EMS First Year Seminar: Climate Change and Potential Societal Impacts (EM SC 100S, 3 Credits)

Course Syllabus for Fall 2017

 

Instructor: Michael E. Mann, Department of Meteorology, 514 Walker Building, mann@psu.edu

Teaching Assistant: Casey Luddy, csl5192@psu.edu 

Meeting Time/Place: T R 10:35 – 11:50 AM (9 Walker Building)

Office Hours: You are welcome to visit my office for questions during scheduled office hours (Wed, 1-2:15 PM), or by appointment. You may also email for questions (please use "mann@psu.edu"). Responses may be delayed.

Motivation:

How certain are we that human activity is altering Earth's climate? How much more warming might we expect over the next century? What will the impacts be on severe weather events such as hurricanes, tornados, floods and drought? How might climate change impact water availability in arid and semi-arid regions already stressed for water resources? What is the threat to coastal regions? How might climate change impact natural ecosystems? Are there winners and losers? This course will explore the scientific evidence underlying each of these questions, reviewing the most recent international assessments of the science.

Webpage

We will regularly draw upon the course homepage as a resource for the course:

http://www.meteo.psu.edu/~mann/Mann/courses/EMSC100SFALL17

Aside from links to the course syllabus, there will be links to the readings, slides from the lectures, and other course-related materials.

Lectures

Attendance of all lectures is expected. You are strongly encouraged to ask questions and participate constructively in class. Copies of slides from the lectures will usually be made available electronically through the course website (see above) the morning prior to the lecture. The assignments given for a particular class meeting are due before that class begins (i.e. at the beginning of that class meeting).

Textbook

The course textbook is: "Dire Predictions: Understanding Climate Change" (2nd edition) by Mann and Kump. It is available in the Penn State bookstore.

In addition, you are expected to read various other selected materials provided through the course webpage. The readings should be completed in advance of our covering the material in class. Readings for each week will typically be posted on the course website by the end of the previous week.

You are welcome (and indeed encouraged) to make use of supplementary sources of information that you may find. You should be sure, however, to assess the reliability of any supplementary sources used in assignments, with respect to the qualifications and expertise of the source, and any biases or conflicts of interest that may compromise its objectivity.

Course Requirements and Grades

Students will be expected to complete homework assignments based on the readings, in advance of our covering the material in class (assignments will be collected at the end of class). Students will take turns leading discussions over the course of the term, and will prepare and present to the class at the end of the semester a multimedia presentation on a topic to be determined (projects will be selected in consultation with the instructor mid-way through the term). Final grades are based on the following approximate formula: 33% homework, 33% in-class participation, 33% final projects.

 

Course Schedule (subject to change)

#              DATE                                                             TOPIC                                                                    

1

T Aug 22

Introduction

2

R Aug 24

Introduction (cont);

3

T Aug 29

Greenhouse Gases on the Rise

4

R Aug 31

The Greenhouse Effect

5

T Sep 5

Observations of Modern Climate Change

6

R Sep 7

Observations of Modern Climate Change  (cont) 

7

T Sep 12

A Tempest in a Greenhouse: Have Hurricanes Become More Frequent or Intense?

8

R Sep 14

Humans vs. Nature

9

T Sep 19

The Paleoclimate Perspective

10

R Sep 21

The Day After Tomorrow: A Possible Scenario?  

11

T Sep 26

The Day After Tomorrow: A Possible Scenario? (cont) 

12

R Sep 28

Climate Modeling; Can't We Explain Climate Trends by Natural Factors Alone?

13

T Oct 3

“The Power of the Story in Science” w/ EMS writer-in-residence Kimberly Del Bright

14

R Oct 5

“The Danger of the Single Story” w/ EMS writer-in-residence Kimberly Del Bright

15

T Oct 10

How Sensitive is the Climate?

16

R Oct 12

Projections of Future Climate Change:  Emissions Scenarios

17

T Oct 17

Projections of Future Climate Change: Surface Warming; Rainfall and Drought

18

R Oct 19

Projections of Future Climate Change:  Melting Ice, Rising Sea Level, Extreme Weather

19

T Oct 24

Academic Integrity and Code of Conduct Program w/ Suzanne Zeman, Office of Student Conduct

20

R Oct 26

Media (iMovie) Workshop w/  Markus Furer (note alternative meeting place: W140 Pattee)

21

T Oct 31

The science in An Inconvenient Truth

22

R Nov 2

The science in An Inconvenient Truth (cont)

23

T Nov 7

Media (iMovie) Workshop w/ Markus Furer (note alternative meeting place: W140 Pattee)

24

R Nov 9

The science in An Inconvenient Truth (cont)

25

T Nov 14

Guest Lecture, Professor Greg Jenkins “Examining the multiple dimensions of climate change in West Africa”

R Nov 16

Study/Work Smarter w/ EMS head librarian Linda Musser (note alternative meeting place: EMS Library)

T Nov 21

No Class [Thanksgiving break]

 

R Nov 23

No Class [Thanksgiving break]

26

T Nov 28

Impacts/Adaptations /Vulnerability/Solutions [student presentations]

27

R Nov 30

Impacts/Adaptations /Vulnerability/Solutions [student presentations]

28

T Dec 5

Impacts/Adaptations /Vulnerability/Solutions [student presentations]

29

R Dec 7

Impacts/Adaptations /Vulnerability/Solutions [student presentations]