It鈥檚 been almost 10 years since geography professor David Kaplan, PhD, first proposed the idea of starting an interdisciplinary environmental studies major at Kent State. Now it鈥檚 one of the fastest-growing majors at the university, with a group of enthusiastic and motivated students and alumni prepared to address the environmental issues facing our world. The following observations are from three environmental studies events this year.
August 18, 2023
ENVS Opening Meeting
Room 302, McGilvrey Hall
3 p.m.
Matthew Arkwright, a junior in the Environmental Studies Program (ENVS), is looking for his nametag. It鈥檚 among a couple hundred labels spread out on a table outside Room 302, McGilvrey Hall. He鈥檚 showed up to attend the program鈥檚 opening meeting for all environmental studies majors and minors during this first week of classes in the 2023 Fall Semester.
鈥淚 like to stay updated on the program,鈥 Arkwright says, noting that he鈥檚 come to the opening meeting for the past two years (although his first year, everybody had to wear masks due to Covid). 鈥淓very single time, there are new minors being introduced, new classes you can substitute for others, new activities.鈥
The large number of nametags on the table reflects the steady growth of the environmental studies major at 黑料网. Located in the Department of Geography at the College of Arts and Sciences, it officially began with 30 students in August 2017 and has grown to 265 students (230 majors and 35 minors) in August 2023.
鈥淥ver time it鈥檚 just been progressing, and more and more people have been getting into it,鈥 Arkwright says. 鈥淎nd the more people get into it, the more activities there are, so that鈥檚 perfect.鈥
A native of Lake Milton, Ohio, Arkwright says that when he graduated high school, 鈥淚 was kind of confused as to where to go and what to study. I made a list and checked off everything I liked doing. And I realized that some of my favorite things were just to be in nature and hike. And I was always interested in science and the political aspect of trying to solve problems.
鈥淭hen I found this major,鈥 he says. 鈥淲hen I first started, the program was still relatively new, and I immediately fell in love with it. All the teachers have been so nice, and you get one-on-one time with them when you need it. The classes are more like having fun, doing labs and just enjoying yourself overall.鈥
鈥淚 want to do something that actually makes a change in the environment.鈥
鈥擬atthew Arkwright, junior environmental studies major
Arkwright says that after graduation, he would like to get into a government program that makes policies to help address environmental issues. 鈥淚 want to do something that actually makes a change in the environment,鈥 he says. 鈥淧olicies help make that possible. And, as more technology is invented, you need more people to understand the environment and how it works.鈥
As Arkwright and other students in the program head into the lecture hall, they pause to scan the room鈥檚 tiered seating, then head up or down to reach an open spot.
David H. Kaplan, PhD, director of the Environmental Studies Program, stands at the front of the room, looking at the rows of students with a broad smile on his face.
A professor in the geography department since 1995, he was honored with a Distinguished Teaching Award by the Kent State Alumni Association in 2018. Kaplan is well-known nationally and internationally for his work in political and urban geography. He recently was named a fellow of the American Association of Geographers in recognition for his significant contributions to advancing geography, which include serving as a past president of the association. He is also editor-in-chief of the and editor of .
Kaplan says he brought the idea of an environmental studies major to Kent State after taking a summer term off in 2014 to teach some classes at the University of Oregon. There, he recalls, he noticed that all his students were majoring in environmental studies鈥攁nd they were all great students. He learned how the program had started and how successful it had been in attracting students. And not just in Oregon鈥攅nvironmental studies now is among the most popular majors across the country.
鈥淪ince I鈥檇 often been in positions like undergraduate coordinator in the geography department, I was always worried about enrollment,鈥 Kaplan says. 鈥淏ecause geography is what we call a 鈥榙iscovery major.鈥 In the United States, at least, you don鈥檛 have many people who come in [as first-year students] wanting to be geography majors. I thought anything we could do to improve our number of majors would be a good thing.
