Skip to main content

Graduate Application Workshop, Potsdam Campus, 4/27. Sign Up!

Home

Primary Navigation

  • About Clarkson
  • Academics
  • Undergraduate Admissions
  • Graduate Admissions
  • Life at Clarkson
  • Research & Scholarship
  • Athletics & Recreation
  • News & Events

Information for

  • Clarkson Students
  • Faculty & Staff
  • Alumni & Friends
  • Parents & Family
  • K-12 Programs
  • Support Clarkson

CU • Adirondack Semester

Courses

EV/BY 312 Adirondack Ecology and Environmental Science
Science Technology Credit, lab credit

This course introduces ecological and environmental science concepts relevant for understanding the structure and function of terrestrial, aquatic and human systems in the Adirondack Park. Students will learn to identify important plant and animal species representative of the Adirondack Mountains, and learn major features of ecological systems in the park. The course will also provide the students and assessment of human impacts on the ecology of ADK Park including but not limited to air and water pollution as well as energy systems. Mass and energy balance concepts will be introduced to aid the students in understanding how systems are impacted by activities in the park.

EV 314 Adirondack Integrated Research Project
Knowledge Areas: CGI, STS Communication Points: 2
Engineering Design Credits (1-2)

This problem-based learning course will task students to analyze and suggest solutions to a complex problem relevant to the economic, social and environmental welfare of the Adirondack Park. The course is intended to reinforce what they have learned in other Adirondack courses.

One important way that governments, businesses, academic researchers, and NGOs investigate and attempt to solve complex technological, environmental and social problems is by forming task-force groups. The groups are comprised of individuals with diverse skills and interests, who are tasked to analyze the many facets of a problem and then provide a consensus document on their findings. The document, often referred to as a white paper, is designed to objectively inform the reader about the problem, and then make some considered recommendations about policy or directions of further study.

There are five objectives for this course: Students will (1) Develop skills at evaluating diverse sources of information (written texts, oral interviews) to produce a considered opinion about a complex problem. (2) Hone skills at collaboratively working in a group toward a common goal. (3) Learn how to write an objective but thought-provoking white paper which will be useful to decision makers and concerned citizens. (4) Acquire an understanding of the challenges that are faced when trying to develop landscape-level plans for sustainable development in the Park, and how the lessons learned here might be profitable applied in other regions of North America.

EV/EC 315 Entrepreneurship and Economic Development in the Adirondacks
Knowledge Area: EC

This course will explore the characteristics of the entrepreneurs of the park while also understanding the opportunities and challenges that these entrepreneurs face. It will also explore the theories of externalities and public goods applied to pollution and environmental policy. The students will analyze the options for encouraging entrepreneurship and achieving economic development goals within the ADK Park.

EV/SS 320 Social and Political Issues in the Adirondacks
Knowledge Area: CSO, Communication Points: 1

The historical, social, political and environmental factors contributing to the fabric of the Adirondack Park is an evolving social experiment. The course readings will focus upon the New York State constitutional provisions that engendered the park, the policies that shaped the park along with the political actions that influence the park today. ADK is extraordinary for its history, and because it is a place where human residents live and recreate in sustainable ways that conserve resources and “forever wild” regions of the park. It is a critical laboratory for political decisions designed to limit development for the sake of ecosystems and habitats, yet to still reconcile public and private interests.

EV 322 Adirondack Park: A Sense of Place
Knowledge Areas: IA, CSO Communication Points: 1

To understand a place, one must often understand the views of nature and the environment as seen by writers, and essayists. Students will explore the Adirondacks through the literature while experiencing the lakes, rivers, streams and mountains. The readings, discussions and written assignments will explore the aesthetics, the social and political climate and the prevailing attitudes toward the environment that helped create the ADK Park. In addition, many forms of outdoor recreation will be explored as an aid to understanding the value of nature and the impact humans can impose upon our natural world. This course will provide students with an opportunity to participate in seasonal outdoor activities to learn how recreational activities have impacted the social, cultural, economic and physical aspects of the Park.

Students will review historical and contemporary land use policies and become familiar with the Park’s agencies that govern and enforce regulations. Leave No Trace travelling and camping skills will be taught in order to facilitate sustainable practices to preserve natural and man-made areas.

CE301 ADK Geographical Information Systems
Science Technology Credit

An introductory course in the concepts and uses of Geographic Information Systems (GIS) including analysis of GIS-based local and global geographic datasets. Provides basic knowledge of GIS theory and applications using existing state-of-the-art GIS software and current spatial data resources. Applications include: overlay analysis, spatial data query, map generation and terrain surface analysis. Students will also learn the basics of GPS data collection, remote sensing, 3D visualization, probability, statistics, and error analysis.

Path Pattern: Department Menu

IN THIS SECTION
  • ADK Admissions
  • Courses
  • Faculty and Staff
  • Institute for a Sustainable Environment

Adirondack Semester

ADK Semester Program Faculty Director
Stephen Bird

271 Snell
Box 5715
Phone: 315-268-3990
adksemester@clarkson.edu

APPLY NOW!

Schools at Clarkson

  • Graduate School
  • School of Arts & Sciences
  • David D. Reh School of Business
  • Wallace H. Coulter School of Engineering
  • Institute for a Sustainable Environment
  • Early College Program: The Clarkson School
  • Institute for STEM Education
  • Beacon Institute for Rivers and Estuaries

Highlights of Excellence

  • Career Center
  • Honors Program
  • ROTC
  • Student Success, Diversity & Inclusion
  • Writing Center

Research & Innovation

  • Research & Scholarship
  • Clarkson Center for Complex Systems Science (C3S2)
  • The Center for Advanced Materials Processing (CAMP)
  • Center for Air Resources Engineering & Science (CARES)
  • Center for Identification Technology Research (CITeR)
  • The Center for Rehabilitation Engineering, Science & Technology (CREST)
  • The Center for Sustainable Energy Systems (CSES)
  • The Shipley Center for Innovation
  • Reh Center for Entrepreneurship

Clarkson University

8 Clarkson Ave., Potsdam, New York 13699315-268-6400
80 Nott Terrace, Schenectady, NY 12308518-631-9831

Contact the Webmaster
© 2018 by Clarkson University

  •  
  • Human Resources • Giving
  • Consumer Information Disclosures (HEOA)
  • Act on Legal & Moral Concerns