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11 - 20 of 23 results for: ENVRES

ENVRES 280: Introduction to Environmental Science

For E-IPER Joint M.S. students only. This course functions as a gateway for E-IPER Joint M.S. students to learn about the variety of environmental science conducted by the program's affiliated faculty. Topics include oceans, green chemistry, water policy, energy, and others. Students engage in problem solving related to the application of science to business, law, and the conservation of natural resources.
Terms: Spr | Units: 2

ENVRES 290: Capstone Project Seminar in Environment and Resources

Required for and limited to E-IPER Joint M.S. students. Propose, conduct and publicly present final individual or team projects demonstrating the integration of professional (M.B.A., J.D., or M.D.) and M.S. in Environment and Resources degrees. Presentation and submission of final product required. 3 total units required; can all be taken during one quarter or divided over two sequential quarters.
Terms: Aut, Win | Units: 1-3 | Repeatable 2 times (up to 6 units total)

ENVRES 300: Introduction to Resource, Energy and Environmental Economics

Examination of environmental, energy and natural resource management problems through the lens of economics, with an emphasis on hands-on practical problem-solving. Topics include market failure, cost-benefit analysis, finance, risk & uncertainty, non-market valuation, regulation, green accounting, rent, renewable resources, exhaustible resources, including energy, and biodiversity. Prerequisite: proficiency in multivariate calculus. Knowledge of basic microeconomics helpful but not essential. Open only to E-IPER PhD students.
Terms: Aut | Units: 3

ENVRES 315: Environmental Research Design Seminar

Required core course for first year E-IPER Ph.D. students; optional for Joint M.S. students; other graduate students with instructor's permission. Series of faculty presentations and student-led discussions on interdisciplinary research design as exemplars of the research design theories discussed in ENVRES 320. Designing Environmental Research. Topics parallel the ENVRES 320 syllabus. Corequisite: ENVRES 320.
Terms: Win | Units: 1
Instructors: Reineman, D. (PI)

ENVRES 320: Designing Environmental Research

Required core course restricted to first year E-IPER Ph.D. students. Research design options for causal inference in environmentally related research. Major philosophies of knowledge and how they relate to research objectives and design choices. Identification of critical elements within a broad range of research designs. Evaluation of the types of research questions for which different designs are suited, emphasizing fit between objectives, design, methods, and argument. Development of individual research design proposals, including description and justification understandable to a non-specialist.
Terms: Win | Units: 3-4

ENVRES 330: Research Approaches for Environmental Problem Solving

Required core course for first year E-IPER Ph.D. students. How to develop and implement interdisciplinary research in environment and resources. Assignments include development of research questions, a preliminary literature review, and a summer funding proposal. Course is structured on peer critique and student presentations of work in progress. Corequisite: ENVRES 398 with a faculty member chosen to explore a possible dissertation topic.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3

ENVRES 340: E-IPER PhD Writing Seminar

Restricted to second year E-IPER PhD students only. Actively pursue one or more writing goals relevant to this stage in their graduate studies in a structured setting. Set specific writing goals, create and follow a plan for reaching these goals, and receive substantive feedback on their written products from their peers. Examples of writing products include, but are not limited to, the student¿s dissertation proposal, E-IPER Fields of Inquiry essay, a literature review, or a grant or fellowship application. By the end of the course, students are expected to have completed or have made substantial progress toward their writing goal.
Terms: Win | Units: 1-2
Instructors: Oakes, L. (PI)

ENVRES 380: Collaborating with the Future: Launching Large Scale Sustainable Transformations

This project-based d.school class combines Design Thinking Processes, Behavioral Sciences, elements of Diffusion Theory, and a methodology for scaled transformation. Tools and theories introduced in class will be used to structure large-scale transformations that simultaneously create value on environmental, societal, and economic fronts. This is a project-based class involving team-based, real world challenges that are all complex and scaled. Primarily meant for Graduate Students (especially qualified/motivated Seniors will be considered). Admission to the class is through an application process which ends on March 3. Please find instructions and applications at https://dschool.stanford.edu/groups/largetransformations/.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3-4

ENVRES 382: Methods in Systems Thinking

The workshop-style class will expose you to the fundamentals of Systems Thinking, and how to combine it with methods in human-centered design. You will learn how to interrogate the dynamics of the system, understand the stakeholder networks, and understand the actions and beliefs of the people that shape the current outcomes. You will then use design tools to frame the vision of a future state, and decide where to intervene in a complex multi-stakeholder system. Simultaneously, you will use Design Thinking processes to ensure that your interventions are grounded in reality, is human-centered, and deeply transformative. Course admission is by application only. Applications are due March 15, 2016.
Terms: Spr | Units: 2

