![]() |
|
| FSU > Registrar > Bulletins > Undergraduate > TOC > Urban Planning | |
Department of URBAN AND REGIONAL PLANNINGCollege of Social SciencesChair: Charles Connerly; Professors: Connerly, Cowart, Stiftel; Associate Professors: Deyle, Doan, Miles, Thompson; Assistant Professors: Audirac, Chapin, Deka, Smutny; Planner-in-Residence: Casella; Professor Emeriti: Frank, RuBino Urban and regional planning is an interdisciplinary field that is concerned with the management of population growth and decline in urban, suburban, and rural areas. It is concerned with the uses of land to accommodate population; the provision of employment, services, and facilities needed by this population (for example, housing, hospitals, roads and other transportation facilities, schools, parks and recreation, and health services); and the impacts of this population on the environment (air, water, and land), society, and governance. Planners study these issues and develop policies and plans to accommodate population growth and the problems that arise from this growth. Planners are concerned with the development of coordinated policy responses to these issues; they practice a broad view that focuses on the interrelationships between problems and the necessary interrelatedness of solutions. Above all, planners are concerned with improvements to the quality of life of our communities. They attempt to address these issues in ways that recognize the diverse interests of both genders and those of varying social and economic groups. Planning is practiced at all levels of government, including local, regional, state, multistate, and national levels. Planners are also found in the private sector; in the employment of development firms, law firms, banks, and specialized resource firms (mining, forestry, etc.); in public interest organizations; and in international settings. The Department of Urban and Regional Planning offers three nonmajor programs for undergraduates interested in planning and urban affairs. These programs are designed to complement an existing major for those students who wish to develop an appreciation of planning or who wish to lay the foundation for graduate study in planning. These programs are the undergraduate planning studies minor, certificate and pregraduate programs. Within each of these three programs, students may satisfy their minor requirements. Because of the variety of issues and contexts within which planners work, there is no one undergraduate background that is universally more important than others. Students may combine their interests in planning and urban affairs with undergraduate majors in the variety of social sciences, physical or natural sciences, business, engineering, design professions, communications, criminology and criminal justice, and others. Planning Studies Minor ProgramThis program is designed for students who wish to apply their major field to problems and issues in planning and urban affairs. The program consists of a series of courses at the 3000 and 4000 levels that provide an overview of planning and that introduce the student to issues, organizations, policies, and implementation strategies. Students may earn a minor in urban and regional planning by completing a four-course sequence that is composed of two required courses and two elective courses. URP 3000 is a prerequisite for all of the required and elective courses. Electives are chosen from among a set of introductory courses representing the major policy areas taught by the department. These include growth management and comprehensive planning, planning for developing areas, environmental planning and resource management, health planning, housing and community development, and transportation planning. Students interested in the planning studies minor program are advised to see the department's Director of Undergraduate Programs for advice on the availability of courses. Required Courses
Elective Courses (Choose Two)
The Certificate Program in Urban and Regional PlanningThe certificate program is intended for undergraduate students who want to delve more deeply into the field of planning. The program requires two courses in addition to the four required for the minor and is issued only in conjunction with the applicant's receipt of a bachelor of arts or science degree and a grade of "C" or better in all courses. One of these two courses is ECO 2023 Economics of the Price System (3). The second course should be chosen from a list available from the undergraduate program advisor. Pre-graduate Minor ProgramThis undergraduate program is designed for students who anticipate continuing to graduate school to earn the professional master's degree in planning. Students in this program are given the opportunity to begin graduate-level course work in their senior year and thereby may satisfy some of the requirements of a graduate degree while still completing their undergraduate credit hour requirements. This program is closely coordinated with the department's graduate program, offering students the possibility of preferred admission with advanced standing at the graduate level. Students make application for advanced standing after admission to the master's program. The pregraduate program allows acceleration toward the master of science in planning degree upon satisfactory completion of one required undergraduate course and one to four of the eligible URP graduate courses listed below. URP 3000 is a prerequisite/corequisite for all these courses. Admission to the pregraduate program is available only to those undergraduates who are beginning or in their senior year and who have maintained a cumulative grade point average (GPA) of at least 3.2 or who have earned a score of at least 1000 on the combined verbal and quantitative portions of the GRE and who have taken or are registered for URP 3000. Students completing this program with an upper-division GPA of at least 3.0 may be offered admission to the master's program in planning with advanced standing for up to twelve (12) semester hours of course work in which the grade of "B" or higher was earned. Required Courses
Elective Courses (Choose One to Four)
