<p>i accdiently posted this in another forum..... so anyone?</p>
<p>The one institution I know of which is an "environmental science college" is the SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry. It is pretty good, too: according to US News and World Reports, they are 93rd overall among national universities. The environment and natural resoruces are part of every major here. Their website is <a href="http://www.esf.edu%5B/url%5D">www.esf.edu</a>. </p>
<p>See <a href="http://www.aeesp.org/education/bseducation.htm%5B/url%5D">http://www.aeesp.org/education/bseducation.htm</a> for a list of programs in environmental science and environmental engineering. </p>
<p>It is important to distinguish between environmental science and environmental studies (policy). Both are interdisciplinary but there are obvious differences. If science is your thing, you may want to get a degree in biology or chemistry and take extra courses in environmental issues.</p>
<p>UC Riverside
U Illinois UC
Indiana U Bloomington
Bates
Bowdoin
Scripps
Claremont McKenna
Notre Dame
Colby
SUNY ESF
UNC Chapel Hill
Brown</p>
<p>Some other options:
The College of the Atlantic (ME)
Humboldt State U (California)
Warren Wilson College (NC)
Cal Poly San Luis Obispo
Whitman College
St. Olaf
Carleton</p>
<p>As Carolyn suggested, definitely check out College of the Atlantic and Warren Wilson - both have students LIVE environmentally aware lives in addition to studying the environment.</p>
<p>hmm noo cal poly SLO I love the place but its in the middle of nowhereeeeee</p>
<p>Duke and its Nicholas School of the Environment is definitely worth looking into. The College of the Atlantic is awesome for environmental science and in a great location, but there's not a huge amount of breadth in the college. Bowdoin has an equally good program, IMO.</p>
<p>UC Davis has highly rated bio science and toxicollogy.</p>
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<p>Them you can cross of College of the Atlantic</p>