ECo + the CALL

The Earth Commons and the Capitol Applied Learning Labs (CALL) have teamed up to develop a slate of undergraduate courses to kickstart your career in environment & sustainability—or to simply explore your passion for positive environmental impact. With downtown D.C. as your classroom, you’ll learn about the local and global ecosystem, gain new perspectives on environmental changemaking, and network with D.C.-connected environmental organizations.

Environment & Sustainability Courses—Spring 2024

Time: TBD

Course Description: The goal of this course is to provide a broad perspective on the field of environmental law. What is environmental law? Where does it come from? How does it work? What are some of the problems with the system of laws currently in place?

Time: TBD

Course Description: This course is a 4-credit seminar focusing on historical, experiential, and imaginative engagement with the aspirational ideals associated with DC and the ways in which inequality is constructed, how practitioners respond to inequality, and how we might imagine alternative futures that hold space for a more equitable future

Ready to Apply?

Whether you’re interested in taking a one course at the CALL, or a full schedule of our unique courses, talk to your Academic Advising Dean on whether the CALL makes sense with your current course load. Start the Interest Form to declare your interest in the program for Spring 2024 and to get more information. 

Past Courses

Course Description: This course is designed as a lecture-discussion to explore topics related to agriculture and sustainability that influence global food security. This course is interdisciplinary in nature touching on environmental science, the economy, innovation and technology, policy, and justice. Defines and applies basic principles of sustainability to address urgent agricultural, environmental, and societal challenges. Students will participate in interactive discussions, investigate current global challenges, and engage in critical thinking to derive solutions to these challenges.

 

UNXD 269-90 is 2 credit Mod A course, meets select F1-3:30pm, select Sat 1-4 (Jan 20-Feb 18)

UNXD 269-91 is1 credit Mod B course (optional), meets select F1-3:30pm, select Sat 1-4 (March 31-April 22)

Course Description: How do we tell stories of climate crisis? Since long before the advent of the written word, humans have told stories, transmitting the earthly wisdom—and warnings—of our ancestors from generation to generation. But what artistic forms can hold the dizzying complexities of the climate emergency? What tales can capture the interlocked crises of extraction and extermination? What legends invite us to imagine radical futures? With a special emphasis on contemporary performance, this course offers a survey of methodologies for climate storytelling rooted in creative nonfiction, literature, and cultural criticism. While forging connections with DC-based arts and environmental workers, students will craft and present an original climate story as the culmination of a two-credit Module A. Students will also have an opportunity to publicly perform their story as part of the Kennedy Center’s upcoming RiverRun Festival for an optional third credit (Module B).

Students are strongly encouraged to register for both credits. Due to the cumulative nature of the final creative assignment,, students must enroll in Mod A in order to participate in Mod B.

 

Thursday 6:30-9:00pm
The CALL Internship Seminars offers students the chance to integrate their professional experiences with their personal, academic, and career goals. This section would place students in an internship focused around disability and activism. UNXD 250 is a required course for all CALL students. 

Wednesday 1:00pm-3:00pm or Friday 10:00am-12:00pm
The CALL Internship Seminars offers students the chance to integrate their professional experiences with their personal, academic, and career goals. UNXD 250 is a required course for all CALL students.

Course Description: This seven-week seminar course provides an introduction for how to apply principles of directed campaigning to win outcomes and goals that benefit the environment from governments and corporations. Students will hear directly from leading green campaigning and political practitioners at agencies, nonprofits and businesses and learn basic principles and how to leverage them on behalf of the environmental objectives of an NGO, movement, or business. Topics addressed will include public affairs and political change analysis, market research and the use of grassroots (and movement building) campaigns, the role of social media, celebrity and influencers, and corporate campaigning.  Students will create a campaign plan (and conduct opinion research and analysis in support of this plan) on behalf of a real or theoretical “client” (either selected by the students or assigned by the professor).

Course Description: This seven-week seminar course provides an introduction for how to apply principles of directed campaigning to win outcomes and goals that benefit the environment from governments and corporations. Students will hear directly from leading green campaigning and political practitioners at agencies, nonprofits and businesses and learn basic principles and how to leverage them on behalf of the environmental objectives of an NGO, movement, or business. Topics addressed will include public affairs and political change analysis, market research and the use of grassroots (and movement building) campaigns, the role of social media, celebrity and influencers, and corporate campaigning.  Students will create a campaign plan (and conduct opinion research and analysis in support of this plan) on behalf of a real or theoretical “client” (either selected by the students or assigned by the professor).

Learn more about the CALL

The CALL is an innovative undergraduate program situated at Georgetown University’s Capitol Campus. Georgetown University students will have the extraordinary opportunity to: immerse themselves in downtown living for a full semester, soaking in the vibrancy of Washington, D.C.; engage in meticulously curated courses that embody the ethos of experiential learning, led by esteemed Georgetown Faculty and seasoned practitioners; cultivate fresh connections with Georgetown Alumni and forge invaluable professional relationships through hands-on experiences such as internships and seminars; and seamlessly connect their career aspirations with their academic endeavors.

Explore the CALL