Overall Rating | Gold |
---|---|
Overall Score | 76.71 |
Liaison | Gioia Thompson |
Submission Date | Feb. 6, 2023 |
University of Vermont
AC-3: Undergraduate Program
Status | Score | Responsible Party |
---|---|---|
3.00 / 3.00 |
Gioia
Thompson Sustainability Strategist UVM Office of Sustainability |
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indicates that no data was submitted for this field
Majors, degrees and certificate programs
Yes
Name of the sustainability-focused undergraduate degree program:
Environmental Studies
A brief description of the undergraduate degree program:
Founded in 1972 by UVM presidential mandate, the campus-wide Environmental Program was established to meet the need for greater understanding of the ecological and cultural systems supporting all life on earth. Through the Environmental Studies (ENVS) we encourage community engagement through internships and service learning and we actively support student advocacy and political awareness. We promote environmental education at all levels as well as artistic expression of environmental values. Our community takes up local and global issues with passion and rigor. We believe in collaborative problem-solving and the power of human imagination to create a more sustainable future. The ENVS Program is a beacon of hope amidst the very challenging environmental dilemmas that face humanity. It covers sustainable ecological and social processes that inform human choices in relation to energy, transportation, climate, waste, and food systems, with a focus on applying sustainability principles to environmental problem-solving. It also includes interdisciplinary grounding in systems thinking and ecological processes.
The ENVS Program has been designated as a sustainability curricula, meaning all students taking the core courses will learn the following sustainability learning outcomes:
- Learning outcome 1: Students can have an informed conversation about the multiple dimensions and complexity of sustainability. (knowledge category)
- Learning outcome 2: Students can evaluate sustainability using an evidence-based disciplinary approach and integrate economic, ecological, and social perspectives. (skills category)
- Learning outcome 3: Students think critically about sustainability across a diversity of cultural values and across multiple scales of relevance from local to global. (values category)
- Learning outcome 4: Students, as members of society, can recognize and assess how sustainability impacts their lives and how their actions impact sustainability. (personal domain)
The ENVS Program has been designated as a sustainability curricula, meaning all students taking the core courses will learn the following sustainability learning outcomes:
- Learning outcome 1: Students can have an informed conversation about the multiple dimensions and complexity of sustainability. (knowledge category)
- Learning outcome 2: Students can evaluate sustainability using an evidence-based disciplinary approach and integrate economic, ecological, and social perspectives. (skills category)
- Learning outcome 3: Students think critically about sustainability across a diversity of cultural values and across multiple scales of relevance from local to global. (values category)
- Learning outcome 4: Students, as members of society, can recognize and assess how sustainability impacts their lives and how their actions impact sustainability. (personal domain)
Website URL for the undergraduate degree program:
Additional degree programs (optional)
Civil Engineering
None
A brief description of the undergraduate degree program (2nd program):
The 21st century has brought great advances in science, engineering and technology, but with it also significant challenges — environmental concerns, energy sustainability, aging infrastructure, accessibility to clean water, and adaptation to climate change, among others. All create unique challenges and opportunities for civil engineers of every specialty. Civil engineers will be in great demand in the coming decades to solve these problems and doing so will reap significant professional rewards.
Our faculty places an emphasis on rigorous technical education and social awareness, preparing students to become engineering leaders and innovators who are empowered to make the world a better place for all. We educate our students to develop sustainable systemic solutions that consider short and long-term environmental, social, political, regulatory and economic issues while identifying, defining and solving engineering problems. We instill in our students essential skills such as critical thinking, data analysis and modeling, use of information and advanced engineering technology, and interpersonal communication (e.g. teamwork, technical writing, presentation and deliberation skills, and communicating with stakeholders, including people with non-technical backgrounds) through project-based service learning. The civil engineering curriculum has a sustainability designation, meaning the program curriculum has committed to teaching UVM’s Sustainability Learning Outcomes.
Our faculty places an emphasis on rigorous technical education and social awareness, preparing students to become engineering leaders and innovators who are empowered to make the world a better place for all. We educate our students to develop sustainable systemic solutions that consider short and long-term environmental, social, political, regulatory and economic issues while identifying, defining and solving engineering problems. We instill in our students essential skills such as critical thinking, data analysis and modeling, use of information and advanced engineering technology, and interpersonal communication (e.g. teamwork, technical writing, presentation and deliberation skills, and communicating with stakeholders, including people with non-technical backgrounds) through project-based service learning. The civil engineering curriculum has a sustainability designation, meaning the program curriculum has committed to teaching UVM’s Sustainability Learning Outcomes.
Website URL for the undergraduate degree program (2nd program):
Name of the sustainability-focused, undergraduate degree program (3rd program):
Environmental Engineering
None
A brief description of the undergraduate degree program (3rd program):
The Environmental Engineering program addresses environmental concerns, energy sustainability, aging infrastructure, accessibility to clean water, and adaptation to climate change, among other issues facing our modern built environment. All of these issues create unique challenges and opportunities for civil engineers of every specialty. Environmental engineers will be in great demand in the coming decades to solve these problems and doing so will reap significant professional rewards.
