Begun in 2006, LU@Yellowstone National Park has served as an unforgettable part of hundreds of students’ Longwood education. A transformative journey through Wyoming and Montana in the country’s most famous national park opens students’ eyes to the myriad of stewardship-related questions facing our society today that cannot be solved without bringing together different perspectives, from various academic disciplines to field practitioners, community members, and business leaders. As they gaze out at majestic mountains and lakes, students ponder what our responsibility as a country is to protect our precious natural resources while recognizing their value in driving commerce for thousands of communities near the park.
In this course, students will develop knowledge of gene structures and the expression of genetic information as heritable traits. To build context for how society has responded to human genetic knowledge, students will investigate the misapplication of genetics through historic eugenic programs, discuss the personal and societal impact of genetic disorders, and investigate a future where gene augmentation for therapeutic and artistic goals is possible. We will consider the technological challenges, ethical conundrums, and personal dilemma that are associated with the risks and benefits of CRISPR-based gene therapy. Throughout, we will probe how the perception and function of our genetics defines us as a human, regardless of ability or disability.
The San Francisco Bay Area of California is the ideal location for an exploration of human genetics. In cities surrounding the bay, research institutions with world-leading human genetics and bioethics programs are dissecting the human genome and inventing medical tools for diagnostic and therapeutic interventions. Students will interact with stakeholders from a variety of different disciplines to develop an inquiry-based perspective of the historical, social, and ethical landscape of human genetics, and the medical industry that has spawned around it.
In this course, students will contemplate the civic question, “who gets a voice,” especially as it relates to the development of rights for marginalized communities. Freedom of speech can sometimes be challenged by lived experiences, oppressive and divisive societal institutions, and intersectionality. Therefore, development of rights for marginalized and oppressed communities (e.g., LGBTQ+, BIPOC) is at the forefront of this question. Diversity, equity, inclusion, and belonging (DEIB) work in college campuses, communities, organizations, and corporate marketing work for and against marginalized communities as a whole to change and/or reinforce politics, laws, and rights for those communities. In this way, having a voice and asking “who gets a voice” becomes one of the pivotal civic elements in addressing these issues.
This is amplified with mediated channels (e.g., social media, news) and can impact a person’s perspective on specific topics, especially considering algorithms help keep people in echo chambers where they do not experience multiple perspectives. Allen Ginsberg once said, “Whoever controls the media, controls the images, controls the message.” This course is designed to have students examine that message and how place and media impact perspectives while simultaneously exploring who should get a voice (and when, how, why, and what) for a particular marginalized and oppressed community. As such, this course examines the LGBTQ+ (queer) community to help students gain a focused perspective. Even within the queer community, there are multiple perspectives and voices to hear, and we will explore those.
Charleston, South Carolina, and the surrounding Lowcountry provide the backdrop to explore these issues and ask how citizens build sustainable communities. Who decides what is sustainable? What does sustainability look like to different people in different communities? Students will wrestle with competing notions of sustainability and consider what this may mean for other communities. For instance, what is viewed as sustainable for middle-upper class citizens in the Daniel Island or North Charleston areas may be much different from how people of the Gullah/Geechee Nation in Johns Island perceive sustainability. How do we balance our conflicting interests? Charleston, well-known for its historic neighborhoods and architecture, finds its desire for historic preservation at odds with increasingly frequent flooding and rising seas, requiring preservationists to either accept damage or redesign. Who has the power, formal or informal, to influence decision-making on these issues?
Sustainability is a multi-faceted and complex pursuit. Students will explore sustainability through lenses of ecological and environmental harms and benefits, equity and justice issues, and political and public administration processes. Participants will engage with city officials to discuss the current adaptation plans (i.e., ongoing sea wall construction, beach nourishment, stormwater management, tree canopy, green infrastructure, etc.), members of community groups, representatives of the Gullah/Geechee Nation, and non-profit organizations, like the Coastal Conservation League. In doing so, students are exposed to various perspectives on the issues facing Charleston and other coastal communities. They can identify ways citizens can work together to chart a path forward amid literal and figurative storms to achieve urban resiliency.
There is perhaps no more hotly contested issue in the United States today than immigration—who crosses our borders, and why do they make the journey to a foreign country to settle? How do they get here, and what challenges do they face once on American soil?
Students studying in Arizona and Richmond experience will meet firsthand immigrant families, employers, and border security officers. Students will explore the extraordinarily complex issue of immigration alongside a team of scholars as they journey from the familiar—Richmond, Va.—to the unfamiliar—Tucson, Ariz.
Students studying in the Longwood in Alaska course explore firsthand the social and cultural debates over land rights through multiple viewpoints and actively evaluate data related to these debates. Students will consider how citizens can serve as best stewards of our nation’s natural resources – including oil and natural gas, minerals and gemstones, forestry and fish, and even tourist destinations.
Building on a slate of programs and research projects already in place at Longwood’s Hull Springs Farm in Westmoreland County, the Chesapeake Bay experience offers students a unique perspective into the complex issues surrounding North America’s largest estuary system.
At once a source of income for oystermen and fishermen, a rich historical landscape, and a polluted natural resource in need of cleanup, the Bay is the source of ongoing debate from a number of disciplines, including science, economics, public policy, and sociology. Students will use the Bay issues investigated as models for understanding how to critically evaluate and formulate solutions to contentious public issues in their local communities.
Students in this course will travel across the Southwest United States, using photography and writing as means of studying the Colorado River, a critically important source of drinking water, hydroelectric power, agricultural irrigation, recreation and economic development to more than 35 million people in the region and beyond.
Spanning 12 days and more than 1,600 miles across Colorado, Utah, Arizona and California, the course will give students the opportunity to meet with multiple stakeholders throughout the upper and lower Colorado River basin to consider the challenges of climate change, population growth and expanded economic development while addressing the questions: Where does the water go? What does it earn and cost? And how can the system be sustained? At the conclusion of this course, students will be better-equipped to address how we, as citizens, work to address complex civic issues.
Puerto Rico, a territory of the USA, is neither a nation nor a state. Puerto Ricans are citizens of the United States—they pay taxes, participate in Medicare, and are subject to federal law. Yet, they have no voting representation in Congress and do not vote in presidential elections.
For this reason, many cite Puerto Rico as an example of “taxation without representation.” Plagued by high debt levels, massive unemployment, and the devastation from Hurricane Maria, Puerto Rico is facing profound economic woes. This begs the question of what is the USA’s responsibility to its territories, and should Puerto Rico, a place that is culturally very different from the mainland, be considered for statehood? Students will travel to Puerto Rico to experience life on the island, interact with locals in meaningful ways, and immerse in the culture so that they may form their own opinions about the best path for this US territory.
The Longwood University Brock Experience in Boston engages students in an exploration of the role the arts play in society and culture in an academic program based in Boston, Massachusetts.
Students in this program will interact with stakeholders in both the public and private sectors in an effort to understand how the arts and humanities improve communities, and how they can enhance individuals’ understanding of their own roles as active participants in citizenship, and, indeed, in the greater concerns of our shared humanity.