Activity Collection
Bioregion Discipline
- Anthropology 3 matches
- Biology 1 match
- Business/Management 1 match
- Chemistry 1 match
- Communication 3 matches
- Economics 1 match
- Education 1 match
- English 4 matches
- Environmental Studies 10 matches
- Geography 4 matches
- Geoscience 1 match
- History 3 matches
- Indigenous Studies 1 match
- Interdisciplinary Studies 7 matches
- Oceanography/Marine Studies 3 matches
- Philosophy 5 matches
- Political Science/Policy 6 matches
- Prof/Tech Field 1 match
- Psychology 2 matches
- Religious Studies 3 matches
- Sociology 5 matches
- Other 3 matches
Bioregion Scale Show all
Campus
15 matchesBioregion Topical Vocabulary Show all
Social & Environmental Justice
15 matchesResults 11 - 15 of 15 matches
Investigating Local Food: Meet Your Washington Farmers
June Johnson Bube, Seattle University
This assignment sequence seeks to stimulate students' thinking and writing about food production in the western Washington bioregion through a series of activities combining readings, class discussion, fieldwork, and writing assignments. Collaborative work in and outside of class culminates in students' interviewing local farmers and vendors at farmers markets and writing a surprising informative essay.
Bioregion Scale: Local Community/Watershed, Campus
Bioregion Topical Vocabulary: Food Systems & Agriculture, Human Health & Wellbeing, Promising Pedagogies:Reflective & Contemplative Practice, Social & Environmental Justice, Ecosystem Health, Sustainability Concepts & Practices
A Lifestyle Project for the Humanities
Kevin O'Brien, Pacific Lutheran University
Students take what they are learning in an introduction to environmental studies course and through a series of writing assignments, they can explore and choose an array of potential approaches to personal and social change.
Bioregion Scale: Campus
Bioregion Topical Vocabulary: Lifestyles & Consumption, Promising Pedagogies:Reflective & Contemplative Practice, Social & Environmental Justice
We're Screwed!
Michael C. Kalton, University of Washington
This course is designed to address the interlocked problems of unwillingness to confront the dimensions of the environmental crisis and the feelings of helplessness and despair that often accompany perceiving the gravity of the situation.
Bioregion Scale: Campus
Bioregion Topical Vocabulary: Promising Pedagogies:Reflective & Contemplative Practice, Lifestyles & Consumption, Climate Change, Social & Environmental Justice, Ecosystem Health, Ethics & Values, Sustainability Concepts & Practices
Alternative Deicers: An Application of Freezing Point Depression
Jennie Mayer and Daniel Mitchell, Bellevue Community College
Road deicers raise several environmental and cost concerns. In this activity students consider alternatives while investigating colligative properties.
Bioregion Scale: Local Community/Watershed, Campus
Bioregion Topical Vocabulary: Human Impact & Footprint, Social & Environmental Justice
Mapping Place, Writing Home: Using Interactive Compositions On and Off the Trail
Kate Reavey, Peninsula College
Students will choose a physical place to study, a site that is close enough to visit at least four times during the quarter/semester. Using writing prompts, text-based research, and close observations in the "field" (the chosen place), students will create a "mashup" of spatially referenced pop-up balloons. These will include researched and narrative prose, citations and links, and some visual images, embedded into a map via Google Earth technology. Through this unique presentation, the research and writing can encourage viewers to better understand the place they have chosen to study.
Bioregion Scale: Campus
Bioregion Topical Vocabulary: Ecosystem Health, Promising Pedagogies:Reflective & Contemplative Practice, Pollution & Waste, Lifestyles & Consumption, Human Impact & Footprint, Sense of Place, Social & Environmental Justice, Food Systems & Agriculture, Cultures & Religions, Sustainability Concepts & Practices