Apr 24, 2024  
2023-2024 Undergraduate and Graduate Catalog 
    
2023-2024 Undergraduate and Graduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Geography and the Environment, B.A.


About the Geography Bachelor’s Program


The Bachelor of Arts in Geography and the Environment combines a liberal arts education with the technical skills necessary to be successful in the modern workforce. The undergraduate program also provides a solid foundation for those students who wish to pursue graduate study in geography or a related professional field.

As a discipline, geography provides a unique framework for understanding our world based on location. Geography is concerned with where things are located, why they are located where they are, and how these work together to form a tapestry of human and physical landscapes across the surface of the Earth. The degree program emphasizes coursework in both the social and physical sciences to provide students with a broad understanding of the world’s physical environment and the human experience in that world.

Students completing the degree program will have the knowledge, tools, and technical skills necessary to understand and address many of the social and environmental problems facing society and the planet at large. This allows students in geography to pursue their interests in a wide variety of topics including social and cultural change, globalization, urbanization, impacts of climate change, natural resource management, natural hazards, food and water security, resilience, and sustainability.

Students in the geography program are strongly encouraged to pursue a minor in Geographic Information Science and Technology (GIST). When taken together, the GIST minor provides students with knowledge and technical expertise in geographic information science. Courses in the minor cover geographic information systems (GIS), database design, spatial analysis, satellite remote sensing, cartographic design, and global navigation satellite systems (GNSS).

Students who graduate from our program have gone on to become emergency managers, urban planners, GIS specialists for city and county governments, faculty members, and researchers in federal labs. Careers are possible in a variety of government, private industry, and academic institutions.

Communication Literacy Requirement. Communication literacy in Geography is illustrated by competence in reading, writing, oral presentation and cartography. Our faculty members endorse a project driven curriculum. Courses in the Communication Literacy Plan for the B.A. in Geography and the Environment are GEOG 3337 , GEOG 3355 , GEOG 4360  and GIST 3300 .

Sample Curriculum (B.A. in Geography and the Environment with GIST minor)


First Year


Fall


Total: 14

Spring


Total: 16

Second Year


Fall


Total: 15

Spring


Total: 15

Third Year


Fall


  • Foreign Language (2000-level) 3 Semester Credit Hours
  • GEOG Jr./Sr. Elective 3 Semester Credit Hours
  • 3 Semester Credit Hours
  • Creative Arts 3 Semester Credit Hours
  • GIST Jr./Sr. Elective 3 Semester Credit Hours
Total: 15

Spring


Total: 15

Fourth Year


Fall


  • English Literature 3 Semester Credit Hours
  • GEOG Jr./Sr. Elective 3 Semester Credit Hours
  • GIST Jr./Sr. Elective 3 Semester Credit Hours
  • Language, Philosophy, and Culture (Jr./Sr.) 3 Semester Credit Hours
  • Free Elective 3 Semester Credit Hours
Total: 15

Spring


Total: 15

Total Hours: 120


Notes:


Multicultural Requirement


GEOG 2300  counts as a Multicultural requirement.

Foreign Language


A student must complete 6 hours at the sophomore level or above in a single language. The prerequisite for all sophomore language courses is credit for the freshman level. This credit can be determined through a credit by examination. The score attained on the exam will determine whether the student is placed in a second-year course, a 5-hour review course, or in some cases the first or second semester of a beginning (first-year) language course. See Arts & Sciences General Degree Requirements  for further explanation.