ENVS410 - CLEAN WATER-GREEN CITIES

Status
O
Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
CLEAN WATER-GREEN CITIES
Term session
0
Term
2015C
Subject area
ENVS
Section number only
301
Section ID
ENVS410301
Meeting times
T 0530PM-0830PM
Meeting location
DAVID RITTENHOUSE LAB 2C6
Instructors
NEUKRUG, HOWARDJESIKIEWICZ, JANELLE
Description
This course will provide an overview of the cross-disciplinary fields of civil engineering, environmental sciences, urban hydrology, landscape architecture, green building, public outreach and politics. Students will be expected to conduct field investigations, review scientific data and create indicator reports, working with stakeholders and presenting the results at an annual symposium. There is no metaphor like water itself to describe the cumulative effects of our practices, with every upstream action having an impact downstream. In our urban environment, too often we find degraded streams filled with trash, silt, weeds and dilapidated structures. The water may look clean, but is it? We blame others, but the condition of the creeks is directly related to how we manage our water resources and our land. In cities, these resources are often our homes, our streets and our communities. This course will define the current issues of the urban ecosystem and how we move toward managing this system in a sustainable manner. We will gain an understanding of the dynamic, reciprocal relationship between practices in an watershed and its waterfront. Topics discussed include: drinking water quality and protection, green infrastructure, urban impacts of climate change, watershed monitoring, public education, creating strategies and more.


Course number only
410
Cross listings
    Use local description
    No

    ENVS408 - URBAN ASTHMA EPIDEMIC

    Status
    O
    Activity
    SEM
    Title (text only)
    URBAN ASTHMA EPIDEMIC
    Term session
    0
    Term
    2015C
    Syllabus URL
    Subject area
    ENVS
    Section number only
    001
    Section ID
    ENVS408001
    Meeting times
    TR 0130PM-0300PM
    Meeting location
    HAYDEN HALL 358
    Instructors
    GUEVARA, MARCOKULIK, MICHAEL
    Description
    Asthma as a pediatric chronic disease is undergoing a dramatic and unexplained increase. It has become the number one cause of public school absenteeism and now accounts for a significant number of childhood deaths each year in the USA.The Surgeon General of the United States has characterized childhood asthma as an epidemic. In ENVS 408, Penn undergraduates learn about the epidemiology of urban asthma, the debate about the probable causes of the current asthma crisis, and the nature and distribution of environmental factors that modern medicine describes as potential triggers of asthma episodes.


    Penn students will collaborate with the Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) on a clinical research study entitled the Community Asthma Prevention Program. The Penn undergraduates will co-teach with CHOP parent educators asthma classes offered at community centers in Southwest, West, and North Philadelphia. The CHOP study gives the Penn students the opportunity to apply their study of the urban asthma epidemic to real world situations.


    Course number only
    408
    Cross listings
      Use local description
      No

      ENVS404 - URBAN ENVIRONMENTS:SPEAKING ABOUT LEAD IN WEST PHILADELPHIA

      Status
      C
      Activity
      SEM
      Title (text only)
      URBAN ENVIRONMENTS:SPEAKING ABOUT LEAD IN WEST PHILADELPHIA
      Term session
      0
      Term
      2015C
      Subject area
      ENVS
      Section number only
      001
      Section ID
      ENVS404001
      Meeting times
      TR 1030AM-1200PM
      Meeting location
      HAYDEN HALL 358
      Instructors
      PEPINO, RICHARDKUTCHER, CATHERINEPILUTTI, JACKSON
      Description
      Lead poisoning can cause learning disabilities, impaired hearing, behavioral problems, and at very high levels, seizures, coma and even death. Children up to the age of six are especially at risk because of their developing systems; they often ingest lead chips and dust while playing in their home and yards.


      In ENVS 404, Penn undergraduates learn about the epidemiology of lead poisoning, the pathways of exposure, and methods for community outreach and education. Penn students collaborate with middle school and high school teachers in West Philadelphia to engage middle school children in exercises that apply environmental research relating to lead poisoning to their homes and neighborhoods.


      Course number only
      404
      Cross listings
        Use local description
        No

        ENVS400 - ENVS SEMINAR: ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY

        Status
        O
        Activity
        SEM
        Title (text only)
        ENVS SEMINAR: ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY
        Term session
        0
        Term
        2015C
        Subject area
        ENVS
        Section number only
        305
        Section ID
        ENVS400305
        Meeting times
        TR 0130PM-0300PM
        Meeting location
        CHEMISTRY BUILDING 109
        Instructors
        PEPINO, RICHARD
        Description
        Application of student and faculty expertise to a specific environmental problem, chosen expressly for the seminar.


        Course number only
        400
        Cross listings
          Use local description
          No

          ENVS326 - GIS MAP PLAC & ANALY SPA: GIS MAPPING PLACES & ANALYZING SPACES

          Status
          O
          Activity
          LEC
          Title (text only)
          GIS MAP PLAC & ANALY SPA: GIS MAPPING PLACES & ANALYZING SPACES
          Term session
          0
          Term
          2015C
          Subject area
          ENVS
          Section number only
          001
          Section ID
          ENVS326001
          Meeting times
          T 0430PM-0730PM
          Meeting location
          DAVID RITTENHOUSE LAB PC-L1
          Instructors
          HEINLEN, KRISTA
          Description
          This course is a hands-on introduction to the concepts and capabilities of geographic information systems (GIS). Students will develop the skills necessary for carrying out basic GIS projects and for advanced GIS coursework. The class will focus on a broad range of functional and practical applications,ranging from environmental science and planning to land use history, social demography, and public health. By the end of the course, students will be ableto find, organize, map, and analyze data using both vector (i.e. drawing-based) and raster (i.e. image-based) GIS tools, while developing an appreciation for basic cartographic principles relating to map presentation.This course fulfillsthe spatial analysis requirement for ENVS and EASC Majors. Previous experiencein the use of GIS is not required.


