McMicken College of Arts & SciencesUniversity of Cincinnati

Geography (Urban Economic Emphasis)

Geography (Urban Economic Emphasis)

   Quick Facts

  • Program Name
    Geography (Urban Economic Emphasis)
  • Degree
    Bachelor of Arts Degree
  • Degree Code
    BA
  • Department
    Geography
  • College
    Arts and Sciences
  • Program Code
    15BA-GEOG-U
  • Location
    Main Campus
  • Time to Completion
    4 years
  • Evening Courses Offered
    No
  • Distance Learning Courses Offered
    No
  • Weekend Courses Offered
    No
  • Contact Information

    Department Website

    401 Braunstein
    PO Box 210131
    Cincinnati, Ohio
    45221-0131

    geography.dept@uc.edu

What Is Geography (Urban Economic Emphasis) ?

Effective Autumn 2009, the college will significantly change the A&S core requirements. Continuing students should consult their new degree audits for changes until the information below can be updated!

Geography focuses on the spatial dimensions of human activities and their interactions with physical landscapes.  The interrelationships between humans and their environments uniquely allow geographers to link the social and physical sciences. Geographers analyze information represented on maps representing data produced in the traditional form (computer generated or drawn by hand) or images generated by satellites (remote sensing).

Success Factors

Students are successful when they have an interest in learning about and understanding: (1) world events; (2) local events within cities; (3) the urban, global, economic and political processes underlying world and local events; (4) human impact on the physical environment; and (5) how to process, display and analyze geographic information.

Career Possibilities

A geography major provides a good educational background for students interested in a variety of careers in business, various government agencies (federal, state, county, city), nonprofit agencies or careers as college and university professors. Geography provides strong preparation for professional and graduate schools (law, medicine, business, geography or other physical or social sciences). Employment for students with strong geographic computer skills (GIS) is particularly strong.  xamples of geography-related jobs in various areas include:

  • Agency of Internal Development
  • Audubon Society
  • Bureau of Land Management
  • Bureau of the Census
  • Cartographer
  • Geographic software programming
  • Housing and Urban Development
  • Market research
  • Sierra Club
  • Teaching
  • Travel industry

Major Details

Geography majors in the UC McMicken College of Arts and Sciences (A&S) are encouraged to develop individualized programs within one of the five geography tracks in consultation with the geography undergraduate advisor. There are three concentrations (tracks) for the BA degree: urban-economic geography, human geography and environmental geography. There are two concentrations (tracks) for the BS degree: geographic information sciences and environmental geography. All majors must take environmental, human, regional and mapping courses. Either environmental geography or the human/regional geography course sequences may be counted toward A&S general education requirements. Geography majors are required to take statistics (15MATH 147-149) or calculus (BS environmental) to fulfill the A&S mathematics requirement.

McMicken College's flexible degree requirements allow for and highly encourage students to pursue multiple areas of study. Free electives allow for enough credits for students to pursue a minor, certificate program or even complete a second major. Some of the most common pairings are listed below.

  • Anthropology
  • Communication
  • Geography
  • History
  • International human rights
  • Journalism
  • Languages or area studies
  • Psychology
  • Security studies
  • Sociology

Minor Details

Urban and Economic Geography Minor Requirements*:

I. Environmental Geography (6 hours)
    101 Introduction to Environmental Geography I (3) E
    102 Introduction to Environmental Geography II (3) E
    103 Introduction to Environmental Geography III (3) E

II. Human Geography (6 hours)
   
104 Intro to Human Geography I (3) R
    105 Intro to Human Geography II (3) R
   

III. Regional Geography (3 hours)
      See electives below     

IV. Urban and Economic (12 hours)
   
323 Urban Geography (3) R
    341 Economic Geography: Geography of Consumption (3) R
    342 Economic Geography: Geography of Production (3) R
    522 Urban Problems (3) R

V. Spatial Techniques (4 hours)
    
574 Principles of Computer Cartography (4) E
    580 Introduction to GIS (4) (574) E

*Students must pass all required Geography courses with a C or better.

