State of the Planet

News from the Columbia Climate School

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Spring 2014 Undergraduate Teaching Assistant Positions

By Jessica Sotomayor

The Undergraduate Program in Sustainable Development is currently accepting applications for Spring 2014 Teaching Assistant positions.

Please note: Applicants must be current full-time CU students enrolled in a degree granting program. Applications will only be accepted by graduate students and undergraduate juniors or seniors.

The Teaching Assistants will support the following courses:

  1. SDEV W1900 Intro to Sustainable Development
  2. PUBH W3100 Fundamentals of Global Health
  3. SDEV W3450 Spatial Analysis and Modeling for SD
  4. SDEV W3280 Workshop in Sustainable Development
  5. SDEV W3310 Ethics of Sustainable Development
  6. SDEV W3360 Disasters and Development
  7. EEEB W3005: Introduction to Statistics for Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
  8. SDEV W3390: GIS for Sustainable Development

1.      Teaching Assistant for SDEV 1900: Introduction to Sustainable Development Seminar

This course will take place on Monday and Wednesday during the spring semester from 10:10-11:25AM and will be taught by Kevin Griffin.

The course is designed to be a free flowing discussion of the principals of Sustainable Development and the scope of this emerging discipline. This course will also serve to introduce the students to the requirements of the Undergraduate Program in Sustainable Development and the content of the required courses in both the Special Concentration and the Major. The focus will be on the breadth of subject matter, the multidisciplinary nature of the scholarship and familiarity with the other key courses in the Program.

Applicants should have knowledge of sustainable development, with previous coursework in the area and be familiar with the structure of the major and the special concentration in the undergraduate program in sustainable development.

Time Commitment & Responsibilities:

A Teaching Assistant must fulfill the responsibilities as identified by the assigned supervising instructor while maintaining conduct of the highest level of professionalism and confidentiality.  The Teaching Assistant may be responsible for directing drills, recitations, discussions or laboratory sessions related to courses offered by an officer of higher rank.  They will be responsible for meeting and coordinating with the instructor regularly and performing other course-related duties as assigned, like grading written coursework.

Applicants must be current full-time CU students enrolled in a degree granting program. Applications will only be accepted by undergraduate juniors or seniors and graduate students.

To Apply:

Please post your cover letter stating your interest in the position and a resume (both in PDF format) to http://fs21.formsite.com/earthinstitute/form125/index.html.

The deadline to apply is November 3, 2013.

2.      Teaching Assistant for PUBH 3100: Fundamentals of Global Health

This course will take place on Monday & Wednesday during the spring semester from 4:10pm-5:25pm and will be taught by Alastair Ager.

Many of the greatest challenges in public health are global.  This course uses a multidisciplinary approach to discuss the major underlying determinants of poor health and the relationship between health and political, social and economic development.  Drawing upon the sciences, social sciences and humanities, students will be introduced to the evolution of modern approaches to the setting of global health priorities, the functions and roles of health systems, an overview of current global health practices, and the major institutional players in global health.

Applicants should have strong interest in public health with a social or natural science background.

Time Commitment & Responsibilities:

A Teaching Assistant must fulfill the responsibilities as identified by the assigned supervising instructor while maintaining conduct of the highest level of professionalism and confidentiality.  The Teaching Assistant may be responsible for directing drills, recitations, discussions or laboratory sessions related to courses offered by an officer of higher rank.  They will be responsible for meeting and coordinating with the instructor regularly and performing other course-related duties as assigned, like grading written coursework.

Applicants must be current full-time CU students enrolled in a degree granting program. Applications will only be accepted by undergraduate juniors or seniors and graduate students.

To Apply:

Please post your cover letter stating your interest in the position and a resume (both in PDF format) to http://fs21.formsite.com/earthinstitute/form125/index.html.

The deadline to apply is November 3, 2013.

 3.      Teaching Assistant for SDEV W3450: Spatial Analysis and Modeling for Sustainable Development

This course will take place on Tuesday & Thursday during the spring semester from 11:40AM – 12:55PM with a lab preceding the course on Thursday from 1PM – 2PM. The course will be taught by Professor Mark Becker.

This is an intermediate course in spatial modeling developed specifically for students in the undergraduate Sustainable Development program. This course will provide a foundation for understanding a variety of issues related to spatial analysis and modeling. Students will explore the concepts, tools, and techniques of GIS modeling and review and critique modeling applications used for environmental planning and policy development. The course will also offer students the opportunity to design, build and evaluate their own spatial analysis models. The course will cover both vector and raster based methods of analysis with a strong focus on raster-based modeling. We will draw examples from a wide range of applications in such areas as modeling Land Use and Land Cover for biodiversity and conservation, hydrological modeling, and site suitability modeling. The course will consist of lectures, reading assignments, lab assignments, and a final project.

Applicants should have advanced knowledge of geographic information systems software, with previous coursework in the area.

