The Environmental Studies (ENSTU) major at CSUMB provides students with a broad foundation in environmental science, social science, economics, social and environmental justice, policy, humanities, and communication, equipping them to promote sustainability in an increasingly complex and interdependent world through:

  • Emphasizing community-engaged and service-learning curricula and internships.
  • Developing intentional community partnerships that promote social and environmental justice.
  • Promoting environmental stewardship through programs and courses.
  • Providing positive leadership for advocacy, policy making, and promotion of environmental literacy.
  • Offering community-based capstone projects that integrate historical and cultural contexts of social justice with applied environmental problem-solving.
  • Exploring problems at local scales while also considering global implications.
  • Promoting career pathways in education, communication, environmental justice, planning, law, health, and sustainability.

Graduates gain entry-level employment in government, non-profit organizations, and the business and entrepreneurial sectors.

More interested in scientifically and technologically assessing plants, animals, and the ecological health of our watersheds? Check out the Environmental Science, Technology, and Policy degree.

Core Features of Our Program

Students develop community outreach and engagement skills in a variety of community-based settings, including service learning, community-based restoration projects, community-engaged research, capstones, and internships. Students engage in community issues that help them view problems through a social justice and equity lens, and that seek applied and locally contextual solutions to environmental challenges.

Students develop a variety of tools for science communication and interpretation. Students learn to facilitate discussions with diverse stakeholder groups, communicate with city councils and decision makers, and deliver professional presentations. They also develop writing skills drawn from multiple disciplines within environmental studies, including science, policy, and community perspectives. Environmental Studies students also have the opportunity to become Certified Interpretation Guides through the National Association for Interpretation.

Students are prepared to work in a range of disciplines but with the shared goal of seeking to understand, communicate about, and/or solve complex problems. This requires a diverse set of tools found in applied or action research, which seeks to understand and solve a practical problem. Students engage in visual, behavioral, and social research that seeks to understand people's beliefs about and impacts on the environment. Students learn to frame problems, investigate solutions, engage stakeholders, and visualize complex ideas along the path to applied problem solving.

Students learn to use geographic information systems to combine social, physical, and biological data to generate maps and models, particularly towards the application of sustainability in the built environment.