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Environmental Studies at UCSB

It was over 37 years ago when Santa Barbara experienced the worst oil spill in U.S. history up to that time. The University of California, Santa Barbara was within sight and smell of the littered channel and its beaches. Until that point in history, the world of academia had not yet realized that it overlooked a very important aspect of educating students on how to care, respect, and develop a framework to protect our fragile world.

But this all changed just a few weeks after the spill when on February 18th, 1969 a group of twenty-one faculty, calling themselves The Friends of the Human Habitat, met to discuss the possibility of promoting some form of environmental education at UCSB. The members of the ad-hoc committee were geologists, geographers, engineers, biologists, an economist, and a historian. By the fall of 1970 the Environmental Studies Program at UCSB was established, one of the first of a new breed of educational programs in the country. It was set up as a multidisciplinary program drawing on the strengths of many fields and providing a generalist approach to complex environmental issues.

Almost four decades later, the Environmental Studies (ES) Program still holds true to its goal of a comprehensive approach to education while simultaneously evolving and adapting to meet the challenges of an ever changing world, both academically and environmentally. The first graduating ES class in 1972 had only 12 students. In 1980 the total number of graduates rose to 871. Today, with more than 300 enrolled students and over 4,300 alumni actively working to preserve and protect our environment, the ES Program at UC Santa Barbara is considered one of the oldest and most successful undergraduate environmental programs in the world.

Learn More About the ES Program

What is Environmental Studies?
About the ES Curriculum (degrees offered)
About the ES Faculty
Why Study the Environment at UCSB?
Highlights about the ES Program
Detailed History of the ES Program
About our Alumni (review latest alumni survey)
Vist the ES 35th Anniversary Website (2005)

What is Environmental Studies?

Simply put, environmental studies is the systematic study of human interaction with their natural environment. Today’s environmental problems have evolved into highly complex and interdisciplinary issues involving political, economic, social, as well as physical and biological considerations. Modern environmental studies must include the study of the urban environment as well as the natural one. Society needs educated people who can address current and future environmental problems from a holistic approach, one that emphasizes linkages between systems such as the urban environment and atmospheric contamination, or economic growth and its impact on natural resources. These types of relationships must be analyzed and understood in order to successfully address environmental problems at local, regional, and global scales.

The Environmental Studies Curriculum

The ES major is designed to provide students with the scholarly background and intellectual skills necessary to understand complex environmental problems and formulate decisions that are environmentally sound. The academic process is multidisciplinary, drawing upon the diversity of environmentally related departments and disciplines throughout UCSB. A student majoring in environmental studies will explore a wide variety of environmental issues, including:

  • The social and human environment, such as urban and regional planning, ethical and values systems, environmental law and policy, indigenous and religious beliefs, and environmental impact analysis
  • The physical environment, including the hydrologic cycle, waste management, coastal processes, energy production technologies, soil preservation, geography, and air/water pollution
  • The biological environment, including the function of ecosystems, population dynamics, and toxicology

The Environmental Studies Program offers two degrees in environmental studies: B.A. and B.S. degree. While both majors are similar in that they stress the importance of understanding the interrelationships between the humanities, social sciences, and natural science disciplines, the ES Program offers two degree options to allow the student the opportunity to choose a major that will most appropriately fit their environmental interests.

  • The bachelor of arts (B.A.) degree in environmental studies requires a wide breadth of introductory social science, natural science, and humanities courses necessary to establish a fundamental understanding of the interdisciplinary nature of today’s environmental problems. Its strength is in the upper-division requirements taken during the student’s junior and senior years. It is here that the major allows maximum flexibility for the student to create their unique environmental emphasis by selecting their elective and outside concentration units from a wide range of disciplines.
  • Although the bachelor of science (B.S.) degree requires many of the same lower-division social science and humanities courses as the B.A., the main purpose of this degree is to develop a student’s technical, quantitative, ecological, and analytical skills. Consequently, a substantial number of courses in biology, mathematics, chemistry, and physics are required. At the upper-division level students are given a number of units to pursue elective courses from social science disciplines; but the majority of their junior and senior electives are dedicated to taking natural and physical science courses to enhance their understanding of earth system sciences and the role they play in environmental problems.

The ES Program is also home to a second bachelor of science degree (B.S.) in Hydrologic Sciences. Its purpose is to provide students with the scientific training needed to understand and solve complex hydrologic problems at local, regional, and global levels. As hydrology is a science dealing with the occurrence, circulation, distribution, and properties of the waters of the earth and its atmosphere, its curriculum is more focused than either of the environmental studies degrees listed above. It provides a rigorous framework of courses in biology, chemistry, geography, physics, and geology necessary for students to understand the hydrologic process and the impacts humans have upon it. Although the B.S. degree in Hydrologic Sciences is housed within the Environmental Studies Program, it is a cooperative effort by the departments of Ecology, Evolution and Marine Biology, Chemistry, Geography, and Geological Sciences.

