Learning goals for the environmental policy, institutions,
and behavior major:Goal 1
Students graduating from the major will understand and
analyze the varied perspectives offered by the social and natural sciences
regarding the causes and consequences of social, ecological, and environmental
change. This includes interactions among natural resources, climate,
population, energy use and technology, health, forces of globalization, social
institutions, and cultural values.
Graduates should be
able to:
1.1 Describe major patterns and drivers of natural resource
use, pollution, and climate and environmental change.
1.2 Identify different approaches to the governance and
management of human activities that affect the environment, both in the United States
and abroad, including institutions, property relations, management regimes, politics,
and policies.
1.3 Explain characteristics of human populations, including
population growth, demographic transitions, social stratification, consumption,
and indicators of human welfare.
1.4 Describe technological trends affecting human well-being
and the environment including energy use and development, biotechnology, and
geospatial and communication technologies.
1.5 Evaluate major issues in health, including race, gender,
and socioeconomic position, food and nutrition access and policies, cultural
factors, and understanding of risk and vulnerability.
1.6 Discuss the dynamics of development and globalization,
including historical antecedents, current trends and pathways, and local
responses to global forces.
1.7 Explain how social forces, cultural values, and behavior
affect human environmental interactions, including issues such as political and
economic relations, inequality, access to resources, and interactions between
human diversity and biological diversity.
Goal 2
Students will acquire the skills to use appropriate
conceptual and methodological tools to structure inquiries about human-environment
interactions.
Graduates should be
able to:
2.1. Assess the relevant contexts for addressing environmental problems at the appropriate spatial, temporal, and organizational scale(s).
2.2. Identify the relevant biological, historical, sociocultural,
governance, and political issues that need to be addressed.
2.3. Identify what constitutes valid and relevant evidence
to address the question and demonstrate an ability to understand and work with
quantitative information.
2.4. Conduct ethical primary and secondary research using
appropriate methods and considering relevant community norms.
2.5. Analyze and interpret evidence.
2.6. Identify appropriate governance tools to manage human-environment
impacts and be capable of engaging with regulatory, legislative, and other
democratic processes.
2.7. Apply this understanding to identify policies and
plans that address the problem.
2.8. Identify different decision-making processes and
criteria for selecting from among alternatives.
2.9. Evaluate the alternatives' environmental and
differentiated social consequences.
2.10. Identify relevant audiences, determine communication
goals, and communicate the results in oral and/or written form in a manner
effective for each targeted audience.
2.11. Work effectively in team settings.
Goal 3
Students will undertake their work guided by ethical
considerations. They will identify their own values with respect to
environmental, health, and food issues. They will evaluate and address the ethical
dimensions and implications of related problems, assessments, plans, and
communication, including their differentiated social impacts.