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GEOG 430 - Human Use of the Environment

This is a sample syllabus.

This sample syllabus is a representative example of the information and materials included in this course. Information about course assignments, materials, and dates listed here is subject to change at any time. Definitive course details and materials will be available in the official course syllabus, in Canvas, when the course begins.

Overview

Human Use of the Environment examines the human use of resources and ecosystems, the multiple causes and consequences of environmental degradation, and adaptive institutional and policy arrangements as prerequisites for resilient and sustainable management and development in different parts of the world. The major objective of this course is to help geographers, earth scientists, and other professionals to develop an awareness and appreciation of the multiple perspectives that can be brought to studies of human use of the environment and of the ways in which resource-management decisions are made in human society. This is a capstone course that encourages students to place their individual major and technical skills within the context of multiple approaches to environmental decision making and management in complex and dynamic social-ecological systems. GEOG 430 is designed as a collective/social learning experience. This implies that the professor and students share responsibility for the learning process and take advantage of collective skills, insights, experiences, and efforts of each other. As in system dynamics, this requires both commitment and flexibility and the willingness to explore foreign territory. As part of this philosophy, learning consists not only of information flow from professor to student, but also from student to student and student to professor. The course follows a case study approach to explore real life lessons of adaptive management around the globe. To make this process work, attendance and active participation are imperative. The course is run more like a seminar than a lecture course and integrates lectures, in-class discussions, presentations, and interactive activities.

Objectives

Upon completion of this course students will be able to:

  • Describe the changing relationships between people and their environments, the causes and consequences of environmental degradation, strategies for building a more sustainable world, and the methods and approaches that scholars have used to describe human-environment interactions.
  • Explain the complexity of human-environment systems
  • Interpret, analyze and communicate effectively regarding human-environment interactions in their lives as students, professionals, and citizens (critical thinking and synthesis of ideas, map interpretation, searching for and finding and assessing academic sources and writing).
  • Analyze and critique competing approaches intended to achieve environmental conservation and sustainability.
     

Required Materials

Typically, there are no required materials for this course. If this changes, students will find a definitive list in the course syllabus, in Canvas, when the course begins.

Prerequisites

GEOG 010, or GEOG 020, or GEOG 030, or GEOG 040, or GEOG 130, or permission from the program (based on experience with environmentally-related coursework from another discipline or prior knowledge)

If you have questions about prerequisites and requirements for a specific program, please ask the Undergraduate Advisor Jodi Vender (jvender@psu.edu) to see if you can take this course or if this course fulfills specific requirements.

Expectations

This is a 400-level Geography course so you can expect a significant amount of reading each week. You will be expected to read one, two or occasionally three academic papers for each of the 11 weeks of course content.

Major Assignments

In this course, students have the option to submit short written reflections on assigned reading(s) each week (‘Path 1’ students) OR to complete take-home midterm AND final exams (‘Path 2’ students) instead. More details on assignments will be provided throughout the course.

There are a maximum of 100 points which can be earned in this course. Graded work in this course includes:

  • 40 points: Two path options
    • Path 1: Ten weekly reflections (4 points each) (11 weekly reflections offered, drop lowest 1)
      OR
    • Path 2: Take-home mid-term (20 points) and final (20 points) exams
  • 40 points: Two analytical current events essays (20 points each)
  • 20 points: Participation Assignments (1 discussion post for introduction and 4 reading assignments on Perusall)

 

Course Schedule

Check the Canvas page for specific due dates and timeframes.

 
DatesLesson 1 - See the calendar in Canvas for specific dates.
Readings
  • Online lesson material
  • Chapter 1 of Moseley, W. G., Perramond, E., Hapke, H. M., & Laris, P. (2014). An introduction to human-environment geography: local dynamics and global processes. John Wiley & Sons.
Assignments
  • Introduce Yourself Activity
  • Everyone: Participation
 more to come...