ENVS407 - PREVENTION OF TOBACCO ADDICTION IN PRE-ADOLESCENT CHILDREN OF PHILADELPHIA

Status
C
Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
PREVENTION OF TOBACCO ADDICTION IN PRE-ADOLESCENT CHILDREN OF PHILADELPHIA
Term session
0
Term
2020A
Syllabus URL
Subject area
ENVS
Section number only
301
Section ID
ENVS407301
Meeting times
TR 1030AM-1200PM
Meeting location
HAYDEN HALL 358
Instructors
KULIK, MICHAEL
Description
Cigarette smoking is a major public health problem. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Control reports that more than 80% of current adult tobacco users started smoking before age 18. The National Youth Tobacco Survey indicated that 12.8% of middle school students and 34.8% of high school students in their study used some form of tobacco products.


In ENVS 407, Penn undergraduates learn about the short and long term physiological consequences of smoking, social influences and peer norms regarding tobacco use, the effectiveness of cessation programs, tobacco advocacy and the impact of the tobacco settlement. Penn students will collaborate with teachers in West Philadelphia to prepare and deliver lessons to middle school students. The undergraduates will survey and evaluate middle school and Penn student smoking. One of the course goals is to raise awareness of the middle school children to prevent addiction to tobacco smoke during adolescence. Collaboration with the middle schools gives Penn students the opportunity to apply their study of the prevention of tobacco smoking to real world situations.


Course number only
407
Cross listings
    Use local description
    No

    ENVS406 - COMMUNITY BASED ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH

    Status
    C
    Activity
    SEM
    Title (text only)
    COMMUNITY BASED ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
    Term session
    0
    Term
    2020A
    Subject area
    ENVS
    Section number only
    301
    Section ID
    ENVS406301
    Meeting times
    TR 0130PM-0300PM
    Meeting location
    DAVID RITTENHOUSE LAB 2C4
    Instructors
    HOWARTH, MARILYN
    Description
    From the fall of the Roman Empire to Love Canal to the epidemics of asthma, childhood obesity and lead poisoning in West Philadelphia, the impact of the environment on health has been a continuous challenge to society. The environment can affect people's health more strongly than biological factors, medical care and lifestyle. The water we drink, the food we eat, the air we breathe, and the neighborhood we live in are all components of the environment that impact our health. Some estimates, based on morbidity and mortality statistics, indicate that the impact of the environment on health is as high as 80%. These impacts are particularly significant in urban areas like West Philadelphia. Over the last 20 years, the field of environmental health has matured and expanded to become one of the most comprehensive and humanly relevant disciplines in science.


    This course will examine not only the toxicity of physical agents, but also the effects on human health of lifestyle, social and economic factors, and the built environment. Topics include cancer clusters, water borne diseases, radon and lung cancer, lead poisoning, environmental tobacco smoke, respiratory diseases and obesity. Students will research the health impacts of classic industrial pollution case studies in the US. Class discussions will also include risk communication, community outreach and education, access to health care and impact on vulnerable populations. Each student will have the opportunity to focus on Public Health, Environmental Protection, Public Policy, and Environmental Education issues as they discuss approaches to mitigating environmental health risks.


    This honors seminar will consist of lectures, guest speakers, readings, student presentations, discussions, research, and community service. The students will have two small research assignments including an Environmental and Health Policy Analysis and an Industrial Pollution Case Study Analysis. Both assignments will include class presentations. The major research assignment for the course will be a problem-oriented research paper and presentation on a topic related to community-based environmental health selected by the student. In this paper, the student must also devise practical recommendations for the problem based on their research.


    Course number only
    406
    Cross listings
      Use local description
      No

      ENVS399 - ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES RESEARCH SEMINAR FOR JUNIORS

      Status
      O
      Activity
      SEM
      Title (text only)
      ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES RESEARCH SEMINAR FOR JUNIORS
      Term session
      0
      Term
      2020A
      Subject area
      ENVS
      Section number only
      401
      Section ID
      ENVS399401
      Meeting times
      T 0130PM-0430PM
      Meeting location
      HAYDEN HALL 358
      Instructors
      ANDREWS, MARIA-ANTONIA
      Description
      This seminar is designed to help Juniors prepare for the Senior Thesis research. Topic selection, advisor identification, funding options, and basic research methods will be discussed.