          Course number only
          326
          Cross listings
            Use local description
            No

            ENVS325 - SUSTAINABLE GOODS

            Status
            C
            Activity
            LEC
            Title (text only)
            SUSTAINABLE GOODS
            Term session
            0
            Term
            2015C
            Subject area
            ENVS
            Section number only
            401
            Section ID
            ENVS325401
            Meeting times
            TR 0130PM-0250PM
            Meeting location
            MCNEIL BUILDING 309
            Instructors
            HAGAN, JAMES
            Description
            The study of sustainability-the long term viability of humans in harmony with the environment-has been identified as a critical issue for society and industry and is evolving to examine how society should conduct itself in order to survive.This issue impacts the consumer goods that we use in our lives,the processes that are designed to make these goods, and the raw materials that we obtain to create these goods.The questions that we will examine will be:can these goods be obtained,made,and consumed in a fashion that allows the current quality of life to be mantained (or enhanced) for future generations? Can these processes be sustainable? A review of consumer goods is necessary as the starting point in order to understand the basic needs of people in society and why people consume goods as they do. Subsequently,each student will choose a product to examine in detail and will research the product for its impact with respect to natural resource selection,production,use,and disposal/reuse.


            Course number only
            325
            Cross listings
            • ENVS667401
            Use local description
            No

            ENVS305 - BIOREMEDIATION

            Status
            O
            Activity
            LEC
            Title (text only)
            BIOREMEDIATION
            Term session
            0
            Term
            2015C
            Subject area
            ENVS
            Section number only
            401
            Section ID
            ENVS305401
            Meeting times
            M 0500PM-0800PM
            Meeting location
            HAYDEN HALL 358
            Instructors
            VANN, DAVID
            Course number only
            305
            Cross listings
            • ENVS605401
            Use local description
            No

            ENVS301 - ENVIRONMENTAL CASE STUDIES

            Status
            O
            Activity
            LEC
            Title (text only)
            ENVIRONMENTAL CASE STUDIES
            Term session
            0
            Term
            2015C
            Subject area
            ENVS
            Section number only
            001
            Section ID
            ENVS301001
            Meeting times
            MW 0200PM-0330PM
            Meeting location
            DAVID RITTENHOUSE LAB 3N1H
            Instructors
            DMOCHOWSKI, JANE
            Description
            A detailed, comprehensive investigation of selected environmental problems. Guest speakers from the government and industry will give their acccounts of various environmental cases. Students will then present information on a case study of their choosing.


            Course number only
            301
            Cross listings
              Use local description
              No

              ENVS239 - SUSTAINABILITY & UTOPIA

              Status
              O
              Activity
              SEM
              Title (text only)
              SUSTAINABILITY & UTOPIA
              Term session
              0
              Term
              2015C
              Subject area
              ENVS
              Section number only
              401
              Section ID
              ENVS239401
              Meeting times
              TR 1200PM-0130PM
              Meeting location
              MEYERSON HALL B13
              Instructors
              WIGGIN, BETHANY
              Description
              This seminar explores how the humanities can contribute to discussions of sustainability. We begin by investigating the contested term itself, paying close attention to critics and activists who deplore the very idea that we should try to sustain our, in their eyes, dystopian present, one marked by environmental catastrophe as well as by an assault on the educational ideals long embodied in the humanities. We then turn to classic humanist texts on utopia, beginning with More's fictive island of 1517. The 'origins of environmentalism" lie in such depictions of island edens (Richard Grove), and pour course proceeds to analyze classic utopian tests from American, English, and German literatures. Readings extend to utopian visions from Europe and America of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, as well as literary and visual texts that deal with contemporary nuclear and flood catastrophes. Authors include: Bill McKibben, Jill Kerr Conway, Christopher Newfield, Thomas More, Francis Bacon, Karl Marx, Henry David Thoreau, Robert Owens, William Morris, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Ayn Rand, Christa Wolf, and others.


              Course number only
              239
              Cross listings
              • COML209401
              • ENGL275401
              • GRMN239401
              Use local description
              No

              ENVS204 - LABORATORY

              Status
              O
              Activity
              LAB
              Title (text only)
              LABORATORY
              Term session
              0
              Term
              2015C
              Subject area
              ENVS
              Section number only
              101
              Section ID
              ENVS204101
              Meeting times
              W 0300PM-0500PM
              Meeting location
              HAYDEN HALL 358
              Instructors
              PIOTROWSKI, JOSEPH
              Description
              Public perceptions and attitudes concerning the causes and importance of globalwarming have changed. Global Climate Change provides a sound theoretical understanding of global warming through an appreciation of the Earth's climate system and how and why this has changed through time. We will describe progress in understanding of the human and natural drivers of climate change, climate processes and attribution, and estimates of projected future climate change. We will assess scientific, technical and socio-economic information relevant for the understanding of climate change, its potential impacts and options for adaptation and mitigation.


              Course number only
              204
              Cross listings
                Use local description
                No