Overall Rating | Gold |
---|---|
Overall Score | 75.28 |
Liaison | Chris Frantsvog |
Submission Date | Feb. 25, 2022 |
Luther College
AC-5: Immersive Experience
Status | Score | Responsible Party |
---|---|---|
2.00 / 2.00 |
Jon
Jensen Professor of Philosophy and Environmental Studies Philosophy, Environmental Studies |
"---"
indicates that no data was submitted for this field
Does the institution offer at least one immersive, sustainability-focused educational study program that is one week or more in length?:
Yes
A brief description of the sustainability-focused immersive program(s) offered by the institution:
Luther offers many immersive courses and experiences that include or focus on sustainability. The majority of these immersive experiences take place over the course of 4 weeks during January Term, though some span a semester and others occur during orientation.
Since 2015, the Center for Sustainable Communities has offered a week-long immersive outdoor pre-orientation program focused on building camaraderie, developing community and building self-confidence for incoming first-year students. In addition, the outdoor immersive experience drives students to develop a greater sense of place and awareness for the natural world. In 2017, working in conjunction with our Center for Intercultural Engagement and Student Success team we were able to grow the scope and size of our program and bridge the gap between our other pre-orientation programs that were geared towards international students and domestic students of color. Together, we launched Endeavor Together, one unifying college-wide pre-orientation program with the goal of creating a more inclusive college campus while developing renewed confidence and an emerging sense of place for our students. This unique approach to pre-orientation is highlighted in our Innovation Credits.
As mentioned, a large number of immersive, sustainability-focused courses are taught during Luther College's January Term. Here are descriptions for several of the 2018 and 2019 January Term courses that focused on sustainability.
Paideia 450: People and Parks: Pastoralism and Conservation in East Africa
Course Description: This course will examine the tensions between the national parks movement and pastoralist societies through the lens of the Maasai people of northern Tanzania. Of particular interest is how wildlife conservation efforts and ecotourism have impacted the relationship of the Maasai to their environment, in turn causing rapid cultural change such as shifts from herding to agropastoralism and wage labor; modification of coming-of-age rituals; and increasing adoption of formal modes of education and Christianity in place of or alongside traditional modes and beliefs. From bases near the city of Arusha and the small town of Moduli, we will study “traditional” Maasai culture and examine the ways in which the Maasai of northern Tanzania are adapting to changing social, political, economic, and environmental conditions. Students will interact with Maasai people in urban and rural marketplaces; in schools, medical facilities, and places of worship; and at Maasai bomas (multi-family homesteads) in the bush. We will also visit Olduvai Gorge, the Ngorongoro Crater Conservation Area, Ngorongoro Crater Lodge, and the Oldoinyo Lengai volcano in order to explore points of intersection between wildlife conservation programs, ecotourism, and pastoralist societies.
Paideia 450: Removal and Restitution: Building Sustainable Communities in South Africa
Course Description: What happens when communities have been forcibly removed from their homes due to misguided and even racist government policies? Do the people ever return to their homes? If so, how? If not, why not? This course will examine the fate of two South African communities that were forcibly removed during apartheid. We will first look at the historical removal of peoples from areas that are now part of the newly created Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park in South Africa, Zimbabwe, and Mozambique. Removed from Kruger National Park in 1969, the Makuleke land restitution case came to represent the solution to the dilemmas of how to address the often contentious relationships between communities and conservationists, people and parks. The Makuleke community, among whom the students will spend some time, are considered to be a model. As victims of apartheid forced removals, they opted for the goals of national reconciliation, conservation, and sustainable development, thus giving a boost to what is widely celebrated as the new blueprint for people-nature interaction, namely the community based natural resource management (CBNRM). The second half of the course will examine the removal of peoples from District Six (1966-1982), a vibrant multicultural area in Cape Town that was bulldozed over as the apartheid regime sought to reserve the land for whites. Unlike the Makuleke people, most of the residents of District Six have not returned to their homes, as a variety of stakeholders—government officials, NGOs, business interests, and community organizations—struggle about how best to restore an old community even as they seek to build a new one. In both case studies we will talk with government officials, policy experts, academics, and local peoples to explore why these removals took place, how people were affected, and ways in which the removed communities have fought to secure their homes and their fundamental human rights.
Biology 140/240: Introduction to Ecology of the Southwest/Ecology of the Southwest Course Description: Field study of the ecology of the arid Southwest, with a focus on adaptations of organisms to arid conditions and understanding the challenges of setting environmental policy. Course activities include hiking in the deserts, mountains, and riparian areas of Arizona; daily readings and discussions; a paper exploring the ethical dimensions of environmental policy; and a research project including statistical analysis of data.