      Course number only
      399
      Cross listings
        Use local description
        No

        ENVS312 - RECITATION

        Status
        O
        Activity
        REC
        Title (text only)
        RECITATION
        Term session
        0
        Term
        2020A
        Subject area
        ENVS
        Section number only
        789
        Section ID
        ENVS312789
        Description
        This course covers the fundamentals of atmosphere and ocean dynamics, and aims to put these in the context of climate change in the 21st century. Large-scale atmospheric and oceanic circulation, the global energy balance, and the global energy balance, and the global hydrological cycle. We will introduce concepts of fluid dynamics and we will apply these to the vertical and horizontal motions in the atmosphere and ocean. Concepts covered include: hydrostatic law, buoyancy and convection, basic equations of fluid motions, Hadley and Ferrel cells in the atmosphere, thermohaline circulation, Sverdrup ocean flow, modes of climate variability (El-Nino, North Atlantic Oscillation, Southern Annular Mode). The course will incorporate student led discussions based on readings of the 2007 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report and recent literature on climate change. Aimed at undergraduate or graduate students who have no prior knowledge of meteorology or oceanography or training in fluid mechanics. Previous background in calculus and/or introductory physics is helpful. This is a general course which spans many subdisciplines (fluid mechanics, atmospheric science, oceanography, hydrology).


        Course number only
        312
        Cross listings
          Use local description
          No

          ENVS312 - RECITATION

          Status
          O
          Activity
          REC
          Title (text only)
          RECITATION
          Term session
          0
          Term
          2020A
          Subject area
          ENVS
          Section number only
          402
          Section ID
          ENVS312402
          Meeting times
          W 0330PM-0500PM
          Meeting location
          CHEMISTRY BUILDING 119
          Instructors
          MARINOV, IRINA
          Description
          This course covers the fundamentals of atmosphere and ocean dynamics, and aims to put these in the context of climate change in the 21st century. Large-scale atmospheric and oceanic circulation, the global energy balance, and the global energy balance, and the global hydrological cycle. We will introduce concepts of fluid dynamics and we will apply these to the vertical and horizontal motions in the atmosphere and ocean. Concepts covered include: hydrostatic law, buoyancy and convection, basic equations of fluid motions, Hadley and Ferrel cells in the atmosphere, thermohaline circulation, Sverdrup ocean flow, modes of climate variability (El-Nino, North Atlantic Oscillation, Southern Annular Mode). The course will incorporate student led discussions based on readings of the 2007 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report and recent literature on climate change. Aimed at undergraduate or graduate students who have no prior knowledge of meteorology or oceanography or training in fluid mechanics. Previous background in calculus and/or introductory physics is helpful. This is a general course which spans many subdisciplines (fluid mechanics, atmospheric science, oceanography, hydrology).


          Course number only
          312
          Cross listings
            Use local description
            No

            ENVS312 - OCEAN-ATMOSPHERE DYNAMICS AND IMPLICATIONS FOR FUTURE CLIMATE CHANGE

            Status
            O
            Activity
            LEC
            Title (text only)
            OCEAN-ATMOSPHERE DYNAMICS AND IMPLICATIONS FOR FUTURE CLIMATE CHANGE
            Term session
            0
            Term
            2020A
            Subject area
            ENVS
            Section number only
            401
            Section ID
            ENVS312401
            Meeting times
            M 0200PM-0500PM
            Meeting location
            HAYDEN HALL 358
            Instructors
            MARINOV, IRINA
            Description
            This course covers the fundamentals of atmosphere and ocean dynamics, and aims to put these in the context of climate change in the 21st century. Large-scale atmospheric and oceanic circulation, the global energy balance, and the global energy balance, and the global hydrological cycle. We will introduce concepts of fluid dynamics and we will apply these to the vertical and horizontal motions in the atmosphere and ocean. Concepts covered include: hydrostatic law, buoyancy and convection, basic equations of fluid motions, Hadley and Ferrel cells in the atmosphere, thermohaline circulation, Sverdrup ocean flow, modes of climate variability (El-Nino, North Atlantic Oscillation, Southern Annular Mode). The course will incorporate student led discussions based on readings of the 2007 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report and recent literature on climate change. Aimed at undergraduate or graduate students who have no prior knowledge of meteorology or oceanography or training in fluid mechanics. Previous background in calculus and/or introductory physics is helpful. This is a general course which spans many subdisciplines (fluid mechanics, atmospheric science, oceanography, hydrology).


