ENVS642 - GLOBAL WATER CONF SWEDEN

Status
O
Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
GLOBAL WATER CONF SWEDEN
Term session
2
Term
2017B
Subject area
ENVS
Section number only
960
Section ID
ENVS642960
Meeting times
TBA TBA-
Instructors
FREEDMAN, JON
Description
The global water and sanitation crisis kills over 4,000 children each day and represents one of the biggest health problems in the world. At the University of Pennsylvania school year 2010-2011 was declared the "Year of Water" in recognition of the many challenges that lie ahead as global increases in population and affluence and the influences of climate change will stress limited water resources. Each year the Stockholm International Water Institute convenes a Conference with experts from around the globe to exchange the latest water research findings and develop new networks. Students will attend the Conference, present research by presentations/posters, document a key issue, interview experts, and meet colleagues with common interests. They will also help other organizations at the Conference.


Course number only
642
Cross listings
    Use local description
    No

    ENVS626 - The History and Science of Climate Change

    Status
    O
    Activity
    ONL
    Title (text only)
    The History and Science of Climate Change
    Term session
    2
    Term
    2017B
    Subject area
    ENVS
    Section number only
    960
    Section ID
    ENVS626960
    Meeting times
    R 0600PM-0800PM
    Instructors
    BORDEAUX, YVETTE
    Description
    This course will provide an understanding of the Earth's climate system and how and why this has changed through time. The emphasis will be placed on spatial and temporal scales in the modern system while exploring the evidence for past change, possible mechanisms to explain these changes, and the implications of these changes to past, present, and future global climate. Students will learn to reconstruct the history and scales of climate change through the use of proxies; understand the mechanisms that act to drive climate change; show an understanding of the long-term natural climate variability on a global and regional scale; understand the importance of natural environmental change, against which to assess human impacts, recent climate change and issues of future environmental change.


    Course number only
    626
    Cross listings
      Use local description
      No

      ENVS610 - REGIONAL FIELD ECOLOGY

      Status
      O
      Activity
      LEC
      Title (text only)
      REGIONAL FIELD ECOLOGY
      Term session
      0
      Term
      2017B
      Subject area
      ENVS
      Section number only
      960
      Section ID
      ENVS610960
      Meeting times
      W 0530PM-0810PM
      Meeting location
      HAYDEN HALL 360
      Instructors
      WILLIG, SARAH
      Description
      Over the course of six Sunday field trips, we will travel from the barrier islands along the Atlantic Ocean in southern New Jersey to the Pocono Mountains in northeastern Pennsylvania, visiting representative sites of the diverse landscapes in the region along the way. At each site we will study and consider interactions between geology, topography, hydrology, soils, vegetation, wildlife, and disturbance. Students will summarize field trip data in a weekly site report. Evening class meetings will provide the opportunity to review field trips and reports and preview upcoming trips. Six all-day Sunday field trips are required.


      Course number only
      610
      Cross listings
        Use local description
        No

        ENVS604 - CONSERVATION & LAND MGMT

        Status
        O
        Activity
        LEC
        Title (text only)
        CONSERVATION & LAND MGMT
        Term session
        0
        Term
        2017B
        Subject area
        ENVS
        Section number only
        960
        Section ID
        ENVS604960
        Meeting times
        T 0600PM-0900PM
        Meeting location
        DAVID RITTENHOUSE LAB 4E9
        Instructors
        BRIGHTMAN, THOMAS
        Description
        Using protected lands in the Delaware Valley, this field-based course will explore various strategies for open-space conservation and protection. In addition, students will be introduced to land management techniques used on such sites to restore or preserve land trust proerties in accordace with goals set for their use or protection.Sustainable land uses such as community supported agriculture, ecovillages, and permaculture design will be covered. Emphasis will be placed on developing skills in "Reading the Landscape" to determine conservation and restoration priorities. Students will produce a site assessment report on sites that they visit.


        Course number only
        604
        Cross listings
          Use local description
          No

          ENVS181 - CULTRS OF SUSTAINABILITY

          Status
          O
          Activity
          LEC
          Title (text only)
          CULTRS OF SUSTAINABILITY
          Term session
          0
          Term
          2017B
          Subject area
          ENVS
          Section number only
          950
          Section ID
          ENVS181950
          Instructors
          RICHTER, SIMON
          Description
          Sustainability is more than science, engineering, policy, and design. Surveyingthe world, we see that the politics and practice of sustainability play out in different ways depending on cultural factors. Some cultures are more prone to pursue ecological goals than others. Why? Do the environmental history and experience of a nation affect policy? Do nature and the environmentplay a crucial role in the cultural memory of a nation? Can cultural componentsbe effectively leveraged in order to win approval for a politics of sustainability? And what can we, as residents of a country where climate changeand global warming are flashpoints in an enduring culture war, learn from other cultures? This course is designed to equip undergraduate students with the historical and cultural tools necessary to understand the cultural aspects of sustainability in two countries noted for their ecological leadership and cultural innovation, Germany and the Netherlands.


          Course number only
          181
          Cross listings
            Use local description
            No

            ENVS498 - SENIOR THESIS: RURAL ELECTRIFICATION IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA: A CASE STUDY OF KENYA

            Status
            O
            Activity
            SRT
            Title (text only)
            SENIOR THESIS: RURAL ELECTRIFICATION IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA: A CASE STUDY OF KENYA
            Term session
            0
            Term
            2017A
            Subject area
            ENVS
            Section number only
            146
            Section ID
            ENVS498146
            Instructors
            DMOCHOWSKI, JANE
            Description
            The culmination of the Environmental Studies major. Students, while working with an advisor in their concentration, conduct research and write a thesis.


            Course number only
            498
            Cross listings
              Use local description
              No