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Anthropology Meets the Environment in Our Online Environmental Science Degree

Explore how to help people live more efficiently and effectively in their environment with an experiential online Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology with a concentration in Environmental Sustainability.

You'll examine ethical, practical and technical skills - and contribute to and view the world through a social, historical and evolutionary lens. You'll emerge a good steward of the natural world, ready to enter the booming green economy as many firms recognize the importance of environmental impact.

UMS's online environmental science degree features a multidisciplinary approach and provides skill sets valued by a range of employers - from urban to rural organizations, private firms to NGOs.

See Yourself Succeed in Environmental Science

UMS's BA in Anthropology with a concentration in Environmental Sustainability helps you recognize and respond to cultural and environmental challenges by exploring the past's interconnectedness to the future. You'll delve into the complexities of biological change and adaptation, investigate identity through a combination of modern and historical events and promote cultural awareness and change. Many of the courses use virtual experiences - from role-playing to tourism plans - to combine theory and problem-solving skills in an authentic way, helping you make your mark as an engaged citizen of a diverse world.

As a private, nonprofit university, UMS has one mission - to help you see yourself succeed. The benefits of earning your online environmental science degree at UMS include:

  • Affordability. Take advantage of some of the most affordable tuition rates in the nation
  • Convenience. Attend class when it's convenient for you - online education means 24/7 access
  • Efficiency and flexibility. Complete your undergraduate degree at your own pace, over six 8-week terms per year
  • Expert instruction. Learn from instructors with relevant, real-world experience
  • Networking. Tap into our nationwide network of alumni for internship and career opportunities
  • Simple application process. Just fill out an online undergraduate application, and we'll retrieve U.S. transcripts from your previous institutions and automatically complete an official credit evaluation. Plus, there's no application fee
  • Student support. Count on the ongoing support of dedicated academic and career advisors specialized in your area of study
  • Transfer-friendly enrollment. Transfer up to 90 credits toward an undergraduate degree

Career Outlook

UMS's BA in Anthropology with a concentration in Environmental Sustainability gives you the skills you need to apply for a range of positions in every area from global health advocacy to environmental and natural resources. You'll emerge from the online environmental science degree program prepared to take on jobs such as:

  • Sustainability analyst
  • Energy efficiency analyst
  • Environmental solutions manager
  • Waste & energy management specialist

Job prospects for anthropologists are expected to grow, with demand for environmental scientists and specialists anticipated to increase by up to 11% through 2026, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.* Note that an advanced degree is required to become an anthropologist.

Curriculum

UMS's online environmental science degree has a strong foundation in archaeology, ethics and conservation and includes a host of real-world applications that yield pragmatic experience and portfolio-worthy projects.

Courses To Prepare You For Your Career

UMS's bachelor's in environmental sustainability program includes:

  • General education
  • Degree-specific courses

General Education Program

Our programs are designed to equip you with the skills and insights you need to move forward. In recent years, employers have stressed the need for graduates with higher order skills - the skills that go beyond technical knowledge - such as:

  • Writing
  • Communication
  • Analysis
  • Problem solving

All bachelor's students are required to take general education classes. Through foundation, exploration and integration courses, students learn to think critically, creatively and collaboratively, giving you the edge employers are looking for.

Courses May Include

Environmental Issues
This course covers a variety of environmental topics in a manner specifically designed for the non-science major. It provides a fundamental understanding of the various processes necessary to support life on Earth and examines how human activities and attitudes (individual, traditional, cultural and others) generate environmental issues that threaten these processes. Topics include ecology, populations, agriculture, desertification and deforestation, water and ocean pollution, air pollution including ozone depletion and acid rain, global climate change, natural resource depletion, solid and hazardous wastes, energy including fossil fuels and nuclear power, economics and sustainability.

Program Outcomes

  • Examine the relationship between human activities and environmental processes for informing individual and community strategies that mitigate environmental issues and promote sustainable living
  • Evaluate diverse cultural behaviors and social interactions for their role in the complex interrelationships between individuals, cultures, social institutions, organizations, and the environment
  • Apply anthropological theories, concepts, and methodologies to complex contemporary and historical cultural issues for a broader understanding of human societies
  • Demonstrate professional ethics and responsibilities for the collection and dissemination of anthropological knowledge to promote the value of human diversity
  • Develop feasible anthropological research questions for designing implementation-worthy project proposals
  • Analyze anthropological research and data for assessing how human groups construct the cultural realities in which they live
  • Assess similarities and differences among cultures for developing culturally relevant perspectives that challenge ethnocentric notions and practices
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