Curriculum

This curriculum information is intended as a general information guide for students considering enrollment in this major. These online tools are designed to assist you, but are not a substitute for planning with an academic or faculty advisor.

If you are currently enrolled at UC, you can audit your degree online. If you are considering transferring to this major from another school use the course applicability system (CAS) to see how credits you have earned will apply to this major at UC. For course descriptions by college, click here.

Course Name Course Number Credits
First Year
*English Composition ENGL 101-102

6

*Foreign Language see checklist

9-15

*Elementary Probability & Statistics I, II, III MATH 147-148-149

9

*Introduction to Environmental Geography I, I, II GEOG 101-102-103

9

*Environmental Geography Lab I, II, III GEOG 111-112-113

6

 Introduction to Human Geography I, II GEOG 104-105

 6

Total

45-51 cr hrs

 
Second Year
*English Composition ENGL 289 

3

*Foreign Language (if necessary) see checklist

9

*History see checklist

 3

*Literature see checklist

6

*Behavioral/Social Science see checklist

6

Urban Geography GEOG 323

3

Geography of Consumption GEOG 341 

3

Geography of Production GEOG 342 

3

Regional geography electives see list below

6

Free electives

 3

TOTAL

 45 cr hrs

 
Third Year
*Behavioral/Social Science see checklist

9

*Humanities see checklist

 9

*History see checklist

6

Principles of Computer Cartography  GEOG 574 

4

Introduction to GIS GEOG 580

 4

GIS Urban Economic Applications GEOG 582 

4

Urban Problems GEOG 522 

3

Free electives 

9

TOTAL 

 48 cr hrs

Fourth Year
Geographic Methods & Quantitative Techniques GEOG 585 

3

Advanced Spatial Statistics GEOG 586

 3

Advanced Geography Courses see list below

 16

Capstone  I  GEOG 500 

 2

Capstone experience electives (field trip, senior thesis, readings) GEOG 507-508-509 

3

Free electives

 18

TOTAL

45 cr hrs

* denotes course that fulfills a McMicken College Core Requirement

Electives & Advanced Courses

Regional Geography Electives
GEOG 123     Americas: NAFTA (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 124     World Regional Europe (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 125     World Regional Africa (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 126     World Regional Asia (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 211     Geography of Latin America (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 216     Geography of Europe (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 226     Geography of Africa (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 231     Geography of the Middle East (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 236     Geography South and East Asia (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 237     Geography of China (3 cr. hrs.)

Environmental Geography Electives
GEOG 101     Introduction to Environmental Geography I (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 102     Introduction to Environmental Geography II (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 103     Introduction to Environmental Geography III (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 111     Environmental Geography Lab I (2 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 112     Environmental Geography Lab II (2 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 113     Environmental Geography Lab III (2 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 261     People and the Environment I (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 262     People and the Environment II (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 263     People and the Environment III (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 301     Elements of Climatology (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 302     Elements of Climate and Landforms (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 303     Environmental Geography (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 311     Resource Conservation (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 570     Soils (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 571     Approaching Past Landscapes (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 573     Urban Habitat (3 cr. hrs.)

Human Geography
GEOG 104     Introduction to Human Geography I (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 105     Introduction to Human Geography II (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 106     Introduction to Human Geography III (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 172     Freshman Seminar:  Super-sized (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 203     Geography of Cincinnati and the Tri-state (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 333     Political Geography (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 335     Geography of Religion (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 353     Political Geography:  Geopolitics (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 514     Readings in Geography (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 578     History and Philosophy of Geography (3 cr. hrs.)

Urban and Economic Geography
GEOG 322     Cities and Globalization (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 323     Urban Geography (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 341     Economic Geography: Geography of Consumption (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 342     Economic Geography: Geography of Production (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 521     Urban Development (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 522     Urban Problems (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 523     Niehoff Urban Studio I (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 524     Niehoff Urban Studio II (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 525     Niehoff Urban Studio III (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 589     Urban Geography:  Inner City (3 cr. hrs.)