            Course number only
            312
            Cross listings
              Use local description
              No

              ENVS151 - FOREST WORLDS

              Status
              O
              Activity
              LEC
              Title (text only)
              FOREST WORLDS
              Term session
              0
              Term
              2020A
              Subject area
              ENVS
              Section number only
              401
              Section ID
              ENVS151401
              Meeting times
              MWF 0200PM-0300PM
              Meeting location
              MCNEIL BUILDING 150
              Instructors
              RICHTER, SIMON
              Description
              Can the humanities help us think differently about the forest? What happens if we imagine forests as the agents of their stories? At a time when humans seem unable to curb the destructive practices that place themselves, biodiversity, and the forests at risk, the humanities give us access to a record of the complex inter-relationship between forests and humanity. The course places a wide range of literature and film in which forests are strongly featured in relation to environmental history and current environmental issues.


              Course number only
              151
              Cross listings
                Use local description
                No

                ENVS100 - How Earth Works

                Status
                O
                Activity
                SEM
                Title (text only)
                How Earth Works
                Term session
                0
                Term
                2020A
                Subject area
                ENVS
                Section number only
                301
                Section ID
                ENVS100301
                Meeting times
                M 0100PM-0200PM
                Meeting location
                VAN PELT LIBRARY 113
                Instructors
                PLANTE, ALAIN
                Description
                This course will explore the physical science of the Earth's environment and human interactions with it. Coverage will include the Earth's various environmental systems, various environmental problems, and the direct and indirect causes of these environmental problems. Fresman seminar will mirror the ENVS100 recitation, and have additional discussions and social media projects.


                Course number only
                100
                Cross listings
                  Use local description
                  No

                  ENVS100 - RECITATION

                  Status
                  O
                  Activity
                  REC
                  Title (text only)
                  RECITATION
                  Term session
                  0
                  Term
                  2020A
                  Subject area
                  ENVS
                  Section number only
                  207
                  Section ID
                  ENVS100207
                  Meeting times
                  F 1200PM-0100PM
                  Meeting location
                  VAN PELT LIBRARY 113
                  Instructors
                  ELLISON, ERIC
                  Description
                  This course will explore the physical science of the Earth's environment and human interactions with it. Coverage will include the Earth's various environmental systems, various environmental problems, and the direct and indirect causes of these environmental problems. Fresman seminar will mirror the ENVS100 recitation, and have additional discussions and social media projects.


                  Course number only
                  100
                  Cross listings
                    Use local description
                    No

                    ENVS100 - RECITATION

                    Status
                    O
                    Activity
                    REC
                    Title (text only)
                    RECITATION
                    Term session
                    0
                    Term
                    2020A
                    Subject area
                    ENVS
                    Section number only
                    206
                    Section ID
                    ENVS100206
                    Meeting times
                    W 0100PM-0200PM
                    Meeting location
                    VAN PELT LIBRARY 113
                    Instructors
                    ELLISON, ERIC
                    Description
                    This course will explore the physical science of the Earth's environment and human interactions with it. Coverage will include the Earth's various environmental systems, various environmental problems, and the direct and indirect causes of these environmental problems. Fresman seminar will mirror the ENVS100 recitation, and have additional discussions and social media projects.


                    Course number only
                    100
                    Cross listings
                      Use local description
                      No