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Climate Change Courses
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Results 31 - 40 of 693 matches
Sandra Penny: Using Regulating Carbon Emissions in Energy and the Environment (SCI-105) at Bard College
Sandra Penny, Russell Sage College
We spent 4 weeks on this module at the conclusion of a 14-week semester in an introductory course called "Energy and the Environment." Inclusion of this module is my first attempt to reform the course into a more activity-based environment that recognizes that global warming is a topic of special importance to the students. The real strength of this unit is that it brings in economics and politics to the discussion of climate change. About half of my students were business and public policy majors, and they welcomed the opportunity to make connections between a topic about which they are deeply concerned – global warming – and the topics that they have already chosen for their major field of study.
Modeling Earth Systems
David Bice, Pennsylvania State Univ-Penn St. Erie-Behrend Coll; Louisa Bradtmiller, Macalester College; Kirsten Menking, Vassar College
In this course, we develop the qualitative and quantitative tools for constructing, experimenting with, and interpreting dynamic models of different components of the Earth system. The integrated set of ten modules ...
Water: Science and Society
Demian Saffer, Pennsylvania State University-Main Campus; Tim Bralower, Pennsylvania State University-Main Campus; Michael Arthur, Pennsylvania State University-Main Campus; Patrick Belmont, Utah State University
Water: Science and Society is a 10-module (12-week) general education course focused on the interrelationships between water and human activities from a science and policy standpoint. The course blends key readings ...
Marshall Shepherd: Using Water Sustainability in Cities at the University of Georgia
The United Nations estimates that by the year 2025, 60% of the world's population will live in cities. Human activity in urban environments alters atmospheric composition; impacts components of the water cycle; and modifies the carbon cycle and ecosystems. A more integrated understanding of the complex interactions of the urban environment and the Earth system is needed. To understand the urban-climate system linkage, an interdisciplinary effort combining in situ and remote sensing, modeling, and human dimension assessment is ultimately required.
Critical Zone Science
Critical Zone Science
Timothy White (Pennsylvania State University)
Adam Wymore (University of New Hampshire)
Ashlee Dere (University of Nebraska - Omaha)
Adam Hoffman (University of Dubuque)
James Washburne (University of Arizona)
Martha Conklin (University of California, Merced)
Susan Gill (Stroud Water Research Center)
Editor: David Gosselin (University of Nebraska - Lincoln)
This course introduces and examines the Critical Zone (CZ), Earth's permeable layer that extends from the top of vegetation to the bottom of the fresh groundwater zone. It is a constantly evolving boundary ...
Water, Agriculture, and Sustainability
Chris Sinton, Ithaca College; nicole davi, William Paterson University of New Jersey; Robert Turner, University of Washington-Bothell Campus; terri plake, Northwest Indian College; Dave Gosselin, University of Nebraska at Lincoln
Water is the most critical substance for the sustenance of life, but the prognosis for the quality and supply of water resources in much of the world is somewhere between troubling and dire. This module provides a ...
Rick Oches: Using Cli-Fi at Bentley University
The purpose of this course is to provide a foundation in essential concepts of environmental science as applied to the development of an environmentally, socially, and economically sustainable society. Students learn about ecosystem function, nutrient and energy cycling in the environment, human population dynamics, material and energy resource consumption, agriculture and food production, global climate change, and disparities in the global distribution of population, wealth, and access to essential resources. The ultimate goal is to think about sustainability from a complex systems perspective and appreciate the importance of addressing wicked problems from a transdisciplinary perspective.
Coastal Processes, Hazards and Society
Tim Bralower, Pennsylvania State University-Main Campus; diane maygarden, University of New Orleans; Sean Cornell, Shippensburg University of Pennsylvania
This blended and online course will provide students with a global perspective of coastal landscapes, the processes responsible for their formation, diversity, and change over time, as well as societal responses to ...
North American Environments
Marguerite Forest, Florida Gulf Coast University
Natural environments of North America (north of Mexico and excluding Florida) and critical environmental issues in the region will be examined in terms of geology/geomorphology, climate/weather, and biogeography ...
Renewable Energy and Environmental Sustainability
Renewable Energy and Environmental Sustainability
Benjamin Cuker (Hampton University)
Maurice K. Crawford (University of Maryland--Eastern Shore)
Randolph M. Chambers (College of William and Mary)
Editor: David Gosselin (University of Nebraska at Lincoln)
This course will explore a variety of sustainable technologies with emphasis on understanding the fundamental scientific properties underlying each. Students will also examine appropriate applications of the ...