International Studies 239: Roatan: Ethical Engagement in a Changing World
Course Description: This course uses the island of Roatan as a case study to examine how individuals can engage ethically with social and environmental challenges in the developing world. Roatan, Honduras is home to the world’s second largest coral reef and the tourist industry it supports, as well as a long history of colonialism that has left the island with an ethnically and linguistically divided population, widespread poverty and environmental degradation. During their month on the island, students will examine the ways in which the people, culture, and ecosystems of Roatan are responding to changing social, economic, political, technological, and environmental factors. Working closely with local health, education, and conservation centers, we will observe the individual loci of change, and explore the systemic forces that are helping to shape the island. Daily presentations, excursions, and group reflection time will lay the foundation for students to understand the rich history and culture of the island. Each student will also undertake an internship with a local NGO, such as a private medical clinic, bilingual school, or marine conservation institute. The course is valuable for students of all majors and is ideal for students who dream about a life of meaningful engagement in a much larger world.
Communication Studies 239: Environmental Communication in Belize
This course examines environmental communication and the public sphere in Belize with particular focus on the significant role of eco-adventure tourism in the country. Topics that will be reviewed, analyzed, and critiqued include the study of environmental rhetoric and discourse, media and environmental journalism, public participation in environmental decision-making practices, varying regulatory factors, social marketing and advocacy campaigns, environmental collaboration and conflict resolution, risk communication, and representations of nature in popular culture and green marketing. Information on these subjects will be drawn from lectures and discussions, as well as from visits with government officials, local non-governmental organizations (NGOs), eco-tourism venders, tourists, and other key stakeholders. These undertakings will provide an understanding of how individuals, institutions, societies, and cultures craft, distribute, receive, understand, and use messages about the environment to influence attitudes and initiatives related to its use.
Environmental Studies 240: Environmental Issues in the Pacific Northwest
Course Description: This course examines environmental issues in the Pacific Northwest and the policies that are used or proposed to address them. Case studies—on issues such as wilderness, endangered species, mining, hydroelectric dams, water rights, public lands management, logging, and outdoor recreation—will be used to better understand the political process in the United States, the role of economics in addressing environmental issues, and the particular challenges in human-nature relations within the intermountain west. The course will be taught at Holden Village, an ecumenical retreat center in the Cascade Mountains of Washington state.
Biology 247: Marine Biology (Caribbean) Course Description: An introduction to the ecology and taxonomy of coral reef, tide pool, tidal creek, high and low energy beaches, hypersaline lake, mangrove, and upland organisms and ecosystems of the Bahamas. In addition to field excursions and snorkeling, students develop and carry out independent research projects.An introduction to the biology of coral reef and other marine environments of the Caribbean. Daily snorkels, SCUBA dives, and lectures introduce students to the identification, ecology, behavior, and conservation of marine organisms and environments. Students develop and complete research projects. Several days are spent on the Luther campus for pre-trip orientation and post-trip completion of projects.
Since 2015, the Center for Sustainable Communities has offered a week-long immersive outdoor pre-orientation program focused on building camaraderie, developing community and building self-confidence for incoming first-year students. In addition, the outdoor immersive experience drives students to develop a greater sense of place and awareness for the natural world. In 2017, working in conjunction with our Center for Intercultural Engagement and Student Success team we were able to grow the scope and size of our program and bridge the gap between our other pre-orientation programs that were geared towards international students and domestic students of color. Together, we launched Endeavor Together, one unifying college-wide pre-orientation program with the goal of creating a more inclusive college campus while developing renewed confidence and an emerging sense of place for our students. This unique approach to pre-orientation is highlighted in our Innovation Credits.
As mentioned, a large number of immersive, sustainability-focused courses are taught during Luther College's January Term. Here are descriptions for several of the 2018 and 2019 January Term courses that focused on sustainability.
Paideia 450: People and Parks: Pastoralism and Conservation in East Africa
Course Description: This course will examine the tensions between the national parks movement and pastoralist societies through the lens of the Maasai people of northern Tanzania. Of particular interest is how wildlife conservation efforts and ecotourism have impacted the relationship of the Maasai to their environment, in turn causing rapid cultural change such as shifts from herding to agropastoralism and wage labor; modification of coming-of-age rituals; and increasing adoption of formal modes of education and Christianity in place of or alongside traditional modes and beliefs. From bases near the city of Arusha and the small town of Moduli, we will study “traditional” Maasai culture and examine the ways in which the Maasai of northern Tanzania are adapting to changing social, political, economic, and environmental conditions. Students will interact with Maasai people in urban and rural marketplaces; in schools, medical facilities, and places of worship; and at Maasai bomas (multi-family homesteads) in the bush. We will also visit Olduvai Gorge, the Ngorongoro Crater Conservation Area, Ngorongoro Crater Lodge, and the Oldoinyo Lengai volcano in order to explore points of intersection between wildlife conservation programs, ecotourism, and pastoralist societies.
