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Faculty |
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Professors Baptiste, Burnett, Cardelús, Frey, Helfant, Henke, Kawall, McCay, Roller |
º¬Ðß²ÝÑо¿Ëù's Environmental Studies Program provides º¬Ðß²ÝÑо¿Ëù students with the concepts, methods, and skills to understand the opportunities, challenges, and consequences of human engagement with environmental systems and processes. Environmental studies is a fundamentally interdisciplinary field and brings together the full range of liberal arts disciplines and perspectives. The Environmental Studies Program is located within the Division of University Studies and staffed by faculty appointed in the program and from a number of departments who apply their knowledge and expertise to teaching and research endeavors that cross disciplinary boundaries. The program administers five majors: environmental studies plus four departmentally affiliated majors including environmental biology, environmental economics, environmental geography, and environmental geology.Â
All five majors include a common set of courses that ensures a shared interdisciplinary experience and provide students with the skills to learn, research, write, and speak about environmental studies through the lenses and tools of environmental humanities, the natural and social sciences, geospatial and policy analysis, and the concept and practices of sustainability. Community-based research methods and service to our campus and regional communities are built into all student experiences through our capstone course, ENST 450.Â
To fulfill environmental studies graduation requirements, students must possess a minimum overall GPA of at least 2.00 in all courses counted toward the major, both ENST courses and those taken in other departments and programs.
Note: For students graduating in the Class of 2025 and earlier, please refer to details of the Environmental Studies curriculum available at this link.
Honors and High Honors
Environmental studies majors wishing to pursue honors should consult with the environmental studies program director and a research sponsor no later than the spring of their junior year. Honors may be awarded to students majoring in environmental studies who accumulate a GPA of 3.30 in courses counted toward the major, and complete a semester-long independent research project under faculty guidance through enrollment in ENST 491 - Independent Study . Students pursuing honors will submit a proposal developed in consultation with an ENST-affiliated faculty member who will serve as research sponsor. The proposal describing the project will be submitted to the environmental studies steering committee in the fall semester of their senior year for approval. The research project should reflect the student's area of focus but must also demonstrate the understanding gained using an interdisciplinary perspective and approach. The Director of the program will normally serve as second reader to the honors project. Alternatively, the director and research sponsor may designate up to three faculty members to evaluate the merit of the work and report to the environmental studies steering committee. Students standing for honors will deliver an oral presentation to faculty and students of the program, and produce a report in a format most appropriate to the project. The environmental studies steering committee and the research sponsor must determine whether the oral presentation and report are of high quality and worthy of honors in the program. Students demonstrating exceptional commitment to research and meeting all the requirements for honors may be awarded high honors if the overall quality of their work is deemed to be outstanding by the environmental studies steering committee and research sponsor.
To qualify for graduation with honors or high honors in environmental biology, environmental economics, or environmental geography, students must take ENST 490 - Seminar in Environmental Studies  and also meet the requirements for honors or high honors in the biology, economics, or geography major (depending on the area of specialization). The major GPA is calculated from all courses counted toward the major, both ENST courses and those taken in other departments and programs.
Honors and High Honors for Environmental Geology
To be eligible for honors in environmental geology, students must complete the following requirements in addition to the environmental geology major: (1) Complete GEOL 441 - Senior Research Seminar  (2) take four full-credit courses in mathematics, chemistry, physics, or biology, (3) complete a year-long senior thesis as described in the honors section of the geology major, and (4) achieve a minimum average GPA of 3.0 in the three 200-level core courses and 400-level capstone course. If additional courses are taken in these categories, the highest grades will be used to compute this GPA.
Transfer Credit
A maximum of two course credits transferred from other institutions may be applied toward the environmental studies major. One course credit transferred from another institution may be applied toward the environmental studies minor. Approved courses taken as part of º¬Ðß²ÝÑо¿Ëù sponsored study groups, such as the Australia study group affiliated with the Environmental Studies Program, are not considered transfer credits and do not count toward the maximum. In many cases, courses that might be applied toward the environmental studies major or minor will be approved for university credit by another department on campus. For example, an environmental economics course would be reviewed for credit by the economics department. Once approved for university credit, the course must be approved by the director of environmental studies for credit toward the major or minor. In some cases, a course might be approved for university credit as an environmental studies (ENST) course. Students must supply the director with a course description and syllabus to apply for transfer credit in these cases. Limits on the transfer of courses toward environmental biology, environmental economics, environmental geography, and environmental geology majors are determined by the biology, economics, geography, and geology departments, respectively, and are available in the affiliated department section in this chapter.
Australia Study Group
This program at the University of Wollongong provides a unique opportunity for junior majors and minors to expand their studies of the environment. For more information, see Off-Campus Study.
Awards
The Award for Excellence in Environmental Studies — awarded annually to the environmental studies student who has demonstrated excellence in academics and in service to the environmental studies community.
Courses
The courses listed below are offered by the ENST program. As an interdisciplinary program, select courses from other departments/programs may also count toward the ENST major and minor requirements. Use the major/minor links below to find other courses that count toward these requirements.Â
Majors and Minors
Major
- Environmental Biology Major
- Environmental Economics Major
- Environmental Geography Major
- Environmental Geology Major
- Environmental Studies Major
Minor
Courses
- ENST 200LÂ -Â Environmental Science Lab
- ENST 200Â -Â Environmental Science: Challenges and Solutions
- ENST 202Â -Â Environmental Ethics
- ENST 219Â -Â American Literature and the Environment
- ENST 224Â -Â Introduction to Environmental History
- ENST 232Â -Â Environmental Justice
- ENST 233Â -Â Global Environmental Health Issues
- ENST 234Â -Â Case Studies in Global Environmental Health
- ENST 240EÂ -Â Sustainability: Science and Analysis Extended Study
- ENST 240Â -Â Sustainability: Science and Analysis
- ENST 241Â -Â Sustainability and Climate Action Planning
- ENST 250Â -Â Environmental Policy Analysis
- ENST 291Â -Â Independent Study
- ENST 309Â -Â Australian Environmental Issues (Study Group)
- ENST 319Â -Â Food
- ENST 321Â -Â Global Environmental Justice
- ENST 324Â -Â Hunting, Eating, Vegetarianism
- ENST 334Â -Â Carnivores Across Cultures
- ENST 335Â -Â US Environmental Politics
- ENST 340Â -Â Environmental Cleanup: Methods and Regulation
- ENST 358Â -Â Ecosystems, Environmental Threats, and response in Trinidad and Tobago (Study Group)
- ENST 389Â -Â Conservation Biology & Policy
- ENST 391Â -Â Independent Study
- ENST 450LÂ -Â Community-Based Research Lab
- ENST 450Â -Â Community-based Study of Environmental Issues
- ENST 490Â -Â Seminar in Environmental Studies
- ENST 491Â -Â Independent Study