Environment, Sustainability, and GIS

Program Update: Coming Fall 2025
Beginning Fall 2025, Environment, Sustainability, and GIS—and our Geology program will merge to form a single, integrated program: Earth and Environmental Sciences. This new program brings together the strengths of both disciplines, offering students a more comprehensive and interdisciplinary approach to studying our planet and its systems.
Unravel some of the biggest challenges of our time and acquire the skills to meet them.
With a focus on human-environment interactions, our students combine geographical theory, knowledge, and hands-on geospatial mapping to make connections, solve problems, and design more sustainable communities. Looking to make a difference in your world from the local to the global? Your future-forward career starts here.
Degrees
B.S.
New Tracks in Earth and Environmental Sciences (EES) Beginning Fall 2025:
- Bachelor of Science in EES (Environmental Sustainability Concentration)
- Bachelor of Science in EES (Professional Geology Concentration)
- Bachelor of Science in EES (GIS Concentration)
Phasing out the following tracks:
- Bachelor of Science in Geography (General Track)
- Bachelor of Science in Geography (Environmental Sustainability Track)
- Bachelor of Science in Geography (Geographic Information Science (GIS) Track)
MINOR
Land Your Dream JobLand Your Dream Job

Land Your Dream Job
Our hands-on, applied approach offers opportunities to engage with critical topics, learn powerful conceptual frameworks, and develop concrete, employable skills like geospatial data analysis, mapping, and field research techniques. Our graduates are employed as GIS analysts/developers, environmental analysts, sustainability coordinators, urban and transportation planners, educators, supply chain analysts, and owners of environmental consulting firms.
Strong Work EthicStrong Work Ethic

Strong Work Ethic
McKown said she credits studies in environment, sustainability, and GIS for instilling in her a sense of ambition and strong work ethic. Still to this day, she recalls a moment when Professor Dr. Andy Walter told her to “shoot for whatever she wanted in life, both professionally and personally.”
- April McKown