ASU freshman have learned about environmental careers and opportunities

Academic peer mentors trained in our Nature Guides program

ASU students, parents, and community members have learned about the value of an environmental career

ASU freshman have learned about environmental careers and opportunities

Academic peer mentors trained in our Nature Guides program

ASU students, parents, and community members have learned about the value of an environmental career

Our Structure

Build
(Recruitment)

🌿 High school and community college outreach

🌿 First year and transfer student outreach

🌿 Community & family outreach

Unite
(Community)

🌿 Nature Guides peer mentoring program

🌿 Nature (co) sponsored events

• Central AZ Chapter of the Soc. for Conservation Biology (CACSCB)

• Wildlife & Restoration Student Association (WRSA)

• ASU Environmental Clubs

Empower
(Careers)

🌿 Environmental career pathways guide

🌿 Career workshops

🌿 Employer, practitioner, and alumni connections

Sustain
(Leadership)

🌿 Strategic planning retreats

🌿 Leadership training

🌿 Fundraising

Our Structure

Build
(Recruitment)

🌿 High school and community college outreach

🌿 First year and transfer student outreach

🌿 Community & family outreach

Unite
(Community)

🌿 Nature Guides peer mentoring program

🌿 Nature (co) sponsored events

• Central AZ Chapter of the Soc. for Conservation Biology (CACSCB)

• Wildlife & Restoration Student Association (WRSA)

• ASU Environmental Clubs

Empower
(Careers)

🌿 Environmental career pathways guide

🌿 Career workshops

🌿 Employer, practitioner, and alumni connections

Sustain
(Leadership)

🌿 Strategic planning retreats

🌿 Leadership training

🌿 Fundraising

What We Do

 

Nature at ASU is built on four pillars that are each designed to address a fundamental challenge facing environmental undergraduate students.  The objectives within each of these pillars is directed by an elected undergraduate leader.

Build

🌿 Incoming students struggle to connect their passion for nature to a major that will help them develop the critical thinking, communication, and scientific skills to make a difference.  We will engage prospective students and their families by exposing them to educational opportunities, an inclusive community of students with similar interests, and career pathways.

Unite

🌿 Academic environmental programs are siloed at an undergraduate level.  We will connect students to ideas, opportunities, and each other by reaching across institutional boundaries to build a diverse, networked community.

Empower

🌿 Undergraduates are not aware of classes, internships, skills, and experiences that are necessary to be qualified and competitive for a wide range of environmental jobs.  Nature at ASU will empower students by connecting university resources with career requirements, assisting with early career planning, curating opportunities in environmental fields, and connecting students with each other, alumni, and prospective employers.

Sustain

🌿 As a community organization run by undergraduates, Nature at ASU will prepare and plan for long-term success by developing a pipeline of leaders with the charisma, skills, and vision to realize our shared mission.

 

Why We Do It

Our Challenge

🌿  In 2016, undergraduates in the Conservation Biology & Ecology major at ASU realized there was a problem.  As the largest university in the nation, we were surrounded by young people like us who were thinking deeply about our environment and conservation of Earth’s biodiversity for our shared future.  We wanted to become the next generation of conservation scientists, natural resource managers, educators, and environmental activists, but at every step of our college experience we came across inadvertent barriers that seemed to cloud our path forward.

As incoming students, we saw clear and lucrative career pathways for pre-medical, pre-law, and business majors that enticed us.  Our parents saw those pathways too, which led many of us to reconsider if we belonged in an environmental degree – especially those of us who are the first in our families to go to college or underrepresented in natural resource fields.

Although we were passionate about studying and protect the environment, we felt lost.  We did not understand the wide range of majors and careers that could help us pursue our passion for the natural world.  We did not know how to find and learn from each other.  We felt isolated in an academic structure where environmental degree programs are split into distinct schools, colleges, and campuses.  Ultimately, upon graduating, we worried that we were under qualified and under competitive for jobs in environmental fields that required proven leadership and communication skills in addition to technical and scientific knowledge about ecology, biodiversity, and conservation science.

Our Solution

🌿 We created Nature at ASU to address these challenges.  As undergraduates, we are building an inclusive, networked community of scholars who are united in our interests in studying, protecting, and restoring nature for our shared future.

We designed a compass as our logo to represent our ultimate mission to help students find their way towards a rewarding future in environmental or conservation careers.  To get there, we are recruiting students into environmentally focused majors at ASU, supporting an inclusive community across academic units and campuses, and preparing students with communication and critical thinking skills to be effective scientists, practitioners, and leaders.