topics include the relationship between environment and identity, technology and crisis, and nature as a spiritual resource. Students bring their experiences of the natural world to the course, considering how various forms of environmental knowledge contribute to readings of literature. Open to first-year students. S. Strong, J. Costlow. 214. Ethics and Environmental Issues. A study of selected issues in environmental ethics, including questions about population growth, resource consumption, pollution, the responsibilities of corporations, environmental justice, animal rights, biodiversity, and moral concern for the natural world. The course explores debates currently taking place among environmental thinkers regarding our moral obligations to other persons, to future generations, to other animals, and to ecosystems and the earth itself. This course may substitute for Religion 215 in the Environmental Studies major requirements. Not open to students who have received credit for Religion 215. This course is the same as Philosophy 214. Open to first year students. Enrollment limited to 30 per section. T. Tracy. 216. Food for Thought:World Agriculture. This course introduces students to the history of agriculture, the manner in which contemporary agriculture is practiced around the globe, and the ever-changing nature of agriculture and its relationships to the broader social and natural worlds. Two important themes are emphasized in this course. The first is the continuing, though often overlooked importance of agriculture in the modern world. The second is that agriculture is a multi-dimensional activity with social, cultural, political, economic, and environmental elements. In the field component of the course, students engage in an on-farm application of farming system theories and techniques. Prerequisite(s): Environmental Studies 202 or 204. Open to first-year students. P. Rogers. First offered Fall 2000. 228. Caring for Creation: Physics, Religion, and the Environment. This course considers scientific and religious accounts of the origin of the universe, examines the relations between these accounts, and explores the way they shape our deepest attitudes toward the natural world. Topics of discussion include the biblical creation stories, contemporary scientific cosmology, the interplay between these scientific and religious ideas, and the roles they both can play in forming a response to environmental problems. This course is the same as Religion 228 and Physics 228. Enrollment limited to 40. T. Tracy, J. Smedley. 245. African Wildlife Conservation. This course examines wildlife and its habitat in sub-Saharan Africa and the ways these populations and ecosystems have been effected by human activity. It explores three periods of African history Ñ pre-colonial, colonial, and postcolonial Ñ in order to assess the changing fortunes of wildlife, habitat, and African communities during these eras. Unlike popular views of Africa as an "Eden" untouched by human activity, the course emphasizes the long history and continuing importance of interrelationships between human communities and wildlife in sub-Saharan Africa. While the empirical focus is most definitely on Africa, broader theoretical and policy issues which are applicable to wildlife conservation elsewhere in the world also play a prominent role in the course. Prerequisite(s): Environmental Studies 202 or 204. Open to first-year students. P. Rogers. 290. Nature in East Asian Literature. How have poets and other writers in Japan and China portrayed, valued, and responded to the myriad phenomena that Western tradition calls "nature"? What ideas have they used to construct the relationship between human beings and the environment? Do their views offer the modern world a possible antidote to its environmental ills? Are these views too deeply conditioned by Asian traditions to be understood in the West? This course looks closely at several works from Japanese and Chinese traditions whose authors pay particular attention to the relationship between the self and the physical world the self observes. Specific writers may include Hitomaro, Saigyô, Kamo no Chomei, Bashô, Li Po, and Wang Wei. This course is the same as Japanese 290. S. Strong. 302. Wetland Science and Policy. This course is an introduction to wetland ecosystems, wetland management, and current controversies over wetland policy. The course emphasizes hydrological, geological, and ecological processes that structure wetland ecosystems, the connections between wetlands and adjacent ecosystems, and how those ecological relationships affect wetland management. The emphasis is on wetlands as dynamic components of a complex landscape that may itself be changing in response to human actions. Prerequisite(s): One natural-science set except physics sets. Enrollment limited to 20. C. Bohlen. 360. Independent Study. This course provides an opportunity, on a tutorial basis, for a student to investigate a selected topic of individual interest. A report is required at the end of each semester of work. Topics are selected jointly by the student and tutor, and must be approved by the program chair. Students are limited to one independent study per semester. Open to first-year students. Written permission of the instructor is required. Staff. 457, 458. Senior Thesis. Research for and writing of the senior thesis, under the direction of a faculty member. Guidelines for the thesis are published on the environmental studies Web page (http://www.bates.edu/acad/depts/environ), or are available from the program chair. Students register for Environmental Studies 457 in the fall semester and for Environmental Studies 458 in the winter semester. Majors writing an honors thesis register for both 457 and 458. Staff. 