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Online
Evaluation |
Overview: This course is designed to provide students with an appreciation for the complexity of environmental issues and an awareness of the tools that can be applied to understand and solve problems involving the environment. The course will begin with the basics of how natural systems function. Next, faculty from different academic departments will present perspectives on the cultural, ethical, economic, and physical dimensions of environmental issues. Finally, students will work on a specific problem, applying techniques and concepts learned earlier in the semester.
Prerequisites: None.
Text and reading: The primary text for this class is Environmental Science by Kauffmann & Cleveland (abbreviated as ES). Required reading is indicated below. Quizzes will be over the chapters from this text. With your text, there is an Online Learning Center at the McGraw-Hill web site.
Many weeks there will be supplementary reading material assigned. Please read the assigned material before Tuesday of each week. Come to class prepared to discuss the assigned readings.
Class attendance and participation: Class participation and attendance will account for 10% of your grade. I encourage you to speak up. Ask for clarification. Share your ideas and your insights. Brilliance is not the point. Discovery and understanding are the goals. Questions are welcomed at all times. Don't be surprised if I ask you questions when I don't hear from you otherwise. All of this contributes to your participation grade.
Attendance is mandatory. You are allowed two unexcused absences before it affects your grade. After that, your final average will be degraded by 1% for every unexcused absence. Class begins at 9:40. Be prepared to begin at that time. Plan to arrive by 9:35. Chronic late arrivals will be counted as absences.
Short response assignments and Quizzes: Many weeks, you will be you will be asked to write a very short (<1 page, double-spaced, typed/computer printed) response to some question regarding your weekly assignment. Detail for each week can be found in the appropriate links found in online syllabus. The purpose of these assignments is to help you get ready for class discussion and to stimulate thinking. Short responses will be graded with a check, check-plus, or check-minus. Short responses are always due at the beginning of class on the day of the assignment. Late submissions will not be accepted after noon on the day assigned.
There will be one quiz. It will cover materials in th 2nd weekly reading assignments from Environmental Science. The "Questions for Review" guides at the end of the chapters will give you a good idea of what to study for the quiz. Short responses and Quizzes will account for 20% of your grade.
Exam and Take-home Essay/Exam: The mid-term exam will cover all readings and class material up to that point in the semester. It will consist of short answer questions and some essay questions. The take-home essay assignment will be a short paper in which you will address an issue using all you have learned in the class to that point. Together, these are worth 35% of your grade.
Field Trips: We will have one or two class field trips to be determined later and are subject to weather conditions. These will be out of doors and may involve getting wet and/or dirty, so dress appropriately.
Group Project: This is a collaborative effort. You will work in groups of 5-6 students on a particular environmental issue. Within certain parameters, your group will define the problem, outline its major components using the systems approach, research the details, and present your project to the class. Finally, each member of the group will write a final report on her/his component of the project. The environmental issue(s) of interest will be determined later in the semester. The project will account for 25% of the grade, which will be a combination of the group and individual contributions to the project.
Academic honesty: This class will follow the official Kenyon College position on academic honesty .
Need help?: If at any time, you feel that you do not have the proper background to understand the material that is being presented, please let me know. If you have a disability and therefore may have need for some type of accommodation(s) in order to participate fully in this class, please feel free to discuss your concerns in private with me and also self identify yourself to Erin Salva, Coordinator of Disability Services at PBX 5453 or via e-mail at SALVAE.
Grading: Student learning will be evaluated with an in-class essay test, a take-home essay, chapter quizzes and responses, the class project, and participation in class activities. I suggest you check with me early in the term if you have any doubts about how well you are doing. It doesn't pay to wait until the last week to ask how you can improve your grade. The contribution of each component to the final grade is as follows;
Essay test = 20%
Take-home essay = 15%
Project = 25%Stella Footprint =10%
Quizzes, short responses = 20%
Class attendance and participation = 10%
Deadlines and conflicts: Work in this class
that is handed in late will be penalized 1/3 grade per day. For example,
a B+ will become a B. If conflicts exist with scheduled extracurricular
events, students must contact me one week before the date to discuss ways to
handle the conflict. In the case of conflicts with exams, I expect that
students will take the exam before the scheduled date. Written assignments
should be handed in before the due date if a class is to be missed because of
a scheduled event.
Schedule:
(subject to change as the semester progresses)
| Date | Topic/Activity | Readings/Assignments |
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Jan 13 Jan 15 |
Introduction to Environmental Studies A Systems Approach to Complex Issues |
ES Chapt.1, 3 Response: ANWR (THURS) |
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Jan 20 Jan 22 |
The Global Context - energy and nutrient cycling Climate Change - systems approach |
ES Chapt.5, 6 Quiz: ES Chap. 3, 5, 6 QUIZ KEY |
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Jan 27 Jan 29 |
Biodiversity Invasive and Endangered Species |
ES Chapt.7, 12, TBA |
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Feb 3 Feb 5 |
Landscape Change - ecological consequences ESSAY TEST (All material through Feb. 3) |
ES Chapt.8 |
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Feb 10 Feb 12 |
Ecological Footprint Modeling Footprints with Stella |
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Feb 17 Feb 19 |
Human Cultural Ecology (Prof. Hardy) |
TBA DUE 2/19 (THURS): Stella Footprint |
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Feb 24 Feb 26 |
Human Population Growth – a complex issue |
ES Chapt.9, 11, TBA |
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Mar 2 to Mar 13 |
Spring Break | |
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Mar 17
Mar 19 |
Note: see Fennessy project groups or Mauck project groups here Sustainable Energy (Prof. Cummings) |
ES Chapt. 20, 22 DUE 3/24: Group Project Definition |
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Mar 24 Mar 26 |
Environmental Ethics (Prof. Dean-Otting) Economic Systems & the Environment (Prof. Corrigan)- Class prep material |
ES Chapt. 10 |
Mar 31 Apr 2 |
Oil and the Environment (Special apprearance, Charlie Hall, SUNY), Also please note a special seminar Tuesday evening at 7:30, Higley Auditorium "Peak Oil and EROI" Local Food Webs (Prof. Sacks) |
Reading & Response due today |
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Apr 7 Apr 9 |
Sustainable agriculture -a whole systems approach (Discussion) Sustainable agriculture: Field Trip to Dharma Farm |
ES Chapt. 16, TBA |
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Apr 14 Apr 16 |
Politics and the Environment (Prof. van Holde) Group Project Workshop |
Link: Tragedy of the Commons ES Chapt. 24 |
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Apr 21 Apr 23 |
Climate Change Discussion Is Environmentalism Dead? discussion |
Shellenberger & Nordhaus essay and Don't Fear the Reapers: a Response Due 4/23: Discsussion Assignment |
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Apr 28 Apr 30 |
Group Project In-class Poster Sessions (TAKE-HOME ESSAY EXAMPLE) |
DUE 5 PM 5/4: Group Project (written) |
last update - April 30, 2009 8:53 AM
No Final Exam - DUE 5PM 5/4: Group Project (written)