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COA Viewbook, 2017-2018
alamy
work.
COLLEGE OF THE ATLANTIC
VISITING COA
Visiting is a wonderful way to get to know the College
of the-Atlantic community. While you're here you can sit
in on classes, meet with students and professors, check
out campus activities, have an admission interview, and
sample our award-winning food at the Blair Dining Hall or
Sea Urchin Café.
It's best to visit on weekdays when term is in session. You
can either come for the day and take a campus tour at
10 am or 2 pm, or stay overnight. During the school year,
a guest room is available for prospective students who
would like to stay overnight in a campus residence. For
those wishing to stay on campus, please schedule your
stay at least two weeks in advance to confirm that space
is available. To schedule a tour and interview, please
contact the Admission Office. If you are unable to travel
to Maine for a visit, we are happy to connect you with a
faculty member, current student, or admission counselor
by phone or email.
Schedule your visit at coa.edu/visit.
3
Welcome & Overview
4
Mission & History
11
Academics
28
Courses
40
Faculty
48
Community
60
Mount Desert Island
62
Life After COA
66
Admission
72
Campus Map
COLLEGE OF THE ATLANTIC
2017-2018 VIEWBOOK
WHAT DO YOU SEE AS YOU LOOK
OUT ACROSS THE WATER?
For College of the Atlantic students, a view like this is commonplace and yet
never ordinary. Our campus sits on 38 acres on the coast of Maine, with views
across the rocky islands of Frenchman Bay to Schoodic Mountain in the distance.
When we look across the water we see ecosystems to study, economic enterprises
to develop, policies to pass, lesson plans to teach, food systems to sustain,
landscapes to paint, resources to steward, space to think, and beauty to inspire.
Students come to COA because they want to be part of creating a more
sustainable and humane world. They want to be inspired and challenged by a
close-knit community of faculty and peers, and they want to dig into complex
questions in the classroom and laboratory, but also in the woods and waters of
Acadia National Park, the conference halls of UN climate negotiations, and the
corn fields of rural Mexico and Guatemala. Some students come here knowing
exactly what they want to do and be; others are drawn in because our academic
program allows and encourages the exploration of multiple subjects and
interests. All COA students will study across different disciplines and learn to
approach each topic from perspectives they previously hadn't considered.
View across Frenchman Bay from the Deering Common Community Center
3
OF
THE
se
MCMLXIX
MISSION
College of the Atlantic enriches
the liberal arts tradition through a
distinctive educational philosophy-
human ecology. A human ecological
perspective integrates knowledge
from all academic disciplines and from
personal experience to investigate-and
ultimately improve--t the relationships
between human beings and our
social and natural communities. The
human ecological perspective guides
all aspects of education, research,
activism, and interactions among the
college's students, faculty, staff, and
trustees. The College of the Atlantic
community encourages, prepares,
and expects students to gain the
expertise, breadth, values, and practical
experience necessary to achieve
individual fulfillment and to help solve
problems that challenge communities
everywhere.
5
Construction of the
T omas S. Gates, Jr.
mmunity Center.
A History of College of the Atlantic
College of the Atlantic was chartered in 1969 by a small group of local community
members and educators who saw in Mount Desert Island a great year-round location for
learning. COA admitted its first class in 1972. There were only four full-time faculty
members that first year (selected from 1800 applicants), and 32 students. The educational
philosophy was clear: COA would be the first college in the US to have the relationships
between humans and the environment as its primary focus. Learning was going to be
active. Together, faculty and students explored the oceans around Mount Desert Island as
well as the woods and mountains of Acadia National Park. Together, they studied whales
in the Gulf of Maine and discussed the texts of such passionate naturalists as Henry
David Thoreau and Rene DuBois. They continued their discussions over coffee in town,
and dinner at each other's homes.
Over forty years later, the college's focus on exploration and community has not changed.
COA's 35 faculty members continually update and change courses to meet students'
interests and adapt to a changing world. Our 350 students are encouraged to explore their
passions and challenged to think in new ways.
As Nell Newman, co-founder of Newman's Own Organics, says of her COA years, "When
Pop asked me 'What do you do with a human ecology degree?' I answered him, 'As my
student advisor said, human ecologists make their own niche in the world.' To be honest,
I wasn't quite sure what that meant at the time, but it is what I feel I have been able to
do. My environmental interests go beyond organic food to an awareness of worldwide
environmental issues. The foundation for this was laid at College of the Atlantic, where I
was given the tools to continue to explore and contribute in my own way."
6
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COA Viewbook, 2017-2018
College of the Atlantic viewbook for the 2017-2018 academic year.