鈥淲hen I came back to Kent, I talked with Mandy Munro-Stasiuk, PhD, the chair of the geography department at the time [now dean of the College of Arts and Sciences] and asked, 鈥榃hy don鈥檛 we think about doing an environmental studies major at Kent State?,鈥欌 Kaplan says. 鈥淚 thought it would be a good interdisciplinary major. So, we reached out to other science and social science departments to form a committee and work out a curriculum. It took us about three years to get the whole thing going.鈥
Kaplan says one of his colleagues, Chris Post, PhD, a geography professor at Kent State Stark, was interested in creating an environmental studies program there, too. 鈥淗e was excited to partner with us, so we got Stark involved,鈥 adds Kaplan. 鈥淭he application that we sent over to the Board of Regents was for a two-campus program from the beginning.鈥
Warm welcome
This day, as the program鈥檚 seventh year begins, Kaplan addresses his current cohort of students.
鈥淲elcome to environmental studies,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 hope you found the room okay; I hope you found the building okay. To all the first-year students out there, welcome to Kent State.鈥
Kaplan gives an overview of the program, including information about the curriculum, electives, advising, education abroad, internships, activities, clubs and other opportunities.
鈥淚 try to make this as easy a program as I can,鈥 he tells the students. 鈥淣ot easy in terms of the courses, but easy in terms of being able to do what you want to do and also being able to understand how to graduate when you want to graduate.鈥
鈥淚 try to make this as easy a program as I can. Not easy in terms of the courses, but easy in terms of being able to do what you want to do.鈥
鈥擠avid Kaplan, PhD, director, Environmental Studies Program
According to Kaplan, one thing that makes the environmental studies major special is its interdisciplinary nature, which includes both natural and human aspects related to the environment. It鈥檚 a social science degree that looks at how humans influence and are influenced by the environment. (In this way, it differs from environmental science, which focuses mostly on the technical aspects of various environmental issues.)
鈥淪o, [in this program] you鈥檒l understand how the environment works from a natural science and also a social science point of view,鈥 he says. 鈥淏y social science, I mean you鈥檒l understand issues of policy, issues of communication, issues of education鈥攁nd be able to impart some of this environmental knowledge to the larger public. That is really what a lot of students who major in environmental studies are most interested in doing, although there are many other things you can do as well.鈥
Another plus, as Kaplan sees it, is the program鈥檚 flexibility, which includes a long list of classes that can fulfill the required social science electives鈥攕uch as courses in architecture, economics, English, fashion design and merchandising, geography, peace and conflict studies, philosophy, paralegal studies, political science, recreation, park and tourism management, and sociology.
Kaplan also mentions opportunities to pursue a double major or add a minor. He assures the students that, with a few exceptions, all the classes offered in the program allow them to waive prerequisites. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the essence of the program and that鈥檚 what [the other departments] agree to do,鈥 he says. 鈥淵ou鈥檒l have to contact the department or instructor and say you鈥檙e an environmental studies student and they will let you in.鈥 If a problem arises, he says, 鈥済et me involved right away. Here鈥檚 my email. I鈥檒l do everything possible to make it work for you.鈥
Speaking of emails, Kaplan tells the students that besides the program website, the best way to get information about the program is to watch for his emails and keep them in a special folder to refer to later. 鈥淚 will never send you junk emails,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 will send you stuff related to internship opportunities, curriculum substitutions, and things that will be useful for you as environmental studies students. When the new schedule comes out, I send you a spreadsheet that shows you when classes related to environmental studies are being offered the next semester.
鈥淎nd if you have any questions at all about anything, email me right away,鈥 he adds. 鈥淚鈥檒l respond very quickly鈥攑robably in about 10 minutes!鈥 Students in their second, third or fourth year laugh and nod their heads in agreement.
Guest speakers
Kaplan introduces the guests he鈥檚 invited to the meeting, and they talk about the services they offer to help students succeed.
Bryan Kline, a career advisor in the Career Exploration and Development office at Kent State, encourages students to take advantage of the help his office provides. 鈥淎s Dr. Kaplan says, this is a very flexible major,鈥 Kline says. 鈥淚f you have questions about minors, majors, internships, careers, I specialize in environmental areas and work. So come and talk to me. There are flyers on that table with a QR code on the back that helps you navigate to Handshake, where you can schedule appointments with our staff for career advising, and a list of our services.
