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2018-2019 Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
General Education: Liberal Education for the Environment & Society
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Liberal Education for the Environment & Society
Northland College integrates liberal arts studies with an environmental emphasis, enabling those it serves to address the challenges of the future. Consistent with this mission, the College’s Liberal Education for the Environment & Society program prepares students to be leaders in understanding, communicating, and acting upon the complexity of environmental issues, and in working to understand and address societal dynamics that create and are influenced by environmental issues.
The program is designed to assure that students develop …
- foundational skills in written communication and mathematics;
- a breadth of disciplinary learning characteristic of a liberally educated individual;
- an understanding of diversity, inequality, prejudice, and discrimination; and
- an understanding of natural systems and the complex relationships between human endeavors and the natural world.
Completion of the program is a graduation requirement for Northland College students, and those who successfully complete the program will also have satisfied many of the requirements for an environmental studies minor. Courses taken to satisfy requirements in the Liberal Arts Curriculum may also satisfy requirements in the Environmental Curriculum and vice-versa; however, students must earn at least 30 credits overall to complete the Liberal Education for the Environment & Society Program.
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Foundational Skills
To assure a solid foundation in written communication and mathematical skills, students are required to fulfill the following requirements:
ENG 110 College Writing
or equivalent proficiency through assessment
Writing Intensive Courses
Four writing intensive courses are required. These courses may also fulfill other requirements in the liberal arts or environmental sections of the program.
Math Proficiency
An ACT math score of 17 or higher; SAT math score of 470 or higher; or MTH 103 Algebraic Reasoning or any higher-numbered MTH course.
Quantitative Reasoning Course
One of the following courses:
Disciplinary Learning
To assure a breadth of disciplinary learning characteristic of a liberally educated individual, students are required to complete two courses, each representing different disciplines, from each of the following categories (6 courses total):
Natural Sciences
Two courses required from different disciplines:
Social Sciences
Two courses required from different disciplines:
Arts & Humanities
Two courses required from different disciplines:
- ART 106 - Intro to Visual Communication 3 Credits
- ART 111 - Drawing I 3 Credits
- ART 209 - Art + Community 3 Credits
- ART 220 - Ceramics I 3 Credits
- ART 222 - Ceramics Handbuilding 3 Credits
- ART 225 - Introduction to Film 3 Credits
- ART 230 - Art History Ancient to Medieval 3 Credits
- ART 231 - Art History Renaissance to Modern 3 Credits
- ART 232 - Contemporary Art History 3 Credits
- ART 262 - Digital Photography I 3 Credits
- ENG 126 - Confluences: Reading and Writing in the Lake Superior Watershed 3 Credits
- ENG 211 - Humanity and Nature in Literature 3 Credits
- ENG 213 - Literature of the Western Worlds 3 Credits
- ENG 216 - The Contemporary Novel 3 Credits
- ENG 217 - Contemporary Third World Literature 4 Credits
- ENG 228 - Literature of the Arab World 4 Credits
- ENG 233 - Women of the Third World 3 Credits
- ENG 234 - Dystopias: Ecology&Gender in SciFi 4 Credits
- ENG 240 - Pens and Paddles in the North Woods 4 Credits
- ENG 264 - Survey of American Literature 3 Credits
- ENG 318 - Nature Writers 3 Credits
- ENG 387 - The English Language 4 Credits
- ENG 415 - Chaucer 4 Credits
- HIS 101 - United States History to 1865 3 Credits
- HIS 102 - United States History since 1865 3 Credits
- HIS 111 - History of World Civilizations to 1500 3 Credits
- HIS 112 - History of World Civilizations since 1500 3 Credits
- HIS 209 - Gender in the United States Landscape 3 Credits
- HIS 221 - History of Medieval Europe 3 Credits
- HIS 334 - Ideology in the 20th Century 3 Credits
- HIS 241 - American Environmental History 3 Credits
- HIS 242 - European Environmental History 3 Credits
- HIS 260 - Gender in Modern Europe 3 Credits
- HIS 263 - History of the Middle East 3 Credits
- HIS 264 - Middle East History and Politics 3 Credits
- HIS 266 - American Material Culture/Objects in Everyday Life and History 3 Credits
- HIS 270 - The Holocaust 3 Credits
- HIS 315 - American Foodways 3 Credits
