2012-2013 Course Catalog

The University Of Montana

Department of Geography

Sarah J. Halvorson, Chair

Geography provides a broad-ranging perspective on humans as inhabitants and transformers of the face of the earth. The search for this understanding involves thorough study of the physical earth, its habitation by humans, and the resulting diversity of regions and places.  Geographers study the physical earth by examining the interlocking systems of the natural environment, including climate, landforms, soils, and biota.  Humans are studied by examining those diverse historical, cultural, social, economic, and political structures and processes which affect the location and spatial organization of population groups and  their activities.  Regions and places, whether described as nations, cities, ecological units, or landscapes, are studied by integrating and interpreting their physical and human relationships in an effort to better understand them and the problems that they face.

Geographers are often found working in business, industry, government, and education. Those in planning might be called upon to determine the most satisfactory location for a new school or an airport, or undertake the environmental or socioeconomic studies required for community and regional planning.  Others enter fields such as environmental law, diplomacy, intelligence, and teaching.  Graduates trained in cartography and Geographical Information Systems find professional opportunities creating digital maps and doing spatial analysis for a wide array of government entities.  No academic discipline offers a greater range of employment opportunities.

The Department of Geography maintains particular strengths in each of the following major branches within the discipline:  1) physical geography (geomorphology, palaeo-environments, climate and global change); 2) human–environment interaction (environmental rehabilitation, water policy, and environmental hazards); 3) geography and society (geography of towns and settlements, economic geography, and migration and population change); 4) regional geography (with particular strengths in the geography of North America, Africa, Asia, and Europe); 5) geographical techniques (remote sensing, cartography and GIS, transport planning and GIS-T, field methods, quantitative and qualitative method).

The Department of Geography offers the Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor of Science, Master of Arts and Master of Sciences degrees in geography.  For a B.A. in geography, an option in community and environmental planning is avaialbe.  For a B.S. in geography an option in physical geography is available.  Also offered are a minor in geography and a teaching major and minor in geography.  Several interdisciplinary minors are also available to students: a minor in mountain studies, a minor in climate change and a minor in international development studies. The bachelor degree program provides a broad liberal education, it qualifies graduates for a variety of professional jobs, and it prepares students who excel for graduate studies in geography, planning, GIS, or related fields.  Graduate programs prepare candidates for a somewhat greater range of employment, including teaching in community and junior colleges, and for  doctoral studies in geography and allied disciplines.  In addition to a general degree in geography without option, students may pursue an option within the Master of Sciences program--community and environmental planning, or cartography and GIS.  See the Graduate School website for more information concerning the M.A. and M.S. programs.

A certificate in GIS Sciences and Technologies, jointly offered by the Department of Geography (College of Arts and Sciences) and the Department of Forest Management (College of Forestry and Conservation), is also available.  This GIST certificate is a complement to an existing major or to a bachelor’s degree already obtained. For details, please see the below or the GIST website.

Special Degree Requirements

Refer to graduation requirements listed previously in the catalog. See index.

General Education Requirements for Geography Majors

Geography majors must meet the mathematical literacy requirement by taking M 115 (MATH 117) or an M or STAT course higher than 150.  Students obtaining a geography degree without an option, may meet the university-wide symbolic system requirement either by taking one year of foreign language instruction (100-level or higher) or by taking M 115 (MATH 117) and STAT 216 (MATH 241).  Students choosing the CEP option must meet the university-wide symbolic system requirement by taking M 115 (MATH 117) and STAT 216 (MATH 241). Students obtaining a geography B.S. degree without an option must meet the symbolic systems requirement by taking M 115 and  STAT 216 (Math 117 and Math 241), or just one of M 162, 181H, or STAT 451 (Math 150, 152H, or 444).  Regular calculus (Math 152) is strongly recommended. The upper-division writing expectation for the B.A. (with or without option) must be met by successfully completing an upper-division writing course from the approved list in the Academic Policies and Procedures section of this catalog (see index), or by writing a senior thesis in geography.  Those students completing the B.S. degree must select a science-based writing class for their writing course (GPHY 335 (GEOG 335), GEO 320 (GEOS 320), GEO 499 (GEOS 499), BIOO 470 (BIOL 304), BIOO 475 (BIOL 306), etc.) approved by their advisor or complete a senior thesis in geography.

Requirements for a Major in Geography

A major in geography requires a minimum of 36 (maximum of 60) credits.  All geography majors take a 26-credit core consisting of the following courses: GPHY 121S (GEOG 101S), GPHY 111N (GEOG 102N), GPHY 112 (GEOG 105), GPHY 385 (GEOG 385), GPHY 381 (GEOG 387) and GPHY 382 (GEOG 389), GPHY 141S (GEOG 103S) or other regional course, three 300- or 400-level courses, one each from the systematic emphases of physical geography, human-environment interaction, and geography and society.
Students who pursue a B.S. degree or an option in physical geography, or in community and environmental planning, also must meet the course requirements of the option (see below).