Paideia 450: Removal and Restitution: Building Sustainable Communities in South Africa
Course Description: What happens when communities have been forcibly removed from their homes due to misguided and even racist government policies? Do the people ever return to their homes? If so, how? If not, why not? This course will examine the fate of two South African communities that were forcibly removed during apartheid. We will first look at the historical removal of peoples from areas that are now part of the newly created Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park in South Africa, Zimbabwe, and Mozambique. Removed from Kruger National Park in 1969, the Makuleke land restitution case came to represent the solution to the dilemmas of how to address the often contentious relationships between communities and conservationists, people and parks. The Makuleke community, among whom the students will spend some time, are considered to be a model. As victims of apartheid forced removals, they opted for the goals of national reconciliation, conservation, and sustainable development, thus giving a boost to what is widely celebrated as the new blueprint for people-nature interaction, namely the community based natural resource management (CBNRM). The second half of the course will examine the removal of peoples from District Six (1966-1982), a vibrant multicultural area in Cape Town that was bulldozed over as the apartheid regime sought to reserve the land for whites. Unlike the Makuleke people, most of the residents of District Six have not returned to their homes, as a variety of stakeholders—government officials, NGOs, business interests, and community organizations—struggle about how best to restore an old community even as they seek to build a new one. In both case studies we will talk with government officials, policy experts, academics, and local peoples to explore why these removals took place, how people were affected, and ways in which the removed communities have fought to secure their homes and their fundamental human rights.
Biology 140/240: Introduction to Ecology of the Southwest/Ecology of the Southwest Course Description: Field study of the ecology of the arid Southwest, with a focus on adaptations of organisms to arid conditions and understanding the challenges of setting environmental policy. Course activities include hiking in the deserts, mountains, and riparian areas of Arizona; daily readings and discussions; a paper exploring the ethical dimensions of environmental policy; and a research project including statistical analysis of data.
International Studies 239: Roatan: Ethical Engagement in a Changing World
Course Description: This course uses the island of Roatan as a case study to examine how individuals can engage ethically with social and environmental challenges in the developing world. Roatan, Honduras is home to the world’s second largest coral reef and the tourist industry it supports, as well as a long history of colonialism that has left the island with an ethnically and linguistically divided population, widespread poverty and environmental degradation. During their month on the island, students will examine the ways in which the people, culture, and ecosystems of Roatan are responding to changing social, economic, political, technological, and environmental factors. Working closely with local health, education, and conservation centers, we will observe the individual loci of change, and explore the systemic forces that are helping to shape the island. Daily presentations, excursions, and group reflection time will lay the foundation for students to understand the rich history and culture of the island. Each student will also undertake an internship with a local NGO, such as a private medical clinic, bilingual school, or marine conservation institute. The course is valuable for students of all majors and is ideal for students who dream about a life of meaningful engagement in a much larger world.
Communication Studies 239: Environmental Communication in Belize
This course examines environmental communication and the public sphere in Belize with particular focus on the significant role of eco-adventure tourism in the country. Topics that will be reviewed, analyzed, and critiqued include the study of environmental rhetoric and discourse, media and environmental journalism, public participation in environmental decision-making practices, varying regulatory factors, social marketing and advocacy campaigns, environmental collaboration and conflict resolution, risk communication, and representations of nature in popular culture and green marketing. Information on these subjects will be drawn from lectures and discussions, as well as from visits with government officials, local non-governmental organizations (NGOs), eco-tourism venders, tourists, and other key stakeholders. These undertakings will provide an understanding of how individuals, institutions, societies, and cultures craft, distribute, receive, understand, and use messages about the environment to influence attitudes and initiatives related to its use.
Environmental Studies 240: Environmental Issues in the Pacific Northwest
Course Description: This course examines environmental issues in the Pacific Northwest and the policies that are used or proposed to address them. Case studies—on issues such as wilderness, endangered species, mining, hydroelectric dams, water rights, public lands management, logging, and outdoor recreation—will be used to better understand the political process in the United States, the role of economics in addressing environmental issues, and the particular challenges in human-nature relations within the intermountain west. The course will be taught at Holden Village, an ecumenical retreat center in the Cascade Mountains of Washington state.
Biology 247: Marine Biology (Caribbean) Course Description: An introduction to the ecology and taxonomy of coral reef, tide pool, tidal creek, high and low energy beaches, hypersaline lake, mangrove, and upland organisms and ecosystems of the Bahamas. In addition to field excursions and snorkeling, students develop and carry out independent research projects.An introduction to the biology of coral reef and other marine environments of the Caribbean. Daily snorkels, SCUBA dives, and lectures introduce students to the identification, ecology, behavior, and conservation of marine organisms and environments. Students develop and complete research projects. Several days are spent on the Luther campus for pre-trip orientation and post-trip completion of projects.
Optional Fields
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