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Courses

Courses taught at the University of Michigan

  • Below are links to courses taught during the 2024-2025 academic year.
  • At the bottom are lists of previously taught courses.
  • Related material can be found on the Resources page.

Current teaching portfolio (2024-2025)

  • Behavior and Environment (ENV 360, Psych 360, EAS 560, Urban/Reg Plan 544, Social Work 710)
    • Introduction to environmental psychology that examines human-environment interactions, builds an information-processing model of human nature, and uses it to understand what conditions bring out the best in people and help to maintain their clarity and vitality
  • Psychology of Environmental Stewardship (ENV 361, Psych 362, EAS 561)
    • Explores research on the psychology of environmental stewardship, reviews behavior change models, creates a toolbox of approaches for promoting durable conservation behavior and develops a framework for conducting small experiments
  • Reconnection and Revitalization Seminar (EAS 568)
    • Examines the embedded benefits of transitioning to a simpler pattern of living. Framed as an opportunity rather than an inevitable downshift it shows how people may decide to transition early because it is important and fulfilling. Co-taught with Professor Princen
  • Localization Seminar: Transitional Thinking for the New Normal (EAS 564 and ENV 484)
    • Examines the implications of an unprecedented downshift in energy and resource availability at the community level, envisions successful adaptation to such a future. Co-taught with Professor Princen

Courses taught previously (1984-2023)

  • Conservation Behavior Seminar (EAS 661)
    • Advanced graduate seminar that examines the embedded benefits that help enhance psychological well-being from pursuing deep behavioral adaptation and re-localization
  • Common Property Resource Management Seminar (Natural Resources 650)     
    • Advanced graduate research seminar that examines the psychology, behavioral ecology and policy aspects of successful, long-term common property resource regimes. Co-taught with Professors Princen and Low
  • Junior Honors Seminar (Natural Resources 399 and Environment 399)
    • First course of the SNRE Honors program in which students prepare a proposal for their senior thesis projects. Course readings and discussions focus on research methods
  • Master’s Project Planning Seminar (Natural Resources 701)
    • Graduate seminar in which research projects are initiated and developed by teams of students and a faculty advisor. Projects are conducted over three academic terms, involving student teams that produce a multi-authored research report
  • Decentralism (Urban Planning 574)
    • Graduate planning course that examines the works of decentralist writers and the structure and psychology of self-reliant communities
  • Introduction to Natural Resource Problems (Natural Resources 100)
    • Required course for first year natural resource students that teaches them to integrate information from separate natural resource fields
  • Environmental Psychology (Psychology 476 and Psychology 702)
    • Psychology course on human needs in terms of informational requirements, on ways in which environments support or hinder the processing of information, and on how humans remain functional in non-supportive environments
  • Managing Technical Change (Industrial and Operations Engineering 300)
    • Required undergraduate industrial engineering course examining human aspects of technical change and techniques for facilitating such change
  • Theories of Administration (Industrial and Operations Engineering 522)
    • Graduate engineering course that examines the administration of complex organizations
  • Research Paradigms (Natural Resources 741)
    • Required course for doctoral students that examines the research methods used in environmental studies. Co-taught with Professor Webb
  • Cognition and Environment (Psychology 703)
    • Graduate psychology course examining cognitive aspects of environmental perception, knowledge, preference, and information sharing. Co-taught with Professor S. Kaplan

Last updated on February 3, 2025

Localization explained

Biophysical limits and disrupted ecosystems mean that soon we will live far more simply. Rather than being dismal, this reality contains many benefits. If thoughtfully done, it can be a locally grounded, intrinsically satisfying life.

Intention

Inspire hopeful visions despite lean times.
Support new farmers, poets, and teachers.

Inspiration

“I think hard times are coming when we will be wanting the voices of writers who can see alternatives to how we live now and can see through our fear-stricken society and its obsessive technologies to other ways of being, and even imagine some real grounds for hope.” – Ursula Le Guin (2014)

“Even a wounded world is feeding us. Even a wounded world holds us, giving us moments of wonder and joy. I choose joy over despair. Not because I have my head in the sand, but because joy is what the earth gives me daily and I must return the gift.” – Robin Wall Kimmerer (Braiding Sweetgrass, 2013)

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