ENVRES 398: Directed Reading in Environment and Resources

Under supervision of an E-IPER affiliated faculty member on a subject of mutual interest. Joint M.S. students must submit an Independent Study Agreement for approval. May be repeat for credit
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr, Sum | Units: 1-10 | Repeatable for credit
Instructors: Ardoin, N. (PI) ; Arrigo, K. (PI) ; Arrow, K. (PI) ; Asner, G. (PI) ; Banerjee, B. (PI) ; Barnett, W. (PI) ; Barry, M. (PI) ; Benson, S. (PI) ; Billington, S. (PI) ; Block, B. (PI) ; Boehm, A. (PI) ; Brandt, A. (PI) ; Burke, M. (PI) ; Caers, J. (PI) ; Caldeira, K. (PI) ; Caldwell, M. (PI) ; Casciotti, K. (PI) ; Chamberlain, P. (PI) ; Cohen, J. (PI) ; Criddle, C. (PI) ; Crowder, L. (PI) ; Curran, L. (PI) ; Daily, G. (PI) ; Davis, J. (PI) ; De Leo, G. (PI) ; Diffenbaugh, N. (PI) ; Dirzo, R. (PI) ; Dunbar, R. (PI) ; Durham, W. (PI) ; Ehrlich, A. (PI) ; Ehrlich, P. (PI) ; Ernst, W. (PI) ; Falcon, W. (PI) ; Fendorf, S. (PI) ; Ferguson, J. (PI) ; Field, C. (PI) ; Fischer, M. (PI) ; Frank, Z. (PI) ; Freyberg, D. (PI) ; Fringer, O. (PI) ; Fukami, T. (PI) ; Gerritsen, M. (PI) ; Gorelick, S. (PI) ; Goulder, L. (PI) ; Granovetter, M. (PI) ; Hadly, E. (PI) ; Hayden, T. (PI) ; Iancu, D. (PI) ; Jacobson, M. (PI) ; Jones, J. (PI) ; Karl, T. (PI) ; Kennedy, D. (PI) ; Kennedy, D. (PI) ; Kennedy, J. (PI) ; Kieffel, H. (PI) ; Knutson, B. (PI) ; Kolstad, C. (PI) ; Koseff, J. (PI) ; Kovscek, A. (PI) ; LaBeaud, D. (PI) ; Lambin, E. (PI) ; Lee, H. (PI) ; Lepech, M. (PI) ; Levitt, R. (PI) ; Lobell, D. (PI) ; Luby, S. (PI) ; Luthy, R. (PI) ; Martinez, J. (PI) ; Masters, G. (PI) ; Mastrandrea, M. (PI) ; Matson, P. (PI) ; McAdam, D. (PI) ; McFarland, D. (PI) ; McGehee, M. (PI) ; Meskell, L. (PI) ; Michalak, A. (PI) ; Micheli, F. (PI) ; Miller, D. (PI) ; Miller, G. (PI) ; Monismith, S. (PI) ; Mooney, H. (PI) ; Mordecai, E. (PI) ; Nall, C. (PI) ; Naylor, R. (PI) ; Ortolano, L. (PI) ; Palumbi, S. (PI) ; Peay, K. (PI) ; Plambeck, E. (PI) ; Powell, W. (PI) ; Rafinejad, D. (PI) ; Rajagopal, R. (PI) ; Rao, H. (PI) ; Reichelstein, S. (PI) ; Reicher, D. (PI) ; Robinson, T. (PI) ; Sapolsky, R. (PI) ; Satz, D. (PI) ; Schoolnik, G. (PI) ; Shiv, B. (PI) ; Simonson, I. (PI) ; Sivas, D. (PI) ; Soule, S. (PI) ; Sprenger, C. (PI) ; Stedman, S. (PI) ; Sweeney, J. (PI) ; Szeptycki, L. (PI) ; Thomas, L. (PI) ; Thompson, B. (PI) ; Tuljapurkar, S. (PI) ; Vitousek, P. (PI) ; Wara, M. (PI) ; Weinstein, J. (PI) ; Weyant, J. (PI) ; White, R. (PI) ; Wilcox, J. (PI) ; Wilcox, M. (PI) ; Wolfe, M. (PI) ; Zoback, M. (PI)
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