General Geography B.A.

The general geography B.A. degree (without option) is very flexible.  In addition to meeting the core requirements for all geography majors, students may take a wide range of electives in geography (minimum 10, maximum 34 elective credits).  Electives may be chosen from the fields of regional geography, geographic methods and techniques, or systematic geography  (physical geography, human-environment interaction or geography and society).

General Geography B.S.

The B.S. in Geography is designed to accommodate those students who are interested in pursuing more technical areas of study and work in the field of Geography, such as aspects of geospatial technologies, environmental planning, and physical geography. Those pursuing a geography B.S. degree (with or without an option) must complete 6-10 additional credits (a two-course sequence) of science coursework. The classes must be selected and approved by the student and advisor as appropriate to individual student goals (e.g., Biol 120 and 121).

Physical Geography Option

In addition to satisfying the general requirements for a B.S. degree in geography, a student pursuing the option in physical geography must complete additional requirements, including  ERTH 303N (GEOG 322N), GPHY 324, and GPHY 426N, though substitutions which broaden the students curriculum may be approved by their advisor. Also, students must complete an additional appropriate math course above the 150 level to complement the one used to fulfill their symbolic systems requirements (the second semester of Calculus is recommended), and the two-course sequence in science used to fulfill the B.S. requirement MUST be one of the following: (CHMY121N-123N (CHEM 151N-152N)), CHMY 141N-143N (CHEM 161N-162N), PHSX 205N-207N (PHYS 121N-122N), PHSX 215N-217N (PHYS 211N- 212N), or BIOO 105N (BIOL 120N), BIOE 172N (BIOL 121N)).

Community and Environmental Planning Option

In addition to satisfying the general requirements for a B.A. degree in geography, the student desiring to achieve an option in community and environmental planning must complete: GPHY 465 (GEOG 465), at least one of the following two courses: GPHY 468 (GEOG 468) or GPHY 486 (GEOG 486) (with corequisite laboratories GPHY 460 (GEOG 469) or  GPHY 489 (GEOG 489)), plus four of the following five courses: GPHY 323S (GEOG 315S), GPHY 335 (GEOG 335), GPHY 421 (GEOG 412S), GPHY 432 (GEOG 432), GPHY 435 (GEOG 435). (These courses can be used to satisfy the 300- or 400-level core requirement in geography and society, and human-environment interaction.)  An internship is strongly recommended.

Certificate in GIS Sciences and Technologies

The Certificate in GIS Sciences and Technologies is a complement to an existing major at The University of Montana or as a complement to a bachelor's degree obtained at another university.  The purpose of the Certificate is to ensure the knowledge, understanding, and training necessary to acquire, process, analyze, and properly display digital geographical data.

Special Requirements for the Certificate

To earn a Certificate in GIS Sciences and Technologies, students must either complete or have completed an undergraduate degree and complete a minimum of twenty semester credit hours of course work including 11 to 13 required credits and 7 to 9 elective credits as described below.  Students must achieve at least an overall grade point average of 3.0 for courses within the program in order to earn a certificate.  The certificate will be awarded upon the successful completion of all of the requirements of the certificate and the undergraduate degree.

Background Courses:

It is recommended that students complete the university symbolic systems requirements before beginning this program because these courses promote basic quantitative reasoning (M 115 (MATH 117), STAT 216 (MATH 241), FORS 201 (FOR 201), SOCI 202 (SOC 202)). 

General Requirements:

To earn the Certificate in GIS Sciences and Technologies, students must complete 11 to 13 required credits and 7 to 9 elective credits totaling a minimum of 20 credits as described below.

Required Courses (11-13 cr.):

Advanced Elective Courses (7-9 cr.):  (Although elective courses are organized by topical specialty, no specialization is necessary).  Additional and experimental courses are offered intermittently; please see faculty or website for current semester offerings.  Faculty may submit course syllabi to the GIS Certificate Committee for possible inclusion in the Certificate.

Raster GIS, Remote Sensing, and Image Analysis

Vector GIS and Networks

Data Management and Programming

GIS Applications

Note: It is a standard of The University of Montana that G designated courses can be taken only by graduate students or undergraduate students who have senior standing with an accumulative GPA of 3.0 or higher, and permission of the instructors.

No more than 4 credits of Independent Study or Internships can be used towards the Certificate.