Skip to content

ENVIR 495 Global Environmental Literature – Summer 2017

 

ENVIR 495 B:  Global Environmental Literature (cross-list with ENGL 242 G)

 

Credits: 5

Summer 2017: Full term

T/TH 9:00 – 11:30 am

Open to all, but especially soph, jr, sr

Optional “W” credit

 

Description: While the study of representations of the environment in literary text has been historically focused on non-fiction nature writing from the United States, rich traditions of environmentalism and environmental literature have developed around the world, both in response to American thinking and independent of it.  This course examines a series of literary texts from around the globe that take up novel conceptions of environment and human interactions with it, alongside selected pieces of scholarship and theory that help situate these literary texts into a holistic sense of what a “global environment” means in the late twentieth-century.

 

Course Objectives:

 

  • Develop the vocabulary necessary to discuss the breadth of cultural positions across the planet and the ways in which cultures do not experience “the global environment” in the same ways.
  • Encounter texts from a range of cultural traditions, and discuss those texts in a collaborative, exploratory way
  • Explore lines of inquiry about the environment and the way it is represented and discussed in literary texts
  • Practice writing focused arguments about a specific question pertaining to representations of the environment in literature, using both primary and scholarly evidence to support a claim

 

Texts:

 

Amitav Ghosh – The Hungry Tide

Heron Habila – Oil on Water

Indra Sinha – Animal’s People

Karen Tei Yamashita – Through the Arc of the Rainforest

Christa Wolf – Accident: A Day’s News

 

Environmental Innovation Practicum – Autumn 2017

Environmental Innovation Practicum

2 credits, Tuesdays 4-5:50 p.m.| Autumn Quarter 2017

ENTRE 443/543, ENGR 498A, ENVIR 495 (Soon to be ENGR 443, ENVIR 443)
Is the doom and gloom of environmental problems weighing you down? Be part of the solution as a student in this course! Each weekly seminar will inspire you to make an impact as experts discuss the circular economy, water innovation, land use, greening the built environment, and more! Instructed by Deb Hagen-Lukens, this course helps students discover how cleantech and innovative solutions are addressing environmental issues and learn how to be a part of the solution. Inter-disciplinary teams form to put inspiration to action by creating project-based solutions to environmental issues, are coached throughout the quarter by environmental professionals or entrepreneurs, then present to classmates and judges. Open to all majors. Recommended for juniors, seniors, and graduate students. Questions? E-mail Lauren Brohawn at brohal@uw.edu.

Summer Internships at the Port of Seattle

The Port of Seattle has two Maritime Environment and Sustainability internship opportunities this summer, one at the graduate level and one at the undergraduate level. They may be of interest to students in the CEP or MUP program.

The work will be at the port’s headquarters near the Olympic Sculpture Garden. The link below will take students to the port’s internships page. Look for the two postings with “Maritime Environment and Sustainability” in the title. Applications will be accepted until May 15.

 

http://www.portseattle.org/Jobs/Students-and-Veterans/Pages/Internships.aspx

ARCH 403 + BE 505 Summer Studios

ARCH   403  ARCH PROBLEMS
Restr 10127 A 6 MWTh 110-540 * NICHOLLS,JAMES KEITH Open 2/ 6 Full-term
Restr 10128 B 6 MWTh 110-540 * GRIGGS,JAMES KIMO SAFFORD Open 0/ 6 Full-term
B E   505  BUILT ENVIR STUDIO
>10290 A 6 MWTh 400-750 GLD 148 CORSER,ROBERT J 0/ 15E CR/NC % Full-term INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIO: DESIGN IN PUBLIC. EMAIL ROB CORSER (CORSER@UW.EDU) FOR ADD CODE.

DesignPOWER – interdisciplinary summer digital fabrication studio 

-summer 2017 (8 weeks)  -M  W and Th 4pm -8pm  -6 credits

Ever wondered what goes on in the CBE fabrication labs?

Ever wanted to connect with the Seattle community by actually building something that will inspire people in a public setting?

If so, there is a summer digital fabrication studio designed just for you~!

The theme is “DesignPOWER”

The focus is Design in Public’s:  Seattle Design Festival 2017.

As we did last year for the “DesignChange” festival, we will produce a digitally fabricated Installation for this year’s event.

Our summer studio will explore how we engage the theme of POWER in our urban environments, our landscapes, and ourselves as designers and citizens,

We will also energize a powerful design ExCHANGE with other communities from across the College of Built Environments, the UW and the City of Seattle!

We will be using all of the facilities in the CBE fabrication labs to explore“DesignPOWER”

The College of Built Environments is offering a unique interdisciplinary opportunity this summer –a digital design and fabrication studio aimed at integrating all of our skillsets to produce and install a small pavilion in the annual Seattle Design Festival.  The festival is sponsored by Design in Public, an outreach initiative of Seattle AIA (American Institute of Architects), and this year’s theme is: POWER. •

Who will have the power? • Who will be empowered? • Who will be left powerless? • How do the powerful and powerless work together? • What will it take to power the future? • How will the design community use our power for change? The theme for this year’s Seattle Design Festival takes this head on: POWER. Please join us in showing up, shouting out, and pushing for change.   It will be up to us to determine how we can respond and translate our findings into built form for public engagement and inspiration.

