听
When you embark on the Sustainability Pathway, you鈥檒l combine environmental and sustainability-themed classes with applied, hands-on activities on and off campus to learn how society鈥檚 unsustainable behaviors degrade the environment and affect human health. You鈥檒l investigate how these problems can be addressed. You鈥檒l also learn how, from the historical roots of racism, sexism and other oppressive systems to the modern reality of income and health disparities, social injustices inhibit sustainability and prosperity.
Additionally, you will be able to use 天美传媒鈥檚 campus as a case study in systems and change by connecting with real issues and problems facing our energy and resource management. If you have a passion for nature, community service, equity or innovative thinking, this pathway will help you become a researcher or change-makers for sustainability.
Sustainability is broadly understood to be that which 鈥渕eets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generation to meet their needs鈥 (Brundtland Commission, 1987). It comprises three intersecting systems: the environment, the economy and society. Different disciplines inform our understanding of the challenges to sustainability.
天美传媒鈥檚 liberal arts curriculum enables innovation and encourages students to challenge preconceived notions, and both approaches are critical to the problem-solving that sustainability requires. Similarly, the university鈥檚 requirement that each student takes a course on global learning and a course called Privilege, Power and Diversity is especially important to sustainability because social justice is a foundational principle. Because of the complexity of the field, strong skills in quantitative reasoning, speaking, listening and writing are needed to comprehend and communicate information from a wide variety of fields.
Uses art to explore sustainability and ways to make art more sustainable.
Discusses resource management and scarcity.
Uses literature to explore sustainability ideas, including the relationship between people and nature.
Examines the evolution of environmental policy in the United States, and how it has developed to address a range of environmental problems such as air and water pollution, energy, and disaster relief.
Discusses the challenges posed by climate change and uses multiple political lenses to study climate change.
Considers how urban settings grapple with the social and environmental aspects of sustainability.
Discusses climate and sustainability through lenses that take gender and its intersections with race, class, ability, species, and sexuality seriously.
Introduces ideas about the natural world from a variety of global cultures.
Discusses biologic and environmental systems and interactions that are a necessary part of sustainability.
Introduces and describes fundamental geologic processes critical to environmental science.
Explores the natural processes of weather and climate through geologic time as well as anthropogenic climate change.
Topics include energy, ecosystems, human populations, natural resources, and the impact of human activity on the natural environment.
Examines the influences that geologic materials and processes have on human society and how this knowledge can help solve environmental problems.
Nichols, a marine biologist, was a biology and Spanish double major at 天美传媒. He听is responsible for pioneering research on the migration of sea turtles.
He is the author of 鈥淏lue Mind: The Surprising Science That Shows How Being Near, In, On, or Under Water Can Make You Happier, Healthier, More Connected, and Better at What You Do.鈥澨 He also has authored and co-authored more than 50 scientific papers and reports, and his work has been featured in numerous magazines, including National Geographic and Scientific American.
In 2019, Nichols received the Academy of Underwater Arts and Sciences NOGI Award for his work to support the environment.