ECT_CLMEMR - Multidisciplinary Approaches to Climate Emergency - Experiential Certificate
Download as PDF
Program Requirements
Credits 1 and 2: Academic Courses (choose two)
Humanities
ENGL 338. Beyond Nature Worship: New Theories of Environmentalism
ENGL 360. Walden (a significant portion of this student-directed research course must be related to climate change)
HISP 346. Antarctica: Culture and Crisis
HIST 219. Planet Earth: Past, Present and Future
HIST 220. Possible Earths: Histories and Cultures of Environmental Thought
HIST 367. Climate and History
LACS 215. Reading Climate: Lit to Action
LACS 229. Desert Fantasies
RELG 203. Religion and Climate Change
Natural Sciences
BIOL 234. Global Change, Evolution and Biodiversity
BIOL 333. Ecology
ENGR 108. The Science and Policies of Energy and Sustainability
ENVS 110. The Earth’s Climate
Social Sciences
ANTH 227. Introduction to Political Ecology
ECON 317. Developmental Economics
ECON 336. The Market for Green Goods
INTS 263./POLS 263. Global Environmental Politics
POLS 324. Environmental Issues in International Relations
POLS 332. HRST 332 . Understanding Civil Conflict
PSYC 206. Environmental Psychology and Sustainability
PSYC 212./URST 212. Landscape Planning and Environmental Education for Brain Health
SOCL 225. Climate Justice
SOCL 245. Environmental Sociology
Credit 3: Co-curricular Experience (choose one)
Research (during the semester or summer) with a faculty member whose research is relevant to climate change
An internship related to climate sustainability
TA-ship for one of the courses listed above (cannot be the same as the courses used to fulfill credits 1 and 2)
For more information, contact certificate faculty advisers Professor Michelle Kovarik.