Time Commitment & Responsibilities:

A Teaching Assistant must fulfill the responsibilities as identified by the assigned supervising instructor while maintaining conduct of the highest level of professionalism and confidentiality.  The Teaching Assistant may be responsible for directing drills, recitations, discussions or laboratory sessions related to courses offered by an officer of higher rank.  They will be responsible for meeting and coordinating with the instructor regularly and performing other course-related duties as assigned, like grading written coursework.

Applicants must be current full-time CU students enrolled in a degree granting program. Applications will only be accepted by undergraduate juniors or seniors and graduate students.

To Apply:

Please post your cover letter stating your interest in the position and a resume (both in PDF format) to http://fs21.formsite.com/earthinstitute/form125/index.html.

The deadline to apply is November 3, 2013.

4.      Teaching Assistant for SDEV W3280 Workshop in Sustainable Development

This course will take place on Tuesday and Thursday from 9:55-11:45AM during the spring semester and will be taught by Professor Stuart Gaffin.

The upper level undergraduate Sustainable Development Workshop will be modeled on client based graduate-level workshops, but with more time devoted to methods of applied policy analysis and issues in Sustainable Development. The heart of the course is the group project on an issue of sustainable development with a faculty advisor providing guidance and ultimately grading student performance. Students will receive instruction on methodology, group work, communication and the context of policy analysis. Much of the reading in the course will be project-specific and identified by the student research teams.

Applicants should have strong project management skills and an interest in sustainable development.

Time Commitment & Responsibilities:

A Teaching Assistant must fulfill the responsibilities as identified by the assigned supervising instructor while maintaining conduct of the highest level of professionalism and confidentiality.  The Teaching Assistant may be responsible for directing drills, recitations, discussions or laboratory sessions related to courses offered by an officer of higher rank.  They will be responsible for meeting and coordinating with the instructor regularly and performing other course-related duties as assigned, including developing, distributing and statistically analyzing “peer review” and “self review” forms.

Applicants must be current full-time CU students enrolled in a degree granting program. Applications will only be accepted by undergraduate juniors or seniors and graduate students.

To Apply:

Please post your cover letter stating your interest in the position and a resume (both in PDF format) to http://fs21.formsite.com/earthinstitute/form125/index.html.

The deadline to apply is November 3, 2013.

5.      Teaching Assistant for SDEV W3310: Ethics of Sustainable Development

This course will take place on Tuesdays and Thursdays during the spring semester from 2:40-3:55PM and will be taught by Adela Gondek.

This is an elective course for students in the undergraduate Sustainable Development program. With the aim of continued improvement of human conditions within many diverse environments, sustainable development seeks to create, increase and perpetuate benefit and to cease, rectify and reverse harm.  Sustainable development is consequently inextricable from the fabric of ethics, woven with determinations of benefit and harm to the existence and well-being of both humans and nonhumans.  Underlying such determinations are those of self- and other-regarding motivation and behavior; and underlying these are still others, of sensitivity and rationality in decision-making, whether individual, social or public.  Sustainable development is interlaced with and contingent upon all these determinations, at once prescriptive and judgmental, which can be called the ethics of sustainable development.

This course is divided into four main sections, of which two are intended to show the ethical fallacies of unsustainable development, and two, the ethical pathways of sustainable development.  The first section focuses upon ethically problematic basic assumptions, including human (species) hegemony, happy (hedonic) materialism, and selective (data) denial.  The second focuses upon ethically problematic ensuing rationalizations, including those pertaining to damages, victims, consequences and situations of climatic, chemical, biological and ecological harm.  The third section responds to these rationalizations with ethically vital considerations of earth justice, environmental justice, culturally-based ethics, and sector-based ethics (water, food, place and climate ethics).  Finally, the fourth section responds to the initial, longstanding problematic assumptions with a newly emergent ethical paradigm, comprising biotic wholeness, environmental integrity and the deliberative zero-goal.

Time Commitment & Responsibilities:

A Teaching Assistant must fulfill the responsibilities as identified by the assigned supervising instructor while maintaining conduct of the highest level of professionalism and confidentiality.  The Teaching Assistant may be responsible for directing drills, recitations, discussions or laboratory sessions related to courses offered by an officer of higher rank.  They will be responsible for meeting and coordinating with the instructor regularly and performing other course-related duties as assigned, including developing, distributing and statistically analyzing “peer review” and “self review” forms.

Applicants must be current full-time CU students enrolled in a degree granting program. Applications will only be accepted by undergraduate juniors or seniors and graduate students.

To Apply:

Please post your cover letter stating your interest in the position and a resume (both in PDF format) to http://fs21.formsite.com/earthinstitute/form125/index.html.

The deadline to apply is November 3, 2013.

6.      Teaching Assistant for SDEV W3360: Disasters and Development

This course will take place on Monday & Wednesday during the spring semester from 5:40-6:55PM and will be taught by John Mutter and Sonali Deraniyagala.

