DEVELOPING A WATERSHED FIELD COURSE TO INSPIRE INTERDISCIPLINARY LEARNING
Students are first introduced to the problems facing Lake Champlain, New England's largest inland water body. Then, five UVM faculty members in geology, geography, civil & environmental engineering, and natural resources lead the group of academically diverse undergraduates from Mount Mansfield's headwaters down the Winooski River watershed into Lake Champlain. A residential first week cements working relationships and bonds students while allowing important informal contact between students and faculty. Working in pairs to develop field exercises. faculty actively demonstrate connections between disciplines and the benefits of cooperation. Cross-disciplinary discussions and peer-to-peer instruction enhance the learning experience for students and faculty. Field data are collected to address critical questions such as: 1) How is watershed science applicable to solving society's water-related problems? 2) What factors contribute to the ecological integrity of a stream? 3) How do channels change over time? 4) How do receiving bodies such as Lake Champlain reflect their watersheds? Student teams balanced by differing disciplines prepared 30-minute presentations, synthesizing large scale watershed issues such as the transport of sediment, water, and nutrients.
This course contributes to the growing body of field-based courses that play an important role in the early academic training of engineers, geographers, environmental scientists, and geoscientists interested in water resources. We present our work to date (www.uvm.edu/watercamp) as a model for institutions interested in interdisciplinary field-based education.