Programs with Sustainability-related Student Learning Outcomes as of 1/20/2016

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Programs with Sustainability-related Student Learning Outcomes as of 1/20/2016 Biology (major/minor) Goal 4: Help students to understand the importance of diversity in the practice of science through collaborative learning where different perspectives are valued and evaluated. Program Objective 4: Interconnectedness and Diversity. Students will learn to recognize and appreciate the diversity of the natural world and the interconnectedness of disciplinary approaches towards studying it. Learning Outcome: Students work in groups, allowing them to appreciate the importance of different perspectives and ideas to solving scientific problems. Goal 5: Challenge students to think critically in evaluating data and to apply that skill to issues arising in the world around them, including ethical conflicts surrounding particular scientific theories, technologies, or applications. Program Objective 5: Social relevance. Students will develop an understanding of issues related to biology and chemistry in society. Learning Outcome: Students consider the applications of science in society through case studies and real world scenarios that explore different social, political and ethical viewpoints. Chemistry (major/minor) Goal 4: Help students to understand the importance of diversity in the practice of science through collaborative learning where different perspectives are valued and evaluated. Program Objective 4: Interconnectedness and Diversity. Students will learn to recognize and appreciate the diversity of the natural world and the interconnectedness of disciplinary approaches towards studying it. Learning Outcome: Students work in groups, allowing them to appreciate the importance of different perspectives and ideas to solving scientific problems. Goal 5: Challenge students to think critically in evaluating data and to apply that skill to issues arising in the world around them, including ethical conflicts surrounding particular scientific theories, technologies, or applications. Program Objective 5: Social relevance. Students will develop an understanding of issues related to biology and chemistry in society. Learning Outcome: Students consider the applications of science in society through case studies and real world scenarios that explore different social, political and ethical viewpoints. Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (major/minor) Goal 4: Help students to understand the importance of diversity in the practice of science through collaborative learning where different perspectives are valued and evaluated. Program Objective 4: Interconnectedness and Diversity. Students will learn to recognize and appreciate the diversity of the natural world and the interconnectedness of disciplinary approaches towards studying it. Learning Outcome: Students work in groups, allowing them to appreciate the importance of different perspectives and ideas to solving scientific problems. Goal 5: Challenge students to think critically in evaluating data and to apply that skill to issues arising in the world around them, including ethical conflicts surrounding particular scientific theories, technologies, or applications. Program Objective 5: Social relevance. Students will develop an understanding of issues related to biology and chemistry in society. Learning Outcome: Students consider the applications of science in society through case studies and real world scenarios that explore different social, political and ethical viewpoints.

Criminal Justice (major/minor) Student learning outcomes: 5. Approaching criminology as a social science by identifying important research questions, effective (yet practical) strategies for answering them and acknowledging the ways traditional research methods (and assumptions embedded within them) can promote (hinder) social justice; 6. Articulating the ways crime definitions and social control policy reflect and (un)intentionally reproduce inequalities associate with race, class, gender, and other social statuses. Economics and Management (major; minors in Economics and in Management) Student learning outcomes: 6. Develop an awareness of the global community environment and foster sensitivity to economic, social, biological and cultural diversity 9. Become informed citizens who can independently think and study economic and business topics and who can effectively share their perspectives, results and implications from such study Education (major; minors in Educational Studies: Childhood Ed and Educational Studies, Adolescence Ed) Wells pre-service teachers will work with learners to create challenging, inclusive environments that support individual and collaborative learning, encourage positive social interaction, and develop motivation to learn. Pre-service teachers will... 1. communicate and interact with students in ways that demonstrate respect and responsiveness to individual needs and cultural backgrounds; and 2. organize and manage a classroom effectively using the concepts of respect and responsibility as the cornerstones. English (major; minors in English, Creative Writing, and Journalism) Students will develop knowledge of ways class, religion, race, gender and sexuality inform literary works, enabling them to better appreciate complexity and difference, and so contribute to acting humanely. Environmental Science (major/minor) Within our eight broad goals we have embedded objectives and outcomes as outlined below. GOAL 1: Examine the nature of the earth Objective 1.1: Examine the nature of ecosystems Outcome 1.1.1: Demonstrate understanding of matter and energy flow through food chains Outcome 1.1.2: Display knowledge of major biogeochemical cycles Outcome 1.1.3: Show familiarity with earth s biodiversity Objective1.2: Examine the nature of natural resources Outcome 1.2.1: Demonstrate awareness of the world s energy resources Outcome 1.2.2: Show familiarity with the nature of the world s water resources Objective 1.3: Examine the nature of the human-environment interaction Outcome 1.3.1: Be able to describe how human activities degrade the earth Outcome 1.3.2: Be able to describe how human activities protect and restore the earth Programs with Sustainability-related Student Learning Outcomes 2