460. Colloquium. Seniors join with members of the faculty to study and reflect upon significant topics in environmental studies. The course may focus on a particular aspect of the environment, such as "water," with visiting experts joining in the reflection. The course may also focus on a set of individual thesis projects presented by participating seniors. The colloquium is an acknowledgement both of the complex, interdisciplinary character of environmental issues and the senior majors' readiness to share in a collegial consideration of them. "Environmental Consequences of War" is the topic for Winter 2000. Required of all majors. This colloquium is taken in the winter semester of the senior year, with the one-semester thesis taken in either the fall term or concurrently in the winter term. Prerequisite(s) or Corequisite(s): Environmental Studies 457 or 458. Staff. Short Term Units s11. Ecological Restoration. This unit examines ecological restoration, rehabilitation, and recovery within a broad environmental management context. Field trips, case studies, and a class project planning a restoration effort are used to explore why restoration is undertaken, how it is carried out, how one can assess the value or benefits of restoration, and how it fits into larger environmental and social contexts. Students see restoration efforts for forests, wetlands, lakes, estuaries, and flowing waters, as well as sites at which recovery processes are occurring without human intervention. Landscape-scale restoration efforts from the Chesapeake Bay and Mississippi watersheds are also examined. Recommended background: Biology 270, Geology 103, or 106. Enrollment limited to 15. C. Bohlen. s24. Seminar in Sustainable Development. The concept of sustainable development is examined and the implications this concept has for a number of areas of human interest are investigated. The relationship between scientific uncertainty and sustainable development is highlighted. Questions relating to social, cultural, and political feasibility are addressed. Students present and discuss selected topics, in a seminar format, drawing from Our Common Future as well as from primary literature and selected textbooks. This unit is the same as Chemistry s24. Enrollment limited to 20. R. Austin. s25. Introduction to GIS and Lewiston, ME. Geographical information systems (GIS) are powerful analytical tools. They will be the key technology of the twenty-first century for the analysis of spatial data and one of the next universal computer applications. This combination of a specifically designed interactive database and a cartographic system allows unparalleled examination of spatially distributed data to solve real-world problems. Service-learning projects in and around the City of Lewiston culminating in a public symposium aptly demonstrate the wide applicability of GIS. Recommended background: a course dealing with spatial data and familiarity with Windows operating system. Open to first year students. Enrollment is limited to 14. This unit is the same as Geology s25. L. Ongley. s26. Using the Land. Land use is one of the most crucial environmental issues we face today. This unit examines the relationship between humans and land, as well as issues such as the ability of current land management practices to ensure the survival of human and other species, and the relative rights of human and other species to the land. Walden, Wilderness and the American Mind, Slide Mountain: The Folly of Owning Nature, and Desert Solitaire are read and discussed. Open to first-year students. Enrollment limited to 14. Not open to students who have received credit for Chemistry s26 or First-Year Seminar 201. T. Wenzel. s27. Sustaining the Masses. Students in this unit investigate the contradictions and complementarities between economic development and global economic integration on the one hand and environmental protection on the other. Students spend up to four weeks in China visiting farming communities, large- and small-scale industrial enterprises, reforestation sites, nature reserves, and pollution control facilities. They also meet with villagers, workers, and government officials. Linkages between local and international economics, politics, history, culture, and the environment are explored using China as a case study. Recommended background: one or more of the following: Economics 101, 222, 227, 229 or Environmental Studies 201. This unit is the same as Economics s27. Open to first-year students. Enrollment limited to 10. Written permission of the instructor is required. M. Maurer-Fazio, J. Hughes. s32. Hydrogeologic and Environmental Problems in Maine's Watersheds. An important hydrogeologic or geochemical issue concerning one of Maine's watersheds is investigated in this unit. Fieldwork may include watershed reconnaissance; water and sediment sampling; acoustic profiling of lakes, ponds, and rivers; and attendance at town meetings. Laboratory work may include water and sediment analysis, map and aerial photograph examination, and data compilation and analysis. A service-learning project frames the course. Prerequisite(s): any 100-level geology course. This unit is the same as Geology s32. Open to first-year students. Enrollment limited to 12. L. Ongley. s34. Chemical Pollutants: Science and Policy. On what basis are chemicals in the environment regulated? How are acceptable levels of exposure determined? This unit examines how these sorts of public policy decisions are made by studying a few chemicals as examples. Topics covered include chemical structures and toxicity, the notion of "risk" and who defines it, and the role of scientific information in the legal process. Prerequisite(s): Chemistry 108A or 108B. This unit is the same as Chemistry s34. Open to first-year students. Enrollment limited to 30. R. Austin. s38. Environmental Issues in Developing Economies. Is poverty a cause of environmental degradation in developing countries? Or is the quest for economic growth to alleviate poverty the source of these countries' environmental problems? How does the interaction between the developed and developing worlds affect the environment? What role can developing countries play in addressing global environmental problems? Can a modern economy develop in a sustainable way? In this unit, students examine the link between economic development and the environment from a number of perspectives. Using case studies of particular countries, and cross-country comparisons of certain industries, students examine the prospects and problems facing the developing world. Prerequisite(s): Economics 101. This unit is the same as Economics s38. Enrollment limited to 20. J. Hughes. s46. Internship in Environmental Studies. Projects may include hands-on conservation work, environmental education, environmental research, political advocacy, environmental law, or other areas related to environmental questions. Specific arrangement and prior approval of the Committee on Environmental Studies is required. Staff.
s50. Individual Research. Registration in this unit is granted by the Committee on
Environmental Studies only after the student has submitted a written proposal for a full-time
research project to be completed during the Short Term and has secured the sponsorship of a
faculty member to direct the study and evaluate results. Students are limited to one individual
research unit. Open to first-year students. Staff.
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