- IDS 154 - Fake News, Forgeries, and Frauds 3 Credits
- IDS 315 - Comparative Race Studies 3 Credits
- MLG 105 - Elementary Spanish I 4 Credits
- MLG 106 - Elementary Spanish II 4 Credits
- NAS 160 - Lake Superior Ojibwe 3 Credits
- NAS 212 - Wisconsin Indian Cultures, History, and Contemporary Issues 3 Credits
- NAS 216 - Indigenous Representations 3 Credits
- NAS 231 - Native American Arts and Cultures 3 Credits
- NAS 241 - Indigenous Museum Studies 3 Credits
- NAS 242 - Field Methods & Production 3 Credits
- NAS 227 - Native Foodways 3 Credits
- NAS 236 - Indigenous Film and Media 3 Credits
- NAS 239 - Indigenous Oral Traditions 3 Credits
- NAS 265 - Indigenous Perceptions of Water 3 Credits
- NAS 283 - American Indian Literature 3 Credits
- NAS 330 - Indigenous Belief & Religion 3 Credits
- NAS 340 - Indigenous Gender Studies 3 Credits
- NAS 342 - Gender in Indigenous Borderlands 3 Credits
- NAS 362 - Native Women’s Activism 3 Credits
- NAS 365 - Decolonization Theory 3 Credits
- NAS 370 - Indigeneity & Health Traditions 3 Credits
- NAS 380 - Indigenous Women Writers 3 Credits
- PHL 225 - Ethics 3 Credits
- PHL 226 - Environmental Ethics 3 Credits
- PHL 229 - Introduction to Philosophy 3 Credits
- PHL 230 - History of Western Philosophy I 3 Credits
- PHL 262 - Environmental Philosophy 3 Credits
- PHL 266 - Environmental Aesthetics 3 Credits
- PHL 270 - Philosophy of Science 3 Credits
- PHL 282 - Contemporary Western Philosophy 3 Credits
- PHL 330 - Philosophy of Language 3 Credits
- PHL 360 - Concepts of Nature 3 Credits
- REL 165 - Demons, Angels, & Ghosts 3 Credits
- REL 174 - Religion and Science 3 Credits
- REL 215 - Hebrew Bible and Jewish Origins 3 Credits
- REL 216 - Jesus, Paul, and Christian Origins 3 Credits
- REL 219 - The Nature of Religious Experience 3 Credits
- REL 220 - Myth and Ritual 3 Credits
- REL 225 - Magic, Medicine, and Miracle 3 Credits
- REL 229 - Religions of the West 3 Credits
- REL 230 - Asian Religions and Philosophies 3 Credits
- REL 231 - Buddhism 3 Credits
- REL 234 - Japanese Religious History 3 Credits
- REL 235 - Daoism Seminar 4 Credits
- REL 241 - Religion in America 3 Credits
- REL 257 - Death and Dying 3 Credits
- REL 258 - Religion and Nature 3 Credits
- REL 270 - Religion and Human Rights 3 Credits
- REL 315 - Christian Thought 3 Credits
- REL 330 - Islam 3 Credits
- REL 331 - Zen Buddhism 3 Credits
- SCD 235 - Forces of Change 3 Credits
- SCD 320 - The History of Planning and Development 4 Credits
Diversity & Justice
To develop an understanding of diversity and of how inequality, prejudice, and discrimination can undermine justice, students must complete two courses that explore these topics as a substantial focus of their curricula.
Environmental Narratives
Courses in this category focus on narratives that individuals and cultures have created to describe, understand, and justify their relationships and interactions with the natural world. Through these courses, students develop their ability to recognize, understand, and critique these narratives.
The Science of Environmental Issues
Courses in this category emphasize a scientific perspective on the environment. Through these courses, students develop an ability to apply scientific methodologies to investigations, analyses, quantitative procedures, and understandings of environmental issues.
Communities, Policies, and Management of Environmental Issues
Courses in this category focus on the role that communities, governments, organizations, or groups play in environmental issues. Through these courses, students develop an understanding of how these different entities function as well as an appreciation for how they might contribute to environmental issues and their resolutions.
Environmental Applications
Courses in this category integrate intellectual inquiry with emotional, social, or physical engagement in nature or environmental issues. Through these courses, students develop an appreciation for ways of knowing and understanding beyond those grounded solely in intellectual approaches. They also develop their ability to integrate theoretical and applied learning when addressing complex questions and issues.
Liberal Education Equivalencies
Students who enroll at Northland with college credits earned at other institutions may fulfill some or all of the liberal education requirements through transfer equivalencies. This includes both first-time freshmen who earned college credit while in high school and transfer students. Individual transfer evaluations will indicate which requirements, if any, have been met through these equivalencies.
AP and CLEP tests can be utilized to fulfill course requirements.
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