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Fall 2025
Structured internship experience and reporting as a reflective practitioner for ten weeks or 200 hours of experience.
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Fall 2025
This course provides a framework for the completion of a Distinguished Major Thesis, a treatise containing an exposition of a chosen urban and environmental planning topic. A faculty advisor guides a student through the beginning phases of the process of research and writing. Prerequisite: Acceptance into the Distinguished Major Program.
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Fall 2025
A series of one-credit short courses, whose topics vary from semester to semester.
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Fall 2025
This course will provide students with an interdisciplinary learning process related to real estate development including finance, branding, design, planning, land use, site planning permitting, adaptive reuse among others. Situated in an actual case, students will have the opportunity to work with a multi-disciplinary team on a real-world development project. Graduate course will have additional course requirement
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Fall 2025
Detailed exploration of the normative debate surrounding environmental issues. Focus on the foundations of environmental economics, questions about the value of endangered species, concerns of future generations, appropriateness of a sustainable society, notions of stewardship, and obligations toward equity. Graduate course will have additional course requirements.
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Fall 2025
Advanced work on independent research topics by individual students. Departmental approval of the topic is required.
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Fall 2025
Preparation and completion of a thesis.
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Fall 2025
A thesis is optional for the Master of Urban and Environmental Planning degree. Students should begin early to explore topics and to identify potential committee members. A guideline document is available.
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