This summer, the National Great Rivers Research and Education Center (NGRREC), 
located at the confluence of the Mississippi, Illinois, and Missouri Rivers, is 
offering a two week course in Large River Floodplain Ecology through the 
University of Illinois. The course will meet June 16-26 at NGRREC in Alton, IL. 
Students will work directly in large river floodplain ecosystems, which 
generally consist of a mosaic of land and water containing bottomland forests, 
grasslands, islands, backwaters, sloughs, side channels, and wetlands. Students 
will learn how historic management practices have impacted these river systems, 
and how current science-based approaches to management and ecological 
restoration are impacting river health and sustainability. Monitoring the 
biological and physical components of riverine habitats is a key part of this 
process, and students will become familiar with the types of quantitative 
assessments common to the field of river ecology.

*         Undergraduate students take the course as NRES 285 
(http://oce.illinois.edu/Section/30222/120145)-estimated tuition and fees for 
non-UIUC students: $918 (includes housing)

*         Graduate or non-degree seeking students with a bachelor's degree may 
take it for graduate credit as NRES 499 
(http://oce.illinois.edu/Section/37944/120145)-estimated tuition and fees for 
non-UIUC students: $988 (includes housing)

Foundations in Environmental Education (NRES 499 section XM, 3 credit hours, 
Meets online Tuesdays 6:30-8:30 pm Central Time from May 27-August 12)
As science education adapts to comply with the Next Generation Science 
Standards (NGSS - 2013) and teachers help prepare students for science, 
technology, engineering, and math careers (STEM) it is important that both 
formal and informal educators provides opportunities to further the 
understanding of human dependence on natural ecosystems, improve awareness of 
environmental problems, and promote environmental literacy. This course will 
familiarize online students with the history of environmental education, 
assumptions of environmental literacy (including concepts, skills, and 
behavior), current trends in education practices (such as place-based and 
garden-based learning), and the professional responsibilities of the 
environmental educator. Estimated tuition and fees for the course for non-UIUC 
students: $1311.

Environmental Psychology (NRES 472, 4 credit hours, Meets online Mondays 
6:30-9:00 pm Central Time from June 2-August 18 except July 21st and 28th)
Theory and research in environmental psychology. Topics include environmental 
perception, cognition, experience, values and emotion, perceived environmental 
quality, environmental hazards and risk perception, and conservation attitudes 
and behavior. Prerequisite: Introductory Psychology. Estimated tuition and fees 
for the course for non-UIUC students: $1748.

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