鈥淲hen it comes to internships, you need things like resum茅s and cover letters,鈥 he adds. 鈥淚鈥檒l help you hone your skills in those areas. So don鈥檛 wait until you鈥檙e a senior to work on your resum茅. Talk to me earlier about volunteer and study abroad opportunities you could do to add to your resum茅鈥攕o in the 10 seconds an employer looks at it, they鈥檒l choose yours out of a pile of 50.鈥
鈥淭alk to me earlier about volunteer and study abroad opportunities you could do to add to your resum茅鈥攕o in the 10 seconds an employer looks at it, they鈥檒l choose yours out of a pile of 50.鈥
鈥擝ryan Kline, career advisor, Career Exploration and Development
He also tells the students to take advantage of career fairs for networking and finding other internship opportunities, such as the Fall Internship, Co-op and Job Fair being held Sept. 20, in the Kent Student Center. (It was hosted online during the pandemic; this year it鈥檚 in-person.) 鈥淚t鈥檚 the largest fair we do every fall,鈥 he says. 鈥淭here are going to be over 70 employers there, so come and network.鈥
Kaplan notes that Kline will be available in Room 417 of McGilvrey Hall every Tuesday from 12鈥2 p.m., making it easy for students to drop by and ask him questions. He says the room is being repurposed as a place for students to hang out, study or have group meetings. It also will be a venue for special talks and forums, many hosted by the Future Environmental Professionals Club.
Amanda Paulus-Woodyard, senior director of Community Engaged Learning, in the Center for Undergraduate Excellence at Kent State鈥攁nd a 2023 recipient of the President鈥檚 Award of Distinction for advancing student success and community engagement鈥攖alks about a number of opportunities available to students. 鈥淥ur office is about getting you out of the classroom and into real-world experiences to utilize the skills and the knowledge that your professors are imparting to you,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e have a variety of different programs and offerings that you can take advantage of, so you have more things to put on your resum茅 and concrete examples you can talk about when interviewing for a future position.鈥
鈥淥ur office is about getting you out of the classroom and into real-world experiences to utilize the skills and the knowledge that your professors are imparting to you.鈥
鈥擜manda Paulus-Woodyard, senior director of Community Engaged Learning
She says those offerings include volunteer service opportunities at community partner organizations throughout the region, like the Cuyahoga Valley National Park and local Metro Parks, to help with things like cleaning up the Cuyahoga River or working at community gardens. And there are volunteer opportunities with Flashes Fighting Hunger, an on-campus food pantry that recovers food from local grocery stores (mostly Trader Joe鈥檚) and makes it available to all members of the greater Kent State community.
鈥淲e also offer the Service Leaders and Community Partner Advocates Program, where we work with you one-on-one to hear what additional skills and knowledge you鈥檙e looking to gain,鈥 Paulus-Woodyard says. 鈥淭hen we鈥檒l match you with a community partner organization, and you鈥檒l work with that partner for a year and get paid through 黑料网. So, it鈥檚 like a paid internship, but it鈥檚 not a lot of time commitment鈥攖ypically about eight to 10 hours a week.鈥
She notes that they also provide alternative break trips, which are short-term, cost-effective experiences that take place over fall, winter and spring breaks. They enable students to travel and focus on a certain social issue鈥攕uch as a trip that goes to Lake Mead, Nevada, that focuses on water conservation.
Student testimonials
During the opening meeting, Kaplan calls on some of the students to briefly talk about opportunities they鈥檝e had or can offer other students.
