Costa Rica field course applications DUE Friday, March 10th
More details on the class (including how to apply) are available via this link:
https://goabroad.umbc.edu/index.cfm?FuseAction=Programs.ViewProgram&Program_ID=28880Applications are due by March 10th!
This course will be led by Dr. Maggie Holland & Dr. Matt Fagan (both from GES), and Dr. Lee Blaney (CBEE).
Course dates: May 29 - June 14, 2017
Course dates: May 29 - June 14, 2017
Course title: Climate Change at the Forest-Water Nexus
The goal of this field course is
to provide students with an applied and active learning experience in
the Tropics through a mixture of interdisciplinary fieldwork,
service-learning, and environmental/cultural engagement. Students will
directly engage with rural communities through integrated fieldwork and
service projects, gaining hands-on experience in social science field research (participatory photo mapping), environmental engineering fieldwork (water quality monitoring), and field ecology
techniques (monitoring cloud forests and avian biodiversity).
Together, the group will work to weave together these three fieldwork
efforts into a more comprehensive understanding of climate change
impacts at the forest-water nexus as it is represented in the Monteverde
region in Costa Rica.
Note: This course offered as a GES 400/600-level Special Topics course, and will therefore be open to enrollment by both undergraduate and graduate students, regardless of major concentration. While there is no minimum language requirement, students with strong communication skills in Spanish (completion of at least one 300-level Spanish language course, or native fluency) will be given special consideration.
Note: This course offered as a GES 400/600-level Special Topics course, and will therefore be open to enrollment by both undergraduate and graduate students, regardless of major concentration. While there is no minimum language requirement, students with strong communication skills in Spanish (completion of at least one 300-level Spanish language course, or native fluency) will be given special consideration.
Posted: March 7, 2017, 9:40 PM