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ELA 1057: World History & the Environment
3.00 Credits
Green Mountain College (Closed)
This course examines the relationship between human history and the environment. We will examine how the environment has affected human societies, how the development of human civilization has impacted the environment, and how human attitudes towards the environment have formed and changed over time. 3 credits.
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ELA 1058: American Views of the Environment
3.00 Credits
Green Mountain College (Closed)
This course focuses on the history of the American environment. We will examine the historical development of social systems economic, political, cultural), and how they affected perceptions, usage, management, and conservation of the American environment from pre-colonial times to the present. 3 credits.
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ELA 1101: Introduction to Statistics
3.00 Credits
Green Mountain College (Closed)
This course explores the basic concepts of statistics: measures of central tendency, variation, estimating and inference. The focus of this course is on data analysis and making students better consumers of statistics. Exploration of these topics will make use of computer technology. Prerequisite: Placement at Level 4 or permission of the instructor. 3 credits.
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ELA 1110: Local Flora
3.00 Credits
Green Mountain College (Closed)
This course is a field-intensive introduction to the plants and plant communities of Vermont and eastern New York. Plant ecology, evolution, conservation, and identification are important themes. Students learn how plants function in plant communities, explore problems and methods in conservation of local flora, learn to recognize major plant families and many local plant species, and become skilled in the use of field guides and technical keys. 3 credits.
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ELA 2110: Natural Disasters
3.00 Credits
Green Mountain College (Closed)
This course will examine the basic geologic processes that drive natural disasters e.g. earthquakes, volcanoes, tsunamis, mass wasting, subsidence, flooding, severe weather, erosion, climate change, and meteorite impacts.)We will also discuss the interrelationships that exist between the effects of these natural events on humans, global ecology, economy and society, and discuss possible prevention and mitigation options. 3 credits.
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ELA 3021: Sustainable Development:Theory & Policy
3.00 Credits
Green Mountain College (Closed)
To alleviate poverty and raise living standards, third world nations need to aggressively pursue economic development. If the resource- and energy-intensive western model of development is followed in these countries, severe resource shortages and widespread environmental degradation are likely to ensue. Sustainable development theory has emerged to describe an alternative path to economic development that averts potential resource and environmental crises. This course analyzes these theories and critically evaluates alternative sustainable development policies. 3 credits.
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ELA 3021 - Sustainable Development:Theory & Policy
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ELA 3023: Contemporary Political Economy
3.00 Credits
Green Mountain College (Closed)
This course will examine the origins and character of the tendency towards crisis in capitalist market systems with emphasis on the contemporary American economy. At the core of our study will be the effort to understand how the forces in a market society affect community, family, the workplace, the environment and the general world order. In particular, we will study income and wealth inequality across generations, the role that disasters natural, financial and political) have played in providing opportunity for profit, and the economic doctrines that have supported and explained these market processes and outcomes. 3 credits.
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ELA 3023 - Contemporary Political Economy
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ENG 1003: English as a Foreign Language I
4.00 Credits
Green Mountain College (Closed)
To meet the particular needs of students whose native language is not English, this course offers instruction and practice in conversational skills, basic structure and vocabulary, and reading/writing. The work is adapted to the requirements of those enrolled. Open only to non-native speakers. Students will place "in" and "out" of this course with permission of the instructor. 4 class hours; 4 credit
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ENG 1003 - English as a Foreign Language I
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ENG 2011: British Literature to 1800
3.00 Credits
Green Mountain College (Closed)
This course provides a survey of British literature, from early texts translated from Old and Middle English to the beginning of the Romantic period. Students will gain a familiarity with the major developments and historical contexts of early British literature, as well as with key figures such as Chaucer, Shakespeare, Donne, and Milton. 3 credits.
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ENG 2012: British Literature from 1800 to the Present
3.00 Credits
Green Mountain College (Closed)
Building on students' familiarity with the traditions of British literature covered in ENG 2011, this course surveys important trends in British literature from the Romantic period through the present age. Students will learn about some of the major issues and historical contexts shaping the literature written by figures such as Wordsworth, Dickens, Austen, Woolf, and Larkin. 3 credits.
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