Jenna McCrudden, a senior environmental studies major and student athlete in field hockey, talks about recently attending a five-week summer session in Florence, where she earned seven credits toward her major with tuition paid for from an athletic scholarship. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a long list of scholarships that you can apply for, and for some of them you just have to write a two-page essay,鈥 McCrudden says. 鈥淢any of them go unused because people don鈥檛 apply. The only thing I ended up paying for was my flight. If you鈥檙e a freshman or sophomore, go now. Don鈥檛 wait until you鈥檙e a senior!鈥
鈥淢any [scholarships] go unused because people don鈥檛 apply. The only thing I ended up paying for was my flight. Don鈥檛 wait until you鈥檙e a senior!鈥
鈥擩enna McCrudden, senior environmental studies major, on taking advantage of education abroad opportunities
Joey Higgins, a sophomore environmental studies major and the current president of the student-led Future Environmental Professionals Club, invites interested students to write their name and email on the signup sheet and tells them when and where the monthly club meets. 鈥淲e mostly meet to talk about different career opportunities within the environmental studies major,鈥 Higgins says. 鈥淲e partner with other clubs, especially Students for Environmental Change, to do a lot of after-school activities either on or off campus.鈥 Past activities include participating in campus and local area cleanups, nature hikes and service projects, such as educating youth in Northeast Ohio about environmentalism.
Kathryn Burns, a senior environmental studies major, sustainability intern and former editor of the Environmental Studies Newsletter (which is written for and by environmental studies students), introduces the newsletter鈥檚 two new co-editors-in-chief: Miles Powell, a senior majoring in environmental studies with minors in political science, geography and GIS (Geographic Information System), and Andrew Shenal, a sophomore majoring in environmental studies.
鈥淚 was the last editor, so we鈥檙e planning some exciting things for this year,鈥 Burns says. 鈥淚n the past, the newsletter has published internship spotlights, alumni interviews and a lot of fun articles. This year we鈥檙e looking to [add] students, art, other news. If you鈥檙e interested in looking at the newsletters, they鈥檙e now on the environmental studies program website.鈥
鈥淭hey鈥檙e really fantastic,鈥 adds Kaplan, the newsletter鈥檚 faculty advisor. 鈥淲e have a lot of different content you鈥檙e invited to write about, such as interviewing someone in a job, or a professor about a course. But we鈥檙e also interested in people talking about their interests, a trip they took or some issue they鈥檙e concerned about.鈥
As the meeting wraps up, Kaplan encourages the group to attend a picnic the program is hosting the following month as another chance to get together. Then he invites the students to head upstairs and gather in Room 417 to talk with one another and see what鈥檚 been going on.
鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to introduce more of these social events, because I think it鈥檚 so helpful to build connection,鈥 Kaplan says. 鈥淲e realized with the pandemic just how much was lost when we didn鈥檛 have that opportunity.鈥
April 13, 2023
ESDRI Poster Session
黑料网 Hotel and Conference Center
4 p.m.
Kyot膿 Youst, a senior in the environmental studies鈥 Integrative Senior Project class, who uses they, she pronouns, stands in front of their research poster and engages with onlookers in the crowded lobby of the 黑料网 Hotel and Conference Center.
A double major in environmental studies and psychology, Youst is among several environmental studies majors taking part in a poster session at the symposium on 鈥淓nvironmental Justice, Ecology & Race,鈥 sponsored by Kent State鈥檚 Environmental Science and Design Research Institute (ESDRI) and Anti-Racism and Equity Institute.
Attendees at the two-day symposium are mostly from Ohio and include nature conservancies, activist groups, community members, faculty, staff, undergraduate and graduate students and some non-Kent State graduate students.
The Integrative Senior Project class is the capstone course for the environmental studies major. Students in the course learn about methods of investigation and presentation in the area of environmental studies. The course culminates in a major research project developed and written by each student.
鈥淚 think the great thing about this particular class is that, first of all, students are doing their own individual research,鈥 says David Kaplan, PhD, director of the Environmental Studies Program, as he observes the poster session. 鈥淎nd then this [symposium] is an opportunity for them to share that research with this larger community.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 not their final project but it鈥檚 close enough,鈥 Kaplan adds. 鈥淕iven the timing of the symposium, I feel they were ready to show the kind of work they are doing.鈥
Youst鈥檚 research project looks at local community gardening initiatives and why and how Kent residents participate in them. Numerous shared growing spaces exist throughout Kent, Youst notes, with each one unique in organization, operation and success. Through observation and interviews with garden organizers and participants, Youst has found that despite many potential benefits, community gardens face challenges regarding organization and consistent engagement.
