May 21, 2025  
2025-2026 Western Washington University Catalog 
    
2025-2026 Western Washington University Catalog

Environmental Studies — Elementary, BAE

Location(s): WWU - Bellingham


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Introduction

This major satisfies the academic major requirement for teacher certification with an endorsement in elementary education and must be accompanied by the professional preparation program in elementary education. See the Early Childhood, Elementary, and Multilingual Education  section of this catalog for program admission, completion, and teaching certification requirements. This program fulfills the academic major requirement for elementary education candidates who wish to have a solid background in studies related to the environment. Although environmental studies itself is not an endorsable area, some of the courses might be counted toward endorsement in other areas. Students should contact a faculty advisor for clarification of course work applications.

Students wishing to complete an Environmental Studies Elementary Education major in four years should complete all GUR requirements in their first two years. The preparatory courses may be used to fulfill both College of the Environment and GUR requirements.

Why Consider an Environmental Studies - Elementary Major?

Are you excited about teaching children about the environment? Do you want to teach people to make environmental choices in their lives? Perhaps an Environmental Studies-Elementary major is for you!

Student Resources

Department website: Environmental Studies

Contact information: Kathryn Patrick, College of the Environment Professional Advisor, Environmental Studies 539, 360-650-3520, Kathryn.Patrick@wwu.edu; Teacher Education Admission, Miller Hall 254F, 360-650-6161, wce.wwu.edu/admissions/contact

Department advising: See the Advising section of the College of the Environment website.

Degree Works: Current students should also log on to Degree Works to check student-specific program progress.

Career Services Center: Connect major to a career

Sample Careers: Elementary Teacher

How to Declare (Admission and Declaration Process):

Admissions applications with essays and deadlines are no longer required to declare a major in Environmental Studies.

Pathways for Major Declaration in Environmental Studies

There are two pathways to declaring a major within Environmental Studies:

  1. Declare a pre-major and then declare a Major upon completion of admission requirements.
  2. Declare a major upon completion of admission requirements.

Pre-Major Declaration

Students can declare a pre-major at any time. Upon completion of admission requirements, these students can then declare a major.

Benefits of declaring a pre-major are:

  • Receive priority registration for restricted sections of ENVS 203 and ENVS 204, both required for entry into the major, and ENVS 201.
  • Assignment of a College of the Environment professional advisor and a faculty advisor.
  • Included in the College’s email distribution list of announcements and internships.
To declare as Pre-major:

Processing your pre-major declaration form can take a couple of weeks. Do not wait until registration to submit. 

Upon completion of admission requirements, declare a major using the process  below.

Major Declaration

Students must meet the following requirements to declare a major:

  • Confirmed admission to Western Washington University.
  • ENVS 203, HNRS 215, or equivalent transfer credit (completion with C- or better).
  • ENVS 204 or equivalent transfer credit (completion with C- or better).
To declare as a major:

Note that student must declare as a major for admission into the department and to have access to most upper division ENVS courses. Students who attempt to declare as a major without completing the ENVS 203 and ENVS 204 courses will be admitted as pre-majors.

If you have questions about this process, please set up an appointment with a professional adviser on our Undergrad Academic Advising webpage, visit the College of the Environment Student Support Office in Environmental Studies Building 539, or call 360-650-3520.

Recommended Deadline for Pre-Major and Major Declarations

While students may declare as pre-majors or majors at any time, students are strongly encouraged to declare early in the quarter. Students who submit a declaration form by October 6 will be given priority processing for winter quarter registration. Students who do so by January 15 will be given priority processing for spring quarter registration. Students who submit by April 18 will be given priority processing for summer and fall quarter registration.

Declaring an Environmental Studies pre-major or major does not guarantee you access to all ENVS courses. Some classes have pre-requisites and others are highly sought after by many students. When classes fill and long waitlists develop, we follow the department waitlist priority policy.

Note that extension program degrees and some combined major degrees may have different declaration processes. Review the catalog for the specific declaration process for your desired major.

Advising Tips

ENVS 201 is a requirement for many Environmental Studies courses; students are encouraged to complete this requirement as soon as possible to avoid delaying access to upper division ENVS courses.

Many other General University Requirements provide good foundations for studying the environment. The following courses are particularly encouraged:

  • Communications (ACOM, BCOM & CCOM): ENG 101 and courses with COMM, JOUR and ENVS prefixes.
  • Quantitative and Symbolic Reasoning (QSR): ENVS 201 and MATH 112 or MATH 240.
  • Natural Sciences (LSCI & SCI): ENVS 203, an LSCI course, and ESCI 225, a SCI course, are required for most Environmental Studies majors. For efficient GUR progress, choose these two courses and one additional LSCI course to complete your natural science GURs.
  • Social Sciences (SSC): ENVS 204 is required for most Environmental Studies majors. Other courses to consider are ENVS 115, ECON 101, PLSC 250, UEPP 202, and UEPP 270.
  • Additional math and sciences courses, such as MATH 114, CHEM 161 and BIOL 204 are also good GUR choices as these courses will allow enrollment in a broader range of upper division environmental science courses in the College of the Environment.

Grade Requirements

A grade of C (2.0) or better is required for courses in the elementary education professional program and all courses required for the endorsement.

All preparatory courses required for admission should be completed on a lettered or numeric grading scale, not P/NP, and must be completed with a grade of C (2.0) or better.

Requirements (53-57 credits)


Additional Requirements


 

Elementary Education Professional Program Requirements


Department of Early Childhood, Elementary, and Multilingual Education, Woodring College of Education

Introduction

This program centers an anti-bias, anti-racist, social justice philosophy and leads to a recommendation to the state of Washington for a teaching certificate with an Elementary Education endorsement. Students seeking a bachelor’s degree with teacher certification and an endorsement in elementary education must complete the GURs, an approved academic major, and the professional education course work listed below.

Admission and Declaration Process

See the Early Childhood, Elementary, and Multilingual Education  section of this catalog for program admission, completion, and teacher certification requirements.

Grade Requirements

Students must earn a grade of C (2.0) or better in the elementary education professional program and in all courses required for the endorsement.

Requirements (105 credits)


Professional Field Experiences & Methods Courses (38 credits)


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