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COA Viewbook, 2004-2005
a liberal
arts college
of human
ecology
on the
maine coast
"If Plato were to return
and take a professorship,
I'd bet my copy of The
Republic that he would
settle in to teach at
College of the Atlantic."
> colman mccarthy
THE WASHINGTON POST
of the Atlantic
life changing world changing
2004-2005
mission statement
WARENUARDING THE HENDAGE 1016 UNTURE CLENERATIONS
The faculty, students, trustees, staff, and alumni of College of the
Atlantic envision a world where people value creativity, intellectual
achievement, and the diversity of nature and human cultures. With
respect and compassion, individuals will construct meaningful lives
for themselves, gain appreciation for the relationships among all
forms of life, and safeguard the heritage of future generations.
College of the Atlantic enriches the liberal arts tradition through
a distinctive educational philosophy-human ecology. A human
ecological perspective integrates knowledge from all academic
disciplines and from personal experience to investigate, and
ultimately improve, the relationships between human beings
and our social and natural communities. The human ecological
perspective guides all aspects of education, research, activism,
and interactions among the College's students, faculty, staff and
trustees. The College of the Atlantic community encourages,
prepares, and expects students to gain the expertise, breadth,
values, and practical experience necessary to achieve fulfillment
and to help solve problems that challenge communities everywhere.
welcome
You may be holding just a
viewbook in your hands,
a brochure that is cool to
the touch and flat in nature.
But as you flip through these
pages, we hope that your
mind will begin to churn with
possibilities.
This book is a collection
of thoughts and images
reflecting the experiences
available to the COA com-
munity. Whether tackling
the frets of a guitar, quietly
stalking birds, solving
a physics problem, writing
a paper, or canoeing down
a creek while studying rivers,
imagine yourself here, in the
intellectually rich and environ-
mentally stunning working
and living spaces of COA.
contents
COA History
and Philosophy
3
Academic Life
7
Curriculum
11
Academic Facilities
and Special Programs
17
Degree Requirements
25
Between Classes
26
After COA
35
Admission
and Financial Aid
37
nathaniel keller,
04
hometown
Charlottesville, Virginia
high school
Charlottesville High School
> life after COA
Travel on a Watson Fellowship: "On and Off the Pitch: the International
Language of Soccer" in Croatia, England, Argentina, and Brazil.
Following this year of travel, my plans are to study environmental
law and land use planning.
> internship
I interned with Virginia's Piedmont Environmental Council in 2001,
investigating land use change in a rapidly growing county.
> classes taken
> senior project
at COA
My senior project is "Mixing it Up: Cross Cultural Reflections on Space."
Advanced Composition
In November of 2003 I returned to Virginia to research the role of public
space in my hometown. I began to construct a narrative examining
Advanced Watershed Planning
how public and private space in places like Charlottesville, Virginia;
Agriculture and Biotechnology
Cambridge, Massachusetts; Ames, lowa; and Bar Harbor, Maine have
Art of the Puppet
informed my values and beliefs.
Articulated Identities
Classic Shorts International
"Attending COA has been
Comparative Colonialism
a life changing experience
in the Americas
because of the people COA
Conservation Biology
attracts and the opportunities it
Contemporary Art
provides. The experiential learn-
Cultural Landscapes
ing that takes place here is as
of the United States
valuable as the learning that
Environmental History
takes place in the classroom.
Environmental Justice
Sophomore year I took Ken Cline's Human Ecology of Wilder-
and Social Welfare
ness, which began with a weeklong canoe trip along the Allagash
Environmental Law and Policy
Wilderness Waterway. Throughout the week we discussed and
Ethnographic Research Methods I
debated the qualities of wilderness, whether cooking a campfire
Field Ecology and Data Analysis
dinner or paddling. My friend Sam and I swam out into frigid
Government & Politics: United States
Churchill Lake and a loon dove after a fish within an arm's length
History of the American
of us.
Conservation Movement
"I have made amazing friends at COA. For four years have
Human Ecology Core Course
debated world affairs with students from Israel, Tibet, Ethiopia,
Introduction to Arts and Design
Denmark, Nepal, Sudan, and Argentina. Economics, land use,
Issues in National Park Planning
politics, and globalization are not just areas of study but something
Land Use Planning
we all participate in together.
Marine Policy
"I investigated land use in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. I observed
People and Public Space
squatter children playing in the space between the huts and shacks.
The Effects of Development
watched the 2002 World Cup from a
on the Malaysian Landscape
houseboat in Tama Negra National Park
The Human Ecology of Wilderness
with Malay cooks and river guides, all the
Understanding 21st
time beginning to realize that the global-
Century Economies
ization I studied at COA was personal-
Use and Abuse of our Public Lands
was watching ESPN on a river in one of
Writing Seminar
the most beautiful places in the world.'
This is a college with a mission: training students to understand
co-educational college in the liberal arts tradition. It would intro-
the relationships between humans and our environment. Even
duce a new interdisciplinary approach to education. At its center
more important, this college expects its students and graduates to
would be Human Ecology.
help solve the urgent problems confronting our natural and social
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COA Viewbook, 2004-2005
College of the Atlantic viewbook for the 2004-2005 academic year.