Their poster, which highlights the benefits of community gardens and informs the local community of available opportunities, represents 鈥渃ountless hours of talking to people, doing work in the gardens, reading, trying to sort all my thoughts, and then finally trying to sum this up somehow,鈥 Youst says. 鈥淎nd here it is. I鈥檓 happy with how it turned out, but there鈥檚 still so much more. [For the final project] I鈥檒l be writing an approximately 25-page paper summarizing everything I did and how I got here.鈥
As a student in the Honors College, Youst also will be doing an honors project that will summarize their experience at Kent State. 鈥淚鈥檒l be using eight to 10 artifacts of my work and then writing around them and creating a narrative of everything I鈥檝e done,鈥 Youst says. 鈥淭his poster is certainly going to be one of them. I鈥檓 really excited to kind of paint a picture of where I started, how I meandered around all these different departments, and how I ended up very close to where I started鈥攂ut with a whole different perspective.鈥
鈥淢y educational journey has equipped me with an expansive skillset to cultivate the collective healing, nourishment and well-being that inspires everything I do.鈥
鈥 Kyot膿 Youst, BA 鈥23
To describe that meandering journey, Youst says, 鈥淚 started out in outdoor recreation management, then I went to early childhood education, then I went to psychology, then I ended up in environmental studies. I had to do some navigating to figure out how to do these things that are really important to my heart, and in a way that I actually feel like I get to make an impact. A lot of it is at that grassroots level of just meeting people in the flesh in the real world, establishing those connections, and connecting the right people with each other.鈥
For Youst, those connections (many made through Kent State鈥檚 Community Engaged Learning program) have included work as a community partner advocate at Walls Elementary School in Kent, with the . At the school, Youst led a reduced waste program, collecting food scraps from the school cafeteria and turning them into compost for the school鈥檚 community garden. They also worked as a community partner advocate at , a coalition of 30 different community gardens across Akron, and volunteered at the in Kent鈥檚 South End neighborhood.
鈥淣ow, I am exploring potential employment opportunities to dive into following my graduation in December,鈥 Youst says. 鈥淚 eagerly anticipate every forthcoming opportunity to reconnect people with Mother Earth. My educational journey has equipped me with an expansive skillset to cultivate the collective healing, nourishment and well-being that inspires everything I do. I am ever grateful for each and all of those who have helped me become who I am today.鈥
Four days later, on April 17, Youst again presented their poster at Kent State鈥檚 annual Undergraduate Symposium on Research, Scholarship and Creative Endeavors, held in the Kent Student Center. Youst and mentor David Kaplan won second place in the category of social science/education/public health.
Update: In November, Youst was hired as a seasonal outreach naturalist with the Summit Metroparks. 鈥淚鈥檒l help facilitate a children's nature club at the Summit Lake Nature Center, along with other programming throughout the parks system,鈥 Youst says. 鈥淭he nature center also shares an attached community garden with Let鈥檚 Grow Akron, where we can engage with the community鈥檚 children through a variety of activities. I鈥檝e already been helping there this semester through my connection to Let鈥檚 Grow Akron, and it is a wonderfully special space. I am so excited to take on a more substantial role with such a great local initiative!鈥
March 16, 2023
Career Pathways in Environmental Studies class
Room 234, McGilvrey Hall
2 p.m.
鈥淭oday we鈥檙e going to have a panel of people who work in parks,鈥 announces David Kaplan, PhD, to the environmental studies majors who have gathered in Room 234, McGilvrey Hall, for a Career Pathways in Environmental Studies class.
The one-credit, pass-fail class (only offered in the spring) is a new addition to the major鈥檚 requirements, which were revised for the first time last year. Kaplan says he added the professional development class to get students thinking about what they want to do after college and preparing for next steps鈥攚hich could include talking with career advisors, polishing a resum茅 and cover letters, opening a LinkedIn account and perhaps applying for graduate school.
Kaplan is also inviting employers and graduates of the program, working in some aspect of environmental studies, to take part in panels related to their particular area and to answer questions from students in the class.
