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A summary of each course to help with your selection.
Course ID
Course
GENV 314
GENV 314
Science and Technology in Global Perspective
Course Credits: 3
This course provides a survey of the history of science and technology from the ancient world to the present with particular emphasis on the early-modern and modern eras. While much of the focus is on developments in the Western world, this course also examines select issues and events in a comparative world perspective.
Cross-listed: HIST 312.
Prerequisite(s): 6 sem. hrs. of history or instructor’s consent. (3-0)
GENV 316
GENV 316
Plant Ecology
Course Credits: 3
The crucial role of plant ecology in shaping major habitats, including those in British Columbia, will be examined. A trip to Salt Spring Island will highlight the threatened Garry oak ecosystem and other features of interest. Field trips throughout the course will highlight the population dynamics and interrelationships of plant communities in natural habitats, agricultural crops and managed forests. Critical assessment of planetary stewardship will form a common theme across various issues in plant ecology.
Cross-listed: BIOL 318
Prerequisite(s): BIOL 103, 104, and 105; or BIOL 113, 114.
NB: Summer sessions only. Offered every other year.
GENV 318
GENV 318
Tropical Botany
Course Credits: 3
This course explores the botanical riches of the tropics, focusing on the plant life of Hawaii. The course traces fundamentals of plant taxonomy, physiology and ecology in relation to complexities of existence on the most isolated island chain in the world. Issues related to indigenous vegetation including effects of introduced animals and plants, agriculture and ethnobotany will be discussed. The course will involve one week of lectures at Trinity Western University Langley campus and two weeks of lectures and field work in the Hawaiian Islands.
Prerequisite(s): BIOL 103, 104, and 105; or BIOL 113, 114 and instructor's consent. BIOL 216 or 312 or 314 or BIOL/GENV 316 strongly recommended.
NB: Offered every other year.
GENV 320
GENV 320
Geomorpology
Course Credits: 3
A scientific examination of the physical processes which shape landform development, structure, and dynamics. Topics include: weathering, slope systems, fluvial and coastal environments, and glacial and periglacial systems. Special emphasis is placed on deciphering past events from current landscape structures. Field trips and field studies are required.
Cross-listed: GEOL 320
Prerequisite(s): 6 sem. hrs. of geography and environment including one of GENV 121, 131, 220, GEOL 109 or 220; or instructor's consent. (3-2; 0-0)
NB: Offered every other year.
GENV 321
GENV 321
Geography of Soils
Course Credits: 3
A scientific investigation of the various aspects of soil as a natural resource. Topics include: physical, chemical, and biological characteristics of soils applied in the context of soil formation, soil classification and land use, agriculture, and environmental engineering. Soil mapping and spatial distribution of soils is also considered. Field trips and field studies are required.
Cross-listed: GEOL 321
Prerequisite(s): 6 sem. hrs. of geography and environment including one of GENV 121, 131, 220, GEOL 109 or 220; or instructor's consent. (3-2; 0-0
NB: Offered every other year.
GENV 322
GENV 322
Global Climate Change
Course Credits: 3
Students will investigate what are the scientific principles and processes which govern natural and human-induced climate change. Students will gather evidence drawing on the latest research and evolving pattern of scientific data that has emerged on climate in recent years. Employing scientific data, students will then be invited to analyze the severity of climate change impacts on a myriad of living and nonliving systems such as arctic sea-ice, freshwater, terrestrial and marine ecosystems; as well as analyzing the socio- economic changes and adaptations that human communities are making in response to Earth's changing climate.
Prerequisite(s): 6 sem. hrs. of geography and environment including one of GENV 121, 131, 220, GEOL 109 or 220; or instructor's consent. (3-2; 0-0)
NB: Offered every other year.
GENV 331
GENV 331
Environmental Philosophy
Course Credits: 3
Explores the theological and philosophical dimensions of the doctrine of creation and from there highlights the various philosophical shifts of outlook that helped usher in modern naturalism and its notions of nature. We will investigate the metaphysics behind the fact/value dichotomy, various environmental ethical frameworks, the case for the moral status of non-human animals and abiotic entities, the evolution of the ecological crisis, the conceptual substructures of some popular contemporary environmental frameworks, and some of the agendas of response to our current ecological crisis
Cross-listed: PHIL 331
Prerequisite(s): 2nd-year status; or instructor's permission.(3-0;3-0)
NB: PHIL/GENV 221 and PHIL/GENV 331 may not both be taken for credit.
GENV 332
GENV 332
Geography of Western Canada
Course Credits: 3
This course provides an overview of the physical and human geography that shapes and defines the Prairie provinces and British Columbia. The course focuses on selected cultural and environmental factors in understanding the spatial variation in population patterns and economic activity. Emphasis is also placed on the role of regional literature and painting in the formation of regional images.
Prerequisite(s): 6 sem. hrs. of geography and environment including one of GENV 111, 131, 212, 230; or instructor's consent.
NB: Offered every other year.
GENV 341
GENV 341
Resource and Environmental Management
Course Credits: 3
An introduction to key concepts and issues in natural resources management. The course examines major resource-based industries, including agriculture, fishing, forestry, mining, energy, and recreation. It also emphasizes understanding the varied influences that environmental, socio-economic, and political factors have on the spatial distribution of resource utilization and resource management.
Prerequisite(s): 6 sem. hrs. of geography and environment including one of GENV 111, 131, 212, 230; or instructor's consent.