Environmental Science (major/minor) - continued GOAL 2: Analyze environmental issues and science-based approaches to environmental problem-solving on different scales Objective 2.1: Analyze environmental issues and problem-solving on local scale Outcome 2.1.1: Demonstrate knowledge of how humans use and affect Cayuga Lake and its watershed Outcome 2.1.2: Show familiarity with local agricultural practices and impacts Objective 2.2: Analyze environmental issues and problem-solving on global scale Outcome 2.2.1: Demonstrate knowledge of major contemporary global environmental issues Outcome 2.2.2: Show familiarity with global agricultural practices and impacts GOAL 3: Explore the interplay between achieving environmental protection and meeting society s resource needs Objective 3.1: Examine how environmental science helps societies mitigate their environmental impacts Outcome 3.1.1: Demonstrate familiarity with scientific issues around the concepts of reduce, reuse, recycle Outcome 3.1.2: Show knowledge of scientific issues around the mitigation hierarchy avoid, minimize, compensate Objective 3.2: Examine how environmental science helps inform priority-setting and decision-making Outcome 3.2.1: Describe how environmental science provides a basis for weighing options open to society Outcome 3.2.2: Describe how societies can use the metrics of environmental science in decision-making processes GOAL 4: Investigate basic science and apply it to environmental issues Objective 4.1: Investigate fundamental scientific principles and basic research in chosen area of specialization Outcome 4.1.1: Demonstrate knowledge with the laws of nature in biology/chemistry/math & physics Outcome 4.1.2: Demonstrate familiarity with the primary literature in biology/chemistry/math & physics Objective 4.2: Investigate how chosen area of specialization can be applied to environmental concerns Outcome 4.2.1: Articulate understanding of how biology/chemistry/math & physics informs environmental debates Outcome 4.2.2: Describe the role of biology/chemistry/math & physics in addressing contemporary environmental issues GOAL 5: Examine how the findings of environmental science are used in decision-making about environmental resources Objective 5.1: Examine environmental policies and how they are developed Outcome 5.1.1: Demonstrate knowledge of current environmental policies Outcome 5.1.2: Demonstrate familiarity with the genesis of major environmental policies Objective 5.2: Examine how interests of various stakeholders interplay with the findings of environmental science Outcome 5.2.1: Demonstrate familiarity with local and global conservation and environmental groups Outcome 5.2.2: Articulate roles of environmental advocates, businesses, government agencies and other entities in environmental concerns GOAL 6: Appreciate the various ways environmental science can contribute to successful stewardship of the earth Objective 6.1: Appreciate the role of scientific inquiry as a foundation of effective stewardship Outcome 6.1.1: Articulate the nature and the value of the scientific lens in environmental issues Outcome 6.1.2: Describe how scientific findings can be translated into effective environmental management Objective 6.2: Appreciate how environmental technologies and engineering can address environmental problems Outcome 6.2.1: Describe major ways in which technology & engineering can help us analyze the environment Programs with Sustainability-related Student Learning Outcomes 3

Environmental Science (major/minor) - continued Outcome 6.2.2: Describe major ways in which technology & engineering can mitigate environmental impacts GOAL 7: Learn and practice skills that contribute to successful pursuit of a career related to the environment Objective 7.1: Learn and practice quantitative skills Outcome 7.1.1: Demonstrate familiarity with indices of environmental quality Outcome 7.1.2: Show proficiency describing numerical dimensions of environmental issues Outcome 7.1.3: Demonstrate competence in statistical approaches to data analyses GOAL 8: Gain practice analyzing environmental issues in an objective and sophisticated way Objective 8.1: Gain practice using evidence-based approaches to environmental issues Outcome 8.1.1: Demonstrate familiarity with data-driven analyses of environmental issues Outcome 8.1.2: Demonstrate ability to distinguish arguments based on emotion and anecdotal evidence from objective arguments grounded in data Objective 8.2: Gain practice seeking and valuing complexity and context in environmental debates Outcome 8.2.1: Demonstrate familiarity with historical aspects of environmental debates Outcome 8.2.2: Demonstrate proficiency in articulating environmental issues in a nuanced and multifaceted way Health Sciences (minors in Healthcare Management, Holistic Health Studies, and Science, Health & Values) Course objectives: 6. Identify standards for medical ethics and cultural competency/ 7. Identify health issues and challenges in local and global communities and think critically about solutions. History (major/minor) Program Goals of the History Major, to: Think historically by cultivating a sense of change and continuity over time. Recognize connections between the past and the present and locate both self and others in time and space. Develop an appreciation of difference and diversity by cultivating a sense of shared human experience across time and space. Gain knowledge of the past and develop analytical skills that encourage students to become well informed, critical, and active citizens capable of exercising sound judgment. Understand the value of conceptual analytical categories such as class, race, gender and ethnicity in historical scholarship. International Studies (major; minors in Global and International Studies and Africana) International Studies major s goals are to help students: (1) Understand the basic concepts within the studies of interactions among peoples and nation-states within their environments; (2) Apply theories, research and concepts intelligibly and holistically in analyzing the world s events, actors and organizations; (3) Possess critical thinking skills needed to retain, manage and synthesize complex information and ideas (4) And acquire a concrete knowledge that is relevant and functional in the contemporary world. Programs with Sustainability-related Student Learning Outcomes 4

