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Nov 21, 2024
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ENVT 300 - Sustainable Resource Management Units: 3 ; Breadth Area: GE-UD-D; Sustainability The Earth as a source of land, water, biotic, mineral and energy resources. The role of human populations in their use, development and exploitation.¿¿ Drivers, trends, patterns and consequences of renewable and non-renewable resource use.
Strongly Recommended Preparation: GEOG 120 and/or ENVT 101 Prerequisites: Completion of GE Areas A1, A2, A3 and B4 with grade C- (CR) or better. Possible Instructional Methods: On-ground, or Hybrid, or Online-Asynchronous, or Online-Synchronous. Grading: A-F or CR/NC (student choice). Breadth Area(s) Satisfied: GE-UD-D - Upper Division Social Sciences, Overlay - Sustainability Cross-listed: GEOG 300 Course Typically Offered: Variable Intermittently
Student Learning Outcomes - Upon successful completion of this course students will be able to:
- Identify and describe important natural resources (non-renewable, conditionally renewable and perpetual) that the modern world depends upon.
- Identify and describe how and where these important natural resources are created and processed.
- Describe and explain the principal ways in which different natural resources are exploited and used.
- Describe and explain the broad economic, ecological and political determining factors and implications of those resource uses both geographic and temporally.
- Identify, describe and explain the dynamics of global population change and per capita resource consumption trends, and their implications for the future sustainability of natural resources management
- Apply research, communication and critical thinking skills to explain critical natural resource management issues and the local, regional and global factors important in their exploitation and conservation.
UD-D. Upper-division Social Sciences Learning Outcomes
- analyze how power and social identity affect social outcomes for different cultural and economic groups using methods of social science inquiry and vocabulary appropriate to those methods;
- demonstrate an understanding of and ability to apply accurately disciplinary concepts of the social or behavioral sciences; and
- demonstrate an understanding of and ability to effectively plan or conduct research using an appropriate method of the social or behavioral sciences.
Sustainability Overlay Learning Outcomes
- identify the environmental, social, and economic dimensions of sustainability, either in general or in relation to a specific problem;
- analyze interactions between human activities and natural systems;
- describe key threats to environmental sustainability;
- explain how individual and societal choices affect prospects for sustainability at the local, regional, and/or global levels.
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