The ES Faculty

1UCSB’s Environmental Studies Program includes 12 full-time faculty members, many of whom hold joint appointments with other UCSB departments such as anthropology, biological sciences, classics, economics, geography, geological sciences, history, and sociology. Additionally, there are a number of affiliated faculty from other departments who teach for the ES Program and approximately 10 career professionals who serve as ES instructors teaching courses on environmental topics within their field of expertise.

The Environmental Studies Program is fortunate that two of our ladder faculty includes distinguished endowed chair positions:

- The Schuyler Endowed Chair in Environmental Studies (presently held by Prof. Carla D’Antonio)
- The Dehlsen Endowed Chair in Environmental Policy (presently held by Prof. William Freudenburg)

ES faculty are some of the most approachable professors of the entire UCSB campus and students are strongly encouraged to take advantage of their willingness to work with undergraduates by:

• Going to their office hours (and not just right before midterms or finals)
• Asking questions and participate in classroom discussions
• Approaching faculty regarding career questions in their area of expertise
• Pursuing independent studies and research assistant positions with individual faculty

For individual profiles of each ES faculty member visit the ES Faculty webpage.


Why Study the Environment at UCSB

1In just over 60 years as a campus of the University of California, UC Santa Barbara has become an internationally renowned center for teaching and research, distinguished for its interdisciplinary programs and commitment to excellence and innovation. With about 18,000 undergraduates, 2,200 graduate students, and 900+ faculty members, UCSB is the site of cutting-edge intellectual activity that spans the academic spectrum. The campus’s residential character, its unparalleled physical beauty, its location near a historic city whose cultural life is diverse and whose commitment to preserving the environment is legendary, all provide the setting for an internationally renowned academic community and an ideal location for studying the environment. Visit UCSB's Points of Pride (http://www.ucsb.edu/pop/index.shtml)

Below are just a few links you might want to visit to learn more about UCSB's extensive academic and research units related to studying the environment. For a complete list of affiliated organizations to the ES Program click here.

UCSB EarthGate is a gateway to UCSB earth science research. It is a central site from which one can jump to all UCSB organizations researching a given environmental field.
(http://www.earthgate.ucsb.edu)

Donald Bren School of Environmental Science and Management: In 1991, the Regents of the University of California established the Graduate School of Environmental Science & Management at UC Santa Barbara to train graduate students in rigorous, interdisciplinary approaches to environmental problem-solving.
(http://www.esm.ucsb.edu)

UCSB's National Center of Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS) scientists conduct collaborative research on major fundamental and applied problems in ecology. The Center facilitates integrative research aimed at synthesizing existing data and information, and subsequently making these data available. NCEAS provides special educational opportunities to graduate students and young scientists, and disseminates the results of its research to potential users.
(http://www.nceas.ucsb.edu)

The UC Natural Reserve System (NRS) is one of the University of California's principal academic resources for the study of natural systems. Encompassing 34 reserves throughout California, it is the only university-owned and operated system of its scope and diversity in the world. Its mission is to provide protected sites, facilities, and support services for field studies in a range of ecosystems that represent California's extraordinary natural diversity. (http://www.msi.ucsb.edu/Pages/nrs.html)


Here are some highlights about the Environmental Studies Program at UCSB:


Three degrees: B.A. in Environmental Studies, B.S. in Environmental Studies, B.S. in Hydrologic Sciences
One of the oldest existing Environmental Studies Programs in the country (established in 1970)
The largest Environmental Studies Program in the country, if not the world:
- Over 300 undergraduates currently enrolled
- 12 ladder faculty members, 9 affiliated faculty, and approximately 10 lecturers
- 4,300+ alumni, including 105 degrees conferred in 2005-06
Two distinguished endowed chair-faculty positions:
- The Schuyler Endowed Chair in Environmental Studies (presently held by Prof. Carla D’Antonio)
- The Dehlsen Endowed Chair in Environmental Policy (presently held by Prof. William Freudenburg)
To date, over $1.45 million in endowed funds and gifts have been received by the ES Program
Approximately $8,000 in combined scholarship monies is awarded each year by the Environmental Studies Program to our students
Home to the Environmental Studies Internship Program (ESIP), established by the ES Program in 1973:
- Coordinated by the ES Program’s own Internship Coordinator
- Over 100 students a year receive academic credit while pursuing environmental internships
- Provides an on-line internship database with approximately 90 local and over 200 non-local organizations who offer environmental
Specialized undergraduate programs offered through the ES Program include:
- Environmental Studies Senior Honors Program
- Senior Thesis Course (ENV S 197)
- Commitment to undergraduate research opportunities with ES faculty (ENV S 199 and 199RA)
Affiliated with UCSB Extended Learning Services’ Wildlands Studies, an environmental field studies program that offers on site field research projects throughout the U.S. and around the world. (http://www.wildlandsstudies.com)
Supported by the Environmental Studies Associates (ESA), a community and alumni support group who
works to ensure the UCSB’s ES Program continues to be one of the finest programs in the world (http://www.es.ucsb.edu/people/esa/index.html)
Work closely with UCSB's Donald Bren Graduate School of Environmental Science Management
(http://www.bren.ucsb.edu)

 

 Bren Hall, University of California, Santa Barbara 93106-4160
 (805) 893-2968, Email: esprogram@es.ucsb.edu
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