The studio is open to graduate and advanced undergraduate students from all CBE departments; no previous digital fabrication experience is required.  This is great opportunity to work across design disciplines, to gain new skills in cutting edge fabrication technologies, and to take your work public.  Let’s find out how far we can go in the effort to “DesignPOWER.”

 BE 505 – 6 credits  (studio credit)   M,W, Th – 4pm – 8pm

Building Resilience and Compassion Event – May 16th

Please join us for a spring AEP workshop with:

 

Anne Browning. Ph.D.

Special Assistant to the Dean

Undergraduate Academic Affairs

 

Resilience and Compassion: Building Strength for the Long Haul

 

 

Hear about the UW Resilience Lab’s evolving framework for working with students and community members.

Topics will include a look at the overlaps of Resilience and Compassion, the utility of self-compassion in academic settings, an update on the launch of our large scale research project, and how these concepts can shape your work.

 

May 16th 2017

11-12:30

Mary Gates Hall 258

Activist Opportunity at Global Zero Action Corps

GLOBAL ZERO ACTION CORPS

“Global Zero is grassroots organizing at its finest.” -UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon

At Global Zero, we’re powered by the creativity and passion of young people who understand that nuclear weapons have no place in the 21st century. We face a new administration that jeopardizes decades of progress by increasing nuclear weapons spending and volatile, bombastic rhetoric that brings the world to the brink of nuclear war. When global leaders such as Donald Trump are able to trigger nuclear war with the push of a button, the need for change is greater than ever. Action Corps leaders are at the forefront of this fight: spearheading the campaign in their city or campus, directing outreach in their communities, and leading as the face of a vision for a world without nukes.

Action Corps is a year-long organizing program designed to train and empower leaders across the country to tackle one of the biggest threats of our generation. Whether you’re new to the fight or a seasoned activist, we’ll provide the hands-on training, in-depth resources you’ll need to make a difference — and have fun while you’re at it!

Over the course of the year, you’ll work with Global Zero on creative and impactful campaigns to eliminate nukes. You will have insider access to cutting-edge international policy, work with local and national media, lobby elected officials, learn real leadership and campaign skills, and use all of this to build and lead your very own Global Zero chapter to resist President Trump’s reckless nuclear agenda. Action Corps leaders this year will be working to pressure their campuses and city councils to pass resolutions in opposition to President Trump’s march toward nuclear war, while attending our organizing trainings and helping to recruit for larger national actions.

Action Corps is not your average volunteer role. By the end of this program you will have the skills you need to effectively organize your peers, mobilize them to action, lobby decision-makers, work with the media, and more. Action Corps leaders typically dedicate 3-5 hours a week to the program.

Ready for the challenge? Here’s your chance to become a leader in the fight to eliminate nuclear weapons.

HOW TO APPLY

Email your resume and a brief cover letter explaining why you’d like to be a Global Zero Action Corps leader to field@globalzero.org. If selected, we will be in touch to set up a time to chat about the opportunity over the phone. The early application deadline is May 5th, 2017. The program begins with a national training in Washington D.C. in August.

Questions? Contact us at field@globalzero.org.

Become LEED Accredited – Apply by May 4th

Subject: Become LEED Accredited! – Invitation to the Department of Community, Environment & Planning – for distribution

LEED Green Associate (GA) Training

When: May 4 2017 – 6:00PM – 10:00PM

Where: UW Seattle – Loew Hall – Room 112 – https://goo.gl/maps/dfrMl

Registration: http://leadinggreen.ca/uwseattle

 

Interested in getting involved in the Green Building and sustainability Industry? Opportunities are plentiful and passing your LEED professional designation is required to get involved!

 

LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) is simply a green-rating point system to certify a building’s sustainability. Just as Buildings can be LEED certified, students and professional can become LEED Accredited themselves.  The LEED Green Associate (GA) credential is the only professional designation used to market yourself to employers and clients and show you have certified knowledge in the green building industry.

 

To date, this course and its materials have proven to be instrumental in helping over 7000 students pass their exam at a 100% pass rate and does not require any specific background. This course is offered at a quarter of the price and time as the competition and is geared at allowing students to graduate with letters after their name and it never expires!

 

Also, a new LEED rating system (v4) was introduced this year and this training course is one of the few that has been updated to teach the current rating system to ensure your knowledge is up to date! This course meets the exam’s eligibility requirements and the USGBC charges a $100 (reduced for students) fee for the actual exam which can be taken at any time at your nearest Prometric center.

 

Cost: $300 ($200 for full time students)

To register for the class please visit: http://leadinggreen.ca/uwseattle

You can register via PayPal or RSVP your attendance by registering at the bottom of the page

FOR MORE INFORMATION CLICK HERE!