This course offers undergraduate students, for the first time, a comprehensive course on the link between natural disaster events and human development at all levels of welfare. It explores the role that natural disasters might have and have had in modulating development prospects. Any student seriously interested in sustainable development, especially in light of climate change, must study the nature of extreme events – their causes, global distribution and likelihood of future change. This course will cover not only the nature of extreme events, including earthquakes, hurricanes, floods and droughts but also their transformation into disaster through social processes. It will ultimately help students to understand the link between such extreme events, the economic/social shock they represent and development outcomes. The course will combine careful analysis of the natural and social systems dynamics that give rise to disasters and examine through group learning case studies from the many disasters that have occurred in the first decade of the 21st century.

Applicants should have a basic knowledge of sustainable development, with previous coursework in the area.

Time Commitment & Responsibilities:

A Teaching Assistant must fulfill the responsibilities as identified by the assigned supervising instructor while maintaining conduct of the highest level of professionalism and confidentiality.  The Teaching Assistant may be responsible for directing drills, recitations, discussions or laboratory sessions related to courses offered by an officer of higher rank.  They will be responsible for meeting and coordinating with the instructor regularly and performing other course-related duties as assigned, like grading written coursework.

Applicants must be current full-time CU students enrolled in a degree granting program. Applications will only be accepted by undergraduate juniors or seniors and graduate students.

To Apply:

Please post your cover letter stating your interest in the position and a resume (both in PDF format) to http://fs21.formsite.com/earthinstitute/form125/index.html.

The deadline to apply is November 3, 2013.

7.      Teaching Assistant for EEEB W3005: Introduction to Statistics for Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

This course will take place on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 1:10-2:25 with lectures on Tuesdays and lab(s) on Thursdays. Depending on enrollment, a second lab section may be added at a different time on Thursday afternoon or evening.  The course will be taught by Matt Palmer from the Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Environmental Biology (E3B).

This course is designed to provide students with a background in the use and interpretation of statistical methods that are frequently used in environmental biology. The general format for the course will be one lecture per week that introduces the concepts supporting a particular statistical technique.  These techniques will be illustrated with examples taken from the primary literature.  Most lectures will be followed by a computer-based lab session where the technique is applied to several data sets using R, an open-source software statistical environment.  Lab sessions will simultaneously develop both statistical practice and general skills for working in R (e.g,. interfacing with other software, manipulating and presenting data). Statistical methods covered will include parametric and non-parametric analyses of univariate data and several multivariate techniques.

Time Commitment & Responsibilities:

A Teaching Assistant must fulfill the responsibilities as identified by the supervising instructor while maintaining conduct of the highest level of professionalism and confidentiality.  The Teaching Assistant may be responsible for directing recitations, discussions or laboratory sessions related to the course and for holding regular office hours.  They will be responsible for meeting and coordinating with the instructor regularly and performing other course-related duties as assigned.   Students with experience using applied statistical methods and with the R software environment are preferred.

Applicants must be current full-time CU students enrolled in a degree granting program.

To Apply:

Please post your cover letter stating your interest in the position and a resume (both in PDF format) to http://fs21.formsite.com/earthinstitute/form125/index.html.

The deadline to apply is November 3, 2013.

8.      Teaching Assistant for SDEV W3390: GIS for Sustainable Development

This course will take place on Monday and Wednesday from 2:40-3:55PM with a lab following the Wednesday course from 2:30-3:30PM during the spring semester and will be taught by Dara Mendeloff.

This course is designed to provide students with a comprehensive overview of theoretical concepts underlying GIS systems and to give students a strong set of practical skills to use GIS for stainable development research. Through a mixture of lectures, readings, focused discussions, and hands-on exercises, students will acquire an understanding of the variety and structure of spatial data and databases, gain knowledge of the principles behind raster and vector based spatial analysis, and learn basic cartographic principles for producing maps that effectively communicate a message. Student will also learn to use newly emerging web based mapping tools such as Google Earth, Google Maps and similar tools to develop online interactive maps and graphics.

Time Commitment & Responsibilities:

A Teaching Assistant must fulfill the responsibilities as identified by the assigned supervising instructor while maintaining conduct of the highest level of professionalism and confidentiality.  The Teaching Assistant may be responsible for directing drills, recitations, discussions or laboratory sessions related to courses offered by an officer of higher rank.  They will be responsible for meeting and coordinating with the instructor regularly and performing other course-related duties as assigned.

Applicants should have advanced knowledge of geographic information systems software, with previous coursework in the area.

Applicants must be current full-time CU students enrolled in a degree granting program. Applications will only be accepted by undergraduate juniors or seniors and graduate students.

To Apply:

Please post your cover letter stating your interest in the position and a resume (both in PDF format) to http://fs21.formsite.com/earthinstitute/form125/index.html.

The deadline to apply is November 3, 2013.

 

 

 

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