Spatial Techniques
GEOG 376     Environmental Remote Sensing and GIS (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 574     Principles of Computer Cartography (4 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 576     Principles of Remote Sensing (4 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 580     Introduction to GIS (4 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 581     GIS Environmental Applications (4 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 582     GIS Urban and Economic Applications (4 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 583     Intermediate Remote Sensing (4 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 585     Geographic Methods and Quantitative Techniques (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 586     Advanced Spatial Statistics (3 cr. hrs.)
GEOG 590     Introduction to GPS (3 cr. hrs.)

Special Opportunities

Students in the UC McMicken College of Arts and Sciences enjoy many benefits afforded through study at a research-intensive institution ranked among the nation's top 25 public research universities. UC's urban, tri-state location offers exciting opportunities for global education, research and service learning, while its student-centered focus includes an 11:1 student-faculty ratio, a nationally recognized Center for Exploratory Studies and a highly successful First Year Experience program that teaches critical skills for first-year students and provides connections with important campus resources.

Special Programs

The Department of Geography offers the following tracks/specializations within the geography degree programs:

  • BA & BS Environmental Tracks (15BA-GEOG-E, 15BS-GEOG-E)
  • BA Human Geography Track (15BA-GEOG-H)
  • BA Urban-Economic Track (15BA-GEOG-U)
  • BS Geographic Information Sciences Track (15BS-GEOG-G)

Students interested in these tracks should contact the undergraduate director for specific information.

Admission Requirements

Admission criteria for this program vary based on the relative strength of test scores, class rank and GPA. Please see the Freshman Class Profile for this major in the Quick Facts sidebar on this page for the range of academic credentials typically accepted into this program. Test scores in the lower range may be acceptable with higher class rank and/or GPA. Freshmen applying to this program should also have completed the following state of Ohio articulation requirements with no more than two units missing:

  • English (4 units)*
  • College-preparatory mathematics (3 units)*
  • Science (2 units)
  • Social science (2 units)
  • Foreign language (2 units)*
  • Fine arts (1 unit)
  • Additional college-prep subjects (2 units)

*McMicken College of Arts and Sciences does not allow units missing from these areas.

Transfer Requirements

Applicants to A&S whose most recent enrollment was not in any of the UC colleges must apply through the Office of Admissions. Applicants in this category must submit transcripts for all secondary school and college-level work. A cumulative GPA of 2.0 for all college-level work is required for admission consideration. Admission to A&S is generally available for any off-campus applicants who have received the associate degree from an accredited college or university and whose cumulative GPA is 2.0 or higher.

Although mid-year off-campus transfer students are not able to participate in priority registration in the quarter prior to their enrollment, they are included in the summer registration period prior to their fall quarter enrollment.

Changing Major Requirements

Applicants to A&S whose most recent enrollment was as a degree student in one of UC’s other colleges can apply directly to the A&S college office. A cumulative GPA of 2.0 for all college-level work is required for admission consideration. Admission to A&S is generally available for any on-campus students who have:

  • at least a 2.0 GPA in all college-level courses (both at UC and at other institutions),
  • successfully completed two quarters of English Composition or its equivalent, and
  • gained credit for a college-level mathematics course.

Transfer students should be aware that some A&S programs have other requirements, beyond those listed above, as conditions for admission to the major; further details on individual programs are available in the A&S Office of Undergraduate Affairs and Advising (102 McMicken).

Graduation Requirements

In addition to meeting the university's general education requirements, the requirements listed in the McMicken College core requirements are common to all potential graduates of the college, whether they are pursuing the bachelor of arts, bachelor of science or bachelor of interdisciplinary studies degree.

Application Deadlines

UC operates on a quarter system, with 10-week grading periods beginning in late September, early January, late March and mid-June. While midyear admission is possible, the fall quarter is generally the best time to enter the university, since many course sequences begin in that quarter.

Applicants to the UC McMicken College of Arts and Sciences who are enrolled or who were previously enrolled as degree students in A&S or in other UC colleges should apply for admission directly to A&S (in McMicken 102). All other applicants who wish to earn an undergraduate degree from A&S should apply through the Office of Admissions (3rd Floor, University Pavilion).