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Human Geography and Environmental Studies BSc (Hons)

About the course

First Year

Develop your understanding of sustainable development, biodiversity, space and place, and the geological evolution of the Earth on this human geography and environmental management course. 

We will also spend time developing your research skills using geographic information systems, data analysis, surveying and map work. Our field course, a week-long residential currently held in the English Lake District, forms a central part of your first year studies. 

Second Year

You’ll visit the Swiss Alps at the start of your second year, further developing your research skills.

You will also develop your knowledge of how our environment can be understood as changing, with the topic areas of ecology and environmental quality, and people and place, forming a core part of your studies. 

Final Year

Your individual research project is the key focus of your final year studies.Complemented by core modules focused on habitat management and monitoring, urban social geography, and the management of environmental problems in the context of moving towards a greener economy. 

Why choose this course?

Our human geography and environmental studies degree is ideal for students who wish to combine core elements of human geography and environmental management. Practical application and fieldwork learning is at the core of this course, supported by our own specialist field station, dedicated laboratories, and facilities for geographical information analysis.

Entry requirements...

260 UCAS points including 2 GCE A Levels (or equivalent) Plus GCSE grade C or above in English and Mathematics.

Study routes

  • Part Time,
  • Sandwich,
  • Full Time,

Locations

  • University of Hertfordshire, Hatfield

Careers

Geography and Environmental Management graduates are highly sought after in a wide range of careers.

Our graduates have gone on to successful careers in the following sectors:

  • Local government
  • Recreational and habitat management organisations
  • Environmental consultancy
  • Teaching
  • Broader graduate recruitment schemes
  • Postgraduate study

Graduates may like to consider further study for example in the University of Hertfordshire's MSc courses in Environmental Management

Teaching methods

You will develop your capacity for independent study and interpersonal skills on this programme. There is an emphasis on structured research, well-prepared written and verbal presentations and computer literacy.

You will experience a wide variety of teaching styles on the programme including:

  • standard lectures
  • seminars
  • tutorials
  • laboratories
  • case studies
  • individual and group projects

In your final year you will normally have the opportunity to hone your independent study and interpersonal skills by undertaking a major project or dissertation

Work Placement

You have the opportunity to take a work placement or study abroad for a year before your final year. These optional placements will enhance your future career prospects. Successfully completion of your placement may also be eligible for the Licentiateship of the City and Guilds Institute.

Structure

Year 1

Core Modules

  • Sustainable Futures

    Topics that may be covered include: environmental concern and the green movement; the environmental spectrum; concepts of sustainable development; Agenda 21 and Local Agenda 21; industrial development and sustainability, sustainable development and waste, sustainable development and water; sustainable development and energy; sustainable development and agriculture; sustainable development and the developing world; and the cost of going green.

  • Graduate and Professional Skills 1 - GE

    Students will complete assignments, within their discipline of choice, that include opportunities for development of their personal transferable skills. They will reflect on their development with the assistance of a personal tutor and will produce a portfolio of evidence based on the set assignments and wider experience such as from the work place or other areas of responsibility. Skills assessed are: autonomy and taking responsibility for themselves (A); group working (GW), oral and written communication (COM), information management (IM), problem solving (PS), numeracy (NUM), self evaluation and reflective practice (SERP).

  • Ecosystems and Environmental Change

    *ecological processes and climate/vegetation patterns *structure and functioning of selected ecosystems (UK focus) e.g. woodlands , grasslands, agro-ecosystems, aquatic ecosystems *human influences on ecosystems,including examples of management *selected approaches to conservation of ecosystems and species *handling of ecological data, descriptive statistics

  • Investigative Skills and Techniques

    The course introduces the basic approaches and methods used in a range of scientific studies, including data handling/presentation and data analysis. Students will undertake a range of appropriate practical sessions enabling practical skills to be developed. Topics that may be covered include: research approaches, experimental design, hypothesis-testing, mapping, data analysis (eg. Data transformation, relationships between variables, probability and confidence limits, data analysis with non-normally distributed data); social survey techniques; techniques for assessment of environmental impacts.

  • Exploring Planet Earth

    This module provides students with an opportunity to explore the Earth s systems. The module provides an account of the history of the Earth, and then considers each of the major environmental systems in turn, focussing on the features and processes that define each system. Students will be able to develop an understanding of how the different systems interact and the importance of these interactions for shaping the surface of the Earth and its biological communities. The implication of environmental change on human activities is a central theme throughout the module.

  • Dynamic Earth

    The aims of this module are to enable students to understand the dynamic processes that produce rocks and geological structures, and be able to recognise them in the laboratory and in the field. The evolution of the Earth and the importance of plate tectonics in the formation of rocks and geological structures will be studied, together with introductory igneous, sedimentary and metamorphic petrology. The module will also consider weathering, erosion, transport and deposition of Earth surface materials and the dynamic endogenic and exogenic processes that impact on anthropogenic activities.

  • Geographies of Governance

    The module provides an introduction to the framework of society with a particular relationship between people and their environment (human space at a range of geographical scales from local to global) helping you to place Hertfordshire and the UK within broader geographical spaces and tiers of governance. Through lectures, field visits, workshops and problem based group learning students explore the interaction of people with the environment and will develop an understanding of the approaches adopted by geographers towards governing and planning human space and society. Lectures will introduce the structure of the UK planning system whilst also looking at European and Global governance and development. Students will have the opportunity to study a range of social and spatial issues and conflicts within human space

  • Mapping Human Geographies

    Students will receive an introduction to the scope of the geographical enquiry at degree level. This will necessarily include an introduction to the philosophical and historical development of geography as an academic discipline and an introduction to the key ideas and concepts. An introduction to cartographic thought and techniques, landscape assessment, observational skills and Geographical Information Systems will be provided as the module covers various spatial perspectives, both historical and contemporary within geography.

  • Introduction to Field Research

    This module includes a residential field course to a UK location. The module will cover a range of topics that may include cultural geography, biodiversity, geology, geomorphology, ecology, climate change and tourism impacts. Underpinning theory and linkage to wider research contexts are introduced in the lectures. Staff-led and student-led data collection methods are introduced and undertaken in the field. Students are then introduced to the analysis and synthesis of this field information through class and IT-lab sessions both during and after the field course.

Optional

Fees & funding

Discounts are available for International students if payment is made in full at registration

View detailed information about tuition fees

Other financial support

Find out more about other financial support available to UK and EU students

Living costs / accommodation

The University of Hertfordshire offers a great choice of student accommodation, on campus or nearby in the local area, to suit every student budget.

View detailed information about our accommodation

How to apply

2013

Start DateEnd DateLink
23/09/201323/05/2014Apply online (Full Time/Sandwich)
23/09/201323/05/2014Apply online (Part Time)

2014

Start DateEnd DateLink
23/09/201423/05/2015Apply online (Full Time/Sandwich)
23/09/201423/05/2015Apply online (Part Time)
22/09/201422/05/2015Apply online (Full Time/Sandwich)

2015

Start DateEnd DateLink
21/09/201527/05/2016Apply online (Full Time)
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Key course information

  • Institution code: H36
  • UCAS code: L7F9BSc (Hons) Human Geography with Environmental Studies,L7F8BSc (Hons) Human Geography,
  • Course code: HHGEH
  • Course length:
    • Part Time,
    • Sandwich,
    • Full Time,
School of study: School of Life and Medical Sciences
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