Sustainability Studies (B.A.) with Community Development Concentration

Program Overview

Director: Brandon Hoover

Mission: Sustainability Studies is an interdisciplinary major in an emerging field for those determined to make a practical difference in the world as students and beyond. It combines elements of the social sciences, politics, environmental sciences and community development in both urban and rural settings. The major requires a core curriculum; a chosen concentration in Community and Urban Development, or Sustainable Agriculture; and a practicum experience in the form of an internship employing the skill learned in the curriculum. Students completing this major will have the theoretical basis, skills, and experience needed to enhance the environmental, economic and social sustainability in the church and society.

Program Learning Outcomes

Graduates from Messiah’s Sustainability Studies program can:

  1. Describe human systemic pressures on environmental systems and the basic ways in which these pressures impact human and other biological life
  2. Evaluate ethical assumptions made about human-environment interactions in social and individual decisions
  3. Formulate a personal understanding of sustainability, and integrate that understanding into a vocational direction
  4. Develop strategies to personally and collaboratively engage in action toward improving social and ecological ailments
  5. Design and implement interventions to transition human institutions and/or social systems toward sustainability.

Graduates with the Community Development concentration can also evaluate the economic, political, and social barriers to creating a socially and ecologically just society

Graduates with the Conservation and Agriculture concentration can also evaluate ecological health and the social changes needed to conserve human wellbeing and biological diversity

Major Requirements

Complete the following for your major:

SUST 140/ENVS 140Introduction to Ecology and Sustainability

3

ENVS 216Environmental Issues and Sustainable Solutions

3

ENVS 315Environmental Ethics

3

GIS 245Introduction to Geographic Information Systems

3

SOAN 212Cultural Anthropology

3

SOAN 310Food, Power, and Society

3

SUST 495Capstone: Environmental Science and Sustainability Studies

3

SUST 495: Writing in the major requirement.

Nine credits from the following:

ECON 117Issues in Environmental Economics

3

POLI 113American Government

3

SOAN 315Urban Sociology

3

STAT 269Introductory Statistics

3

SOCI 315: ECON 117 meets Social Science

STAT 269: STAT 269 meets Mathematical Sciences

Three credits from the following:

INTE 391Internship

1-3

SOAN 391Sociology Practicum

1-3

Community Development Concentration (21 credits)

Three credits from the following:

POLI 243Political Research Methods

3

SOAN 285Research Methods

3

Eighteen credits from the following:

ECON 120Principles of Macroeconomics

3

ECON 220Principles of Microeconomics

3

ECON 312Economic Development II

3

HIST 355U.S. Urban History

3

POLI 323Public Policy

3

POLI 212International Politics

3

POLI 213Comparative Politics

3

SOAN 356Social Inequality

3

QuEST Requirements

Experiential Learning requirement 0
QuEST requirements Credits
First Year Seminar 3
Oral Communication 3
Created and Called for Community (W) 3
Mathematical Sciences (STAT 269)** 3
Laboratory Science (ENVS 140/SUST 140) met/major
Science, Technology & the World (BIOL 216) met/major
Social Science *** (SOAN 310) met/major
European History or United States History 3
Literature (ENGL 174 suggested) 3
Philosophy and Religion 3
Arts 3
First Semester of Language 3
Second Semester of Language 3
Third Semester of Language or Cross Cultural 3
Non-Western Studies (SOAN 212) met/major
Bible 3
Christian Beliefs 3
Wellness 1
Ethics (ENVS 315), World Views or Pluralism met/major
QuEST requirements 40
Major requirements (inclusive of concentration) 54
Free electives 29
Total credits 123

*INTE 394 must be taken for a letter grade to fulfill Major requirement.

**STAT 269 meets the QuEST requirement for Mathematical Sciences

***ECON 117