Our faculty places an emphasis on rigorous technical education and social awareness, preparing students to become engineering leaders and innovators who are empowered to make the world a better place for all. We educate our students to develop sustainable systemic solutions that consider short and long-term environmental, social, political, regulatory and economic issues while identifying, defining and solving engineering problems. We instill in our students essential skills such as critical thinking, data analysis and modeling, use of information and advanced engineering technology, and interpersonal communication (e.g. teamwork, technical writing, presentation and deliberation skills, and communicating with stakeholders, including people with non-technical backgrounds) through project-based service learning. The environmental engineering curriculum has a sustainability designation, meaning the program curriculum has committed to teaching UVM’s Sustainability Learning Outcomes.
Our faculty places an emphasis on rigorous technical education and social awareness, preparing students to become engineering leaders and innovators who are empowered to make the world a better place for all. We educate our students to develop sustainable systemic solutions that consider short and long-term environmental, social, political, regulatory and economic issues while identifying, defining and solving engineering problems. We instill in our students essential skills such as critical thinking, data analysis and modeling, use of information and advanced engineering technology, and interpersonal communication (e.g. teamwork, technical writing, presentation and deliberation skills, and communicating with stakeholders, including people with non-technical backgrounds) through project-based service learning. The environmental engineering curriculum has a sustainability designation, meaning the program curriculum has committed to teaching UVM’s Sustainability Learning Outcomes.
Website URL for the undergraduate degree program (3rd program):
None
The name and website URLs of all other sustainability-focused, undergraduate degree program(s):
https://www.uvm.edu/academics/studying_environment_uvm
https://www.uvm.edu/admissions/undergraduate/environment-and-sustainability
https://www.uvm.edu/admissions/undergraduate/environment-and-sustainability
Minors and concentrations
Yes
Name of the sustainability-focused undergraduate minor or concentration:
Business Administration - Sustainable Business Concentration
A brief description of the undergraduate minor or concentration:
This theme provides knowledge, competencies and experiences for students interested in sustainable business, including but not limited to social and environmental sustainability. Sustainable businesses maximize shareholder value over the long run with leaders who are innovative, and who manage interactions with stakeholders across the economic, social, environmental and political spheres. Students involved in the Sustainable Business theme are challenged to recognize business opportunities and points of tension between the needs of the natural environment, social justice, and the demands of business and economic growth, all of which affect a variety of stakeholders, such as employees, investors, and local and global communities.
Required business electives and participation in a capstone course will give students the opportunity to synthesize and validate their evolving perspectives in both academic and applied settings. Students may enhance their understanding of sustainable business by taking courses spanning a number of different disciplines outside of business such as ecology, economics, environmental studies, political science, history and sociology.
Required business electives and participation in a capstone course will give students the opportunity to synthesize and validate their evolving perspectives in both academic and applied settings. Students may enhance their understanding of sustainable business by taking courses spanning a number of different disciplines outside of business such as ecology, economics, environmental studies, political science, history and sociology.
Website URL for the undergraduate minor or concentration:
Additional minors and concentrations (optional)
Agroecology
A brief description of the undergraduate minor or concentration (2nd program):
This minor is designed to give students a knowledge-based concentration in diversified agricultural production based on ecological principles and is economically viable, socially just and equitable, and ecologically sound.
Website URL for the undergraduate minor, concentration or certificate (2nd program):
Name of the sustainability-focused undergraduate minor or concentration (3rd program):
Food Systems
A brief description of the undergraduate minor or concentration (3rd program):
At UVM, it's in our nature to think differently and to challenge the usual. We are the first and only university in the country to offer undergraduate, master’s, and doctoral degrees in Food Systems.
As a leader in food systems nationally, Vermont offers students access to a living classroom, a working laboratory, and professors who think as broadly as the disciplines they straddle. But once you're here, you'll just call it home.
The B.S. program deeply educates students on all aspects of the food system:
Agricultural systems
Environmental, social, and economic sustainability of food production with a changing climate
Food and health
Food security
Policy development at federal, state, and local levels
Understanding the complex dynamics of a global food systems
As a leader in food systems nationally, Vermont offers students access to a living classroom, a working laboratory, and professors who think as broadly as the disciplines they straddle. But once you're here, you'll just call it home.
The B.S. program deeply educates students on all aspects of the food system:
Agricultural systems
Environmental, social, and economic sustainability of food production with a changing climate
Food and health
Food security
Policy development at federal, state, and local levels
Understanding the complex dynamics of a global food systems
Website URL for the undergraduate minor or concentration (3rd program):
The name and website URLs of all other sustainability-focused undergraduate minors and concentrations:
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Optional Fields
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Data source(s) and notes about the submission:
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