BS in Geography: Tourism Studies Emphasis (46 hours*)
Program Requirements | View MAP
- Complete the following geography core courses:
GEOG 101 : Global Environment: Understanding Physical Geography.
(3:3:0)
(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| OFFERED: | F, W, Sp, Su |
| DESCRIPTION: | Physical environment, distribution and interrelationships of climates, landforms, ecosystems and their human significance. |
GEOG 110 : Landscapes of Disaster: An Introduction to Natural Hazards.
(3:3:0)
(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| OFFERED: | F, W |
| DESCRIPTION: | Exploring natural and social science of disturbances by analyzing causes, consequences, and role of human behavior in causing and mitigating natural disasters. |
GEOG 212 : Introduction to Geographic Information Systems.
(3:2:1)
(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| OFFERED: | F, W; Sp on demand. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Concepts in the use of small- and large-scale digital map data, emphasizing landscape interpretation and feature description. |
GEOG 250 : United States and Canada.
(3:3:0)
(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| OFFERED: | W |
| DESCRIPTION: | Analysis of the natural environment, historical development, cultural patterns, economic systems, and political structures of geographic regions. |
GEOG 322 : Statistics for Geographers.
(3:3:0)
(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| OFFERED: | F, W, Sp |
| PREREQUISITE: | Geog 222. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Methodology of spatial analysis. Theory and techniques in geographic data description and population inference. |
- Complete one regional course from the following:
GEOG 245 : Geography of Utah.
(3:3:0)
(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| OFFERED: | On demand. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Exploring geography of Utah. Topics include land forms, climate, agricultural and recreational economics, historical migration, Mormon cultural landscape, ethnic patterns, and rural-urban contrasts. |
GEOG 265 : Russia and the Former Soviet Union.
(3:3:0)
(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| OFFERED: | On demand. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Physical features, resources, political issues, economy and industries, population concerns, and role in world affairs. |
GEOG 271 : Middle East.
(3:3:0)
(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| OFFERED: | F |
| DESCRIPTION: | Physical and cultural geography of Southwest Asia and North Africa, emphasizing the cultural mosaic, geopolitics, environment, and resources of the region. |
GEOG 272 : East Asia.
(3:3:0)
(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| OFFERED: | W |
| DESCRIPTION: | Region of monsoon Asia and its basic human (demographics, nations and ethnic groups, settlement patterns, religious beliefs, transportation and communication systems, political structures), and physical geographic characteristics (land forms, physiography, climatic characteristics, and natural resources). |
GEOG 273 : Southeast Asia.
(3:3.0:0)
(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| OFFERED: | W on demand. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Fundamental issues of geography relating to Southeast Asia, including the extraction and marketing of natural resources, economic development, neighborly relations, and how diffusion has influenced the unique cultural, religious, and linguistic characteristics of the region. |
GEOG 285 : Environment and Development in Africa.
(3:3:0)
(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| OFFERED: | W |
| DESCRIPTION: | Geographical analysis focusing on resource management, political issues, development, environmental problems, economic development, and urban-rural change; case studies from selected countries. |
- Complete the following major courses:
GEOG 347 : Tourism: A Conceptual Framework.
(3:3:0)
(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| OFFERED: | F |
| DESCRIPTION: | Introduction to tourism as a field of study; four elements of tourism: dynamic, service, functional, and consequential. |
GEOG 348 : Tourism: Patterns and Analysis.
(3:3:0)
(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| OFFERED: | W |
| DESCRIPTION: | Patterns in domestic and international tourism; interrelationship between geography and tourism in understanding the patterns and their impact. |
- Complete one course from the following:
BUS M 340 : Marketing Management.
(3:3:0)
(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| OFFERED: | F, W, Sp, Su; Independent Study also. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Emphasizes marketing's role in society and the firm, marketing opportunities, the consumer market, and management of marketing mix. |
| NOTE: | For nonmanagement majors. |
RMYL 497R : Special Topics and Research.
(.5-4:ARR:0)
(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| OFFERED: | F, W, Sp, Su |
| PREREQUISITE: | instructor's consent. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Special topics, mentored research, and learning experiences, including attending professional conferences, Study Abroad participation, and other learning experiences. |
- Complete three advanced tourism courses from the following:
GEOG 349 : Global Adventure Travel.
(3:3:0)
(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| OFFERED: | F |
| DESCRIPTION: | Historical and emerging trends in global adventure travel and tourism. Detailed case studies selected from across world regions. |
GEOG 350 : Tourism Planning.
(3:3:0)
(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| OFFERED: | F |
| RECOMMENDED: | Geog 347. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Applying regional development and planning concepts, principles, and approaches to tourism destinations to enhance sustainable economic, ecological, and social development. |
GEOG 353 : Heritage and Cultural Tourism.
(3:3:0)
(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| OFFERED: | W |
| RECOMMENDED: | Geog 120, 130, 347, 348. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Heritage and culture (places, people, relics, and traditions) as tourism resources examined within the context of supply and demand, conservation, interpretation, management, planning, and politics. |
- Complete exit assessment and senior survey during final semester, no later than one month before graduation.
*Hours include courses that may fulfill university core requirements.