Page 88 of Saint Anselm College 2004 - 2005 Catalog by Saint Anselm College Manchester New Hampshire
87
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
Professors: F. Jay Pitocchelli, Donald H. Rhodes, Barry J. Wicklow; Associate
Professors: John R. Feick, Daniel J. Lavoie, Stephen W. Tobin, Robert C. Vallari;
Assistant Professors: Stacey A. Forsyth, Peter M. Larson, Brian K. Penney.
The Environmental Science major is designed for students with a strong interest
in the life and physical sciences, and a desire to improve the quality of their
environment by working toward sustainable development and environmental
protection. The program offers a multi-disciplinary approach with its core
curriculum firmly based in the lecture and laboratory experiences of foundation
courses in Biology, Chemistry, and the Physical Sciences. The major also requires
courses from the economic and political sciences to introduce the student to the
economic and political influences that lend complexity to environmental decision
making and the implementation of environmental solutions.
Students majoring in Environmental Science will select courses with the assistance
of a faculty advisor and are required to take a minimum of 6 basic science courses
and 8 environmental core courses (see below). A research or internship experience
is also strongly recommended. The program is designed to provide the fundamental
background necessary to understand environmental issues, while providing
students with the skills to both investigate these issues and to design and
implement actions aimed at solving environmental problems. Overall, this
program enhances students problem solving abilities, quantitative methods,
modeling skills, ability to critically review scientific literature and information,
field methods, critical thinking, and communication skills. In addition, the
program should foster a stronger personal environmental ethic.
Students majoring in Environmental Science are required to take:
Basic Science Courses: General Biology (BI3-4), General Chemistry (CH11-12),
Organic Chemistry I (CH27), Biostatistics (BI45)
Environmental Core Courses: Biosphere at Risk (BI05), Aquatic Ecology (BI19),
Ecology (BI20), Conservation Biology (BI28), Environmental Biology of Plants
(BI29), Environmental Chemistry (CH29), Principles of Microeconomics (EC02),
Politics of the Environment (PO15)
Each Environmental Science student is encouraged to gain additional laboratory
or field experience by (1) enrolling in either Independent Research in Biology
(BI21-22) or Research and Seminar (CH50-51), (2) developing an individual
internship program with direction from the Internship Facilitator (BI51 and/or
52), or (3) participating in the Washington Internship Program (BI50). Should a
student opt not to engage in one of the above research experiences, he/she must
enroll in one additional non-introductory level laboratory course offered by the
Biology Department.
[close]