Exchange Program in Environmental Studies

Overview

The Exchange Programme in Environmental Studies invites visiting students into a living classroom where Tibetan Buddhist wisdom, monastic immersion, and ecological awareness meet.

Within four to ten months, learners engage in Tibetan language, debate foundations, meditation training, rituals, art, philosophy, community service, and optional retreat modules. While