Today鈥檚 panel includes Pam Machuga, a park ranger at the who works in community engagement and building relationships with underserved populations; Matthew 鈥淲oody鈥 Woodyard, BA 鈥21, an interpretive naturalist at , located near a marginalized urban community; and Bob Lange, natural areas steward at , whose job involves controlling invasive plants, documenting rare plant species and monitoring stream quality.
Machuga and Lange have hired environmental studies students as interns. Woodyard, who was a non-traditional student with children (and is married to Amanda Paulus-Woodyard, senior director of Community Engaged Learning), interned with Machuga while he was a student at Kent State.
As the panel members talk about how they got their current jobs and what they do, the students in the class ask questions.
One student wants to know what exactly is meant by 鈥渋nterpretation.鈥
鈥淧eople have different definitions for it,鈥 Machuga says, 鈥渂ut mine would be education with inspiration. How can we facilitate that connection to the parks so that the next generation has access to and loves their parks as much as we do? National parks are voted in by Congress and could be taken away just as easily. Interpreters help people find relevance in their parks so that they care enough to help preserve them for the next generation.鈥
鈥淚nterpreters help people find relevance in their parks so that they care enough to help preserve them for the next generation.鈥
鈥擯am Machuga, park ranger, Cuyahoga Valley National Park
鈥淲hen I鈥檓 doing an interpretive program, I鈥檓 trying to help folks foster their own connection to the resource,鈥 Woodyard adds. 鈥淭hat involves meeting people where they are, reading the audience, asking questions to find out what they know, fostering curiosity, appreciation, mindfulness and just really connecting to nature.鈥
Another student wants to know the importance of getting a Certified Interpretive Guide certificate when applying for naturalist positions.
鈥淚t鈥檚 great training,鈥 Woodyard says. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e learning skills you might not be taught in the classroom: how to build a concise, consecutive program to present to the public, how to figure out your target audience. And I think it does bolster your resum茅. My advice is if you can get in somewhere that wants you to get the , push for it and see if they can fund it for you. Because it鈥檚 not a cheap course.鈥
When it comes to finding a job, all the panelists share advice.
鈥淣etworking is huge in this field,鈥 Woodyard says. 鈥淚t is a challenging field to get into. So, the more people you know, the more you鈥檙e putting your work out there, the better chances you have.鈥
鈥淚t is a challenging field to get into. So, the more people you know, the more you鈥檙e putting your work out there, the better chances you have.鈥
鈥擬atthew 鈥淲oody鈥 Woodyard, BA 鈥21
Lange agrees. 鈥淜eep those connections strong and don鈥檛 get discouraged,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hings change. I once lost out on a park biologist position, but I kept in touch and in a couple years the person who got the position was gone.鈥
鈥淓very summer, if you鈥檙e able, do an internship, get a job or volunteer,鈥 Machuga says. 鈥淎nd put everything you鈥檝e done on your resum茅. When I look at resum茅s, it鈥檚 the experience that jumps out at me. If you鈥檙e a student or recent graduate and you want to work for the National Park Service, you can apply for [which offer current students and recent graduates paid internships and streamlined hiring programs to explore federal career opportunities].鈥
鈥淚 have a couple kids at home, so I had to stay local,鈥 Woodyard adds. 鈥淏ut while you鈥檙e young, if an opportunity to move and get a job is available, take it. Take that $12 per hour job where housing is paid for. You might struggle at the time, but it鈥檚 going to be worth it for the experience.鈥
The last student to ask a question wants to know what park staff do in the winter.
鈥淧ut our coat and gloves on,鈥 Woodyard says. 鈥淲e program through the winter. Maybe not as much, but we definitely get out there鈥攚hether it鈥檚 snowshoeing or winter campfires or a hike in the snow.鈥
Career Possibilities in Environmental Studies
Possible careers with an environmental studies major include:
Environmental consultant
Environmental educator
Public relations specialist
Environmental journalist
Fundraiser for environmental causes
Environmental attorney
Sustainability specialist
Environmental policy analyst
Environment/conservation planner
Environmental specialist
Natural resources manager
Park ranger
View a video presentation of David Kaplan, PhD, introducing the environmental studies major below: