ACTIVITIES | PERCENTAGES |
---|---|
Extensive Reading and Class Participation | 25% |
Final Plan and Presentation to the Client | 50% |
Grading by Teammates | 25% |
Increasingly, developers, business owners, policymakers, and citizens are addressing the environmental issues associated with economic development by incorporating sustainability goals in their development efforts. They seek planning, design and business strategies that prevent pollution and other environmental risks, beautify blighted landscapes and reuse vacant, contaminated sites in a sustainable manner while attracting new uses that further neighborhood economic development goals and increase the community's capacity and resources to implement sustainable economic development.
This course explores the application of environmental and economic development planning, policy and management approaches to urban neighborhood community development. Through an applied service learning approach, the course requires students to prepare a sustainable development plan for a community-based non-profit organization. Through this client-based planning project, students will have the opportunity to test how sustainable development concepts and different economic and environmental planning approaches can be applied to advance specific community goals within the constraints of specific neighborhoods and community organizations. The project also emphasizes skills and issues involved in defining community goals, uncovering and gaining community knowledge, existing conditions analysis, formulation of planning agendas and integration of multiple components into a coherent and professional quality plan. Students are also encouraged to use the planning project and class discussions to explore how historic and existing social exclusion impact their work and to reflect on insights gained about their individual work styles and the planning challenges that they faced.
The class is organized into four phases:
Class time is largely devoted to the client projects through discussions, exercises, and presentation of work in progress. Approximately one-quarter of the class sessions will be used to introduce economic and sustainable development concepts, environmental and economic analysis tools, and policy and practice areas. Fieldwork will include a day-long site visit to both neighborhoods on Session FT. In addition to the regular lecture sessions, an additional 2 hours per week has been set aside for project work, and students are expected to take advantage of this time. Students will collaborate with the client to undertake field research and hold a session to present their existing conditions findings and get feedback on the proposed plan agenda and ideas. In the last phase of the project, each team will schedule a working session to review the draft plan with the client in late April and then present the final plan to the client and/or larger community meeting in mid-May.
Requirements for this course include:
ACTIVITIES | PERCENTAGES |
---|---|
Extensive Reading and Class Participation | 25% |
Final Plan and Presentation to the Client | 50% |
Grading by Teammates | 25% |
The final project grade includes evaluation of all work leading into the final project, including the six assignments and the mid-term findings report.
The primary deliverable to the client is the final project plan and supporting presentation materials. In addition to this final product, there will be two less formal deliverables designed to present findings, preliminary ideas and agendas, and proposed plan elements to the client and to receive feedback. These interim products include:
The six assignments provide an opportunity for students to apply the skills and methods discussed in class to their projects in Jackson Square and Fields Corner. These assignments are meant to encourage students to work together and work early.
The project teams will be created after the first week of class and will balance the self-indicated strengths of class members. The work required for the class will be highly collaborative. Though each team may develop a system that works for them, the following roles and responsibilities may be a useful allocation of team resources.