Note: a guide to undergraduate studies in urban and regional planning is available from the department and should be consulted by all students enrolling in the minor planning studies or pre-graduate programs. A minor can be earned concurrent with work on the pregraduate program. The minor is composed of a four-course sequence: URP 3000, 4022, and at least two additional graduate courses included in the list above. Multicultural StudiesA variety of Urban and Regional Planning undergraduate courses explore perspectives of different cultural groups on questions related to urban life and the development of human settlements. Approved for credit under the University's baccalaureate Multicul-tural requirement for Cross-cultural (X) courses are: URS 1006 World Cities; and URP 4618 Planning for Developing Regions. Approved under the requirement for Diversity in Western Cultures (Y) is: URP 4402 Sustainable Development Planning in the Americas. Definition of PrefixesURP - Urban and Regional Planning Undergraduate CoursesLiberal Studies Area IIIURS 1006. World Cities: Quality of Life (3). Major world cities are examined in terms of their natural, social and built environments in order to assess those factors that promote quality-of-life and sustainability. Prospects for future growth and change are considered in light of demographic, cultural, economic and political trends. Upper Division CoursesURP 3000. Introduction to Planning and Urban Development (3). Introduces planning concepts and the role of planning in formulating policy, meeting critical problems, and shaping the future urban environment. URP 3949r. Cooperative Education Work Experience (0). (S/U grade only.) URP 4022. Collective Decision Making (3). Prerequisites: URP 3000 or permission of instructor. Outlines efficiency, equity, and environmental quality as competing bases for public decisions. Examines tools for contributing to public decisions in varying circumstances including unitary and diverse decision makers, certain and uncertain environments, and simple and complex goals. URP 4314. Introduction to Growth Management and Comprehensive Planning (3). Prerequisite: URP 3000 or permission of instructor. An introduction to the problems and needs for growth management and comprehensive planning for US cities, highlighting various planning approaches and strategies available for meeting development, growth, and land-use problems. URP 4401. Coastal Ecosystems, Environmental Issues and Coastal Zone Management (3). Prerequisite: URP 3000 or permission of instructor. This course will provide an introduction to coastal environments in terms of their basic ecological functioning, human impacts and management issues. Florida coastal ecosystems will be emphasized, including salt marsh and mangroves, estuaries, barrier islands, sea grass meadows, coral reefs and continental shelves. URP 4402. Sustainable Development Planning in the Americas (3). Prerequisite: URP 3000 or permission of instructor. Examines various dimensions of the "sustainable development" paradigm and its local-global policy implications, issues, and controversies with a focus upon North American and Latin America. Organized in three modules: 1) environmental philosophies that have influenced the movement; 2) North American approaches to planning for sustainable development; and 3) critical issues of sustainable development in Latin America. URP 4423. Introduction to Environmental Planning and Resource Management (3). Prerequisite: URP 3000 or permission of the instructor. A general introduction to the problems of resource management and environmental planning, with an overview of problems and potential solutions and their relation to other public policy areas such as land-use control and regional development. URP 4523. Introduction to Health Planning (3). Prerequisite: URP 3000 or permission of the instructor. Examines the structures, policies, resources, and services of the health care system, including both the public and private sectors and systems for acute, chronic, and long-term care. Focuses on planning and policy needs and implications. URP 4531. Policy and Planning for the Aged (3). This course examines issues faced by older people and the current federal and state policies designed to address these issues. It explores these policies and issues, in the context of both political economy and the long-term care continuum from independence to dependence. URP 4618. Planning for Developing Regions (3). Prerequisite: URP 3000 or permission of instructor. This course will introduce the student to the field of development planning and gives the student exposure to the interplay between theory and practice. Topics include concepts of development, measurement and indicators of patterns of development, rural development, urban development, preparation of development plans, and implementation of development plans. URP 4710. Introduction to Transportation Issues and Transportation Planning (3). Prerequisite: URP 3000 or permission of instructor. An introduction to contemporary US transportation problems, sources of funding, and legislation. Presents the theory and methods employed by planners in the process of resolving transportation problems. URP 4741. Introduction to Issues in Housing and Community Development (3). Prerequisite: URP 3000 or permission of instructor. Focuses on the operation of the housing market, the nature of the housing and community development problem, and the gradual development of a national housing and community development policy since the 1930s. Relationships between public and private sectors are examined. URP 4936r. Special Topics in Urban and Regional Planning (3). A selected topics seminar for the discussion of unique and timely planning related issues. Content varies. May be repeated to a maximum of six (6) semester hours. Graduate CoursesPlanning Theory and Practice
Planning Methods
Urban Growth Process
Planning for Developing Regions
Environmental Planning and Natural Resource Management
Growth Management and Comprehensive Planning
Transportation Planning
Housing and Community Development
Health Planning
Other Courses for Graduate Students
For listings relating to graduate course work for thesis, dissertation, and master's and doctoral examinations and defense, consult the Graduate Bulletin. VISUAL DISABILITIES: |
![]() |
||
|
|
||