Philosophy (major; minors in Philosophy and Religion and Religious Studies) Learning Objectives: 3. Students will be able to articulate an ethical perspective that is informed by and responsive to the major ethical traditions of humankind, so far. 4. Students will demonstrate an ability to reflect on, grapple with, and reasonably appreciate the values, basic commitments, perspectives, and biases they inherited through socialization, and how their own values and beliefs will, in turn, impact future human beings. 5. Students will demonstrate basic competency in the philosophy of mind and human nature. 6. Students will articulate a view of how human beings fit or don t fit into the larger animal and living world, the evolution of life and consciousness, and possible worlds unseen. How also do our actions impact our children and their children in regard to the climate they will inherit from us? 7. Students will demonstrate broad competence concerning important concepts in or related to mind, human psychology, ethics, philosophy of religion, and the history of philosophy. Political Science (major/ minor) Student Learning Objectives: A. Acquire and assess information about social problems from a variety of sources B. Using knowledge about politics and governmental processes to address social problems C. Analyze social problems using critical thinking and moral reasoning E. Construct and present persuasive arguments about social problems and possible solutions Psychology (major/ minors in Psychology and Cognitive and Brain Sciences) Goal 2. Research Methods in Psychology Objective 5: Students will appreciate the ethical issues involved in conducting behavioral research both on humans and animals. Outcome 5: Students will know how to conduct ethically sound research and how to evaluate the research of others for its ethical soundness. Goal 3. Critical Thinking Skills in Psychology Objective 6: Students will use and respect critical thinking, skeptical inquiry, and the scientific approach to understanding behavior and mind. Outcome 6: Students will develop the skills necessary to critically and reasonably evaluate psychological research and theory. Goal 4. Application of Psychology Objective 8: Students will understand and apply psychological principles to personal, social, and organizational issues, with the goal of improving the world in terms of sustainability, justice, and the human experience. Outcome 8: Students will demonstrate their ability to apply their knowledge of the field to real-world issues and problems. Goal 5. Values in Psychology and Wells College Objective 9: Students will be able to weigh evidence; appreciate complexity and tolerate ambiguity; act ethically, humanely, and rationally; respect others opinions and perspectives; make interdisciplinary connections; and reflect other values that are the underpinnings of psychology as a social science and Wells College as a liberal arts institution. Outcome 9: Students will possess the character, skills, and values to make a positive difference at Wells and in the wider world. Programs with Sustainability-related Student Learning Outcomes 5

Psychology (major/ minors in Psychology and Cognitive and Brain Sciences), continued Goal 8. Sociocultural and International Awareness Objective 13: Students will recognize, understand, accept, and respect the complexity of sociocultural and international diversity. Outcome 15: Students will develop an awareness and understanding of inclusivity and diversity in the context of the field of psychology and in their own lives. Outcome 16: Students will expand their own experiences through exposure to other ways of thinking, values, and worldviews. Outcome 17: Students will understand the limitations of the current state of the field in a multicultural context and consider ways of improving the status quo. Goal 9. Personal Development Objective 14: Students will develop awareness and insight into their own and others behavior and mental processes and apply effective strategies for self-management, self-understanding, and self improvement. Outcome 18: Students will be encouraged to develop the capacity to be self-reflective, compassionate, and empathetic. Outcome 19: Students will learn to value and pursue lifelong learning as a means of self-development in the cultivation of a meaningful life. Outcome 20: Students will grow in their own ethical and moral judgments and actions. Outcome 21: Students will apply course material to better understand, appreciate, and possibly improve their own and others behaviors. Social and Economic Justice (minor) Goals of the minor: 1) To provide students with a broad understanding of issues under the term social justice 2) To provide students with critical knowledge that will allow them to recognize structural inequalities 3) To provide students with some understanding of how to end structural inequalities 4) To provide students with an understanding of the similarities between diverse struggles against structural inequalities 5) To provide students with the knowledge that alliances are important 6) To provide students with hands-on experience with social justice organizations or experience applying organizing theory to real-life situations Sociology and Anthropology (major; minors in Sociology; Anthropology, First Nations and Indigenous Studies, and Communication Studies) Program Goal 1: to develop informed critical scholars who can communicate in the language of sociology and anthropology Learning Objective 1: Students will be able to engage in professional discourse both verbally and through writing. Learning Objective 2: Students will be aware of and be able to use theoretical frameworks to examine enduring and timely social issues. Learning Objective 3: Students will be able to conduct a research project and critique research methods and methodologies. Learning Objective 4: Students will be able to synthesize information. Program Goal 2: to introduce students to timely and enduring issues in sociology and anthropology Learning Objective 5: Students will be aware of enduring and timely social issues in Sociology and Anthropology. Learning Objective 6: Students will be able to exercise their sociological imagination. Programs with Sustainability-related Student Learning Outcomes 6

Sociology and Anthropology, continued Learning Objective 7: Student will be able to exercise the anthropological perspective. Program Goal 3: to open students eyes to structural injustices and develop an appreciation for diverse life ways Learning Objective 8: Students will understand social systems and systems of meaning that perpetuate social inequalities. Learning Objective 9: Student will develop an appreciation for diverse life ways. Program Goal 4: to allow students the opportunity to think about creating a more just, equitable and sustainable society. Learning Objective 10: Students will be able to articulate the need for social justice and suggest paths to improve social inequalities Sustainability (individualized major/minors in Sustainability and Sustainable Food Systems) Goal 1: Students will have a foundation of knowledge about the issues of sustainability from several disciplines, and will develop a basic understanding of how these disciplines can work together to create a more sustainable world. Objective 1: Students will have basic scientific understanding of ecosystems and the limits of these systems. Objective 2: Students will have an understanding of economic systems, the problems of capitalism and the necessary strain it puts on ecosystems. Objective 3: Students will have a cross-cultural or trans-national comparative understanding of how humans interact with the environment in ways that both put undo strain on the environment, and ways that are less harmful to the environment. Included in this is a critical analysis of the good life. Objective 4: Students will be knowledgeable of both domestic and international public policy as it pertains to environmental issues. Objective 5: Students will understand the individual psychological benefits of being aware of nature, how individual awareness creates a more healthy society and how we can persuade others to examine their relationship to building a healthy planet. Objective 6: Students will understand how issues of equity and diversity, in the social sphere, are related to issues of sustainability. Goal 2: Students will understand the complex ways human behavior has led to an unsustainable world. Goal 3: Students will understand the complex ways human behavior can lead to a more equitable and sustainable world. Goal 4: Students will be prepared to think about psychological, social and cultural adaptions that are necessary to survive in a changing climate. Goal 5: To take a personal inventory of one s own contribution to the problems and the solutions of sustainability. Goal 6: To learn basic organizing skills to help build a movement around issues of sustainability. Theatre and Dance (major; minors in Theatre and Dance) Personal Development Goals: Students will develop: Independent thinking and confidence Adaptability and innovation Comprehension of symbols and abstraction World-view and multicultural awareness Sensitivity to gender, race, and class Well-being and the healthy channeling of stress and emotion Programs with Sustainability-related Student Learning Outcomes 7

Visual Arts (major; minors in Studio Art, Graphic Design, Art History, Book Arts, Advertising, and Museum Studies) The visual arts as a major area of study offers students the opportunity to develop: An informed understanding of aesthetics and visual language An acute and engaged sense of visual literacy and communication Creative problem-solving skills The ability to critically describe and analyze visual images, both past and present, with an accurate vocabulary and informed discourse (written, oral, art making/ artistic expression) Meaningful links between contemporary trends and conceptual practices with those from the past An understanding of the relationship between art and society. Women s and Gender Studies (major/minor) Goal 1. Establishing knowledge base on the contextual nature of gender roles Objective 1: Students will understand that gender categories and roles differ across time periods and cultural groups Objective 2: Students will explore the formation of gender/ed identities and the relationships between variously gendered persons within local communities and cross-culturally Goal 3: Develop students intersectional understanding of social and political issues relating to gender, sexuality, race, class, disability and nationality as they pertain to the social construction of difference and inequality. Objective: Students will take courses that explicitly address the challenges of intersectional analysis Programs with Sustainability-related Student Learning Outcomes 8