Geosciences Major
Goals for our 100 level curriculum
- Develop scientific literacy
- Explore earth systems in the classroom, the lab, and in the field
- Understand our local landscape, sustainability, and planetary limits
- Collect, curate, and model data to create geological narratives
Goals for our 200-300 level curriculum
- Understand the drivers of Earth processes from first principles
- Experience content through inquiry based research projects, field work, analogue modeling and engagement with Earth materials and scientific data
- Apply the scientific method and use data to make interpretations about geologic processes
- Collaborate with peers in a project based setting
- Demonstrate written, oral, and visual communications skills to convey complex information to a range of audiences.
Requirements for the Geosciences Major
The geosciences major includes three components: a set of three core requirements (100-200 level), a set of five electives, three of which must be at the 300 level (one must be a Wellesley 300-level geoscience course with lab, and one may be GEOS 350, GEOS 360 or GEOS 370), and a set of four cognate STEM courses. The core requirements provide students with an introduction to the key elements of geosciences: Earth materials and processes, scale, and deep time, as well as the development of system thinking skills. The electives (200-300 level) allow students to develop an area of focus that reflects their particular interests and future goals. The cognate STEM courses provide context, depth, and additional quantitative skills. A maximum of two approved geoscience courses taken outside of Wellesley can count towards the major.
The core includes one 100 level course either GEOS 101, or GEOS 102, and two 200 level courses: GEOS 200 and GEOS 203. In addition, students are encouraged, in consultation with their advisors, to choose areas of interest that lend depth and coherence to the major and can guide both elective and cognate science choices. Areas of interest might include Earth Materials, Tectonics, Environmental Geosciences, Surface Processes, Planetary Geology, Earth and Space Education, Climate and Oceans, or some combination.
Four complementary (cognate) courses from mathematics, biological sciences, chemistry, physics, and astronomy, computer science, or STEM focused environmental studies are also required, and two must come from the same discipline. Most majors pursue research experiences as part of their curriculum.
Honors in Geosciences
The only route to honors in the major is writing a thesis and passing an oral examination. To be admitted to the thesis program, a student must have a grade point average of at least 3.5 in all work in the major field above the 100 level; the department may petition on behalf of the student if the GPA in the major is between 3.0 and 3.5. See Academic Distinctions.
Graduate Study in Geosciences
Students considering graduate school are urged to take two semesters of mathematics, two of chemistry, two of physics, and a geoscience field experience or summer research program. Students will choose an appropriate set of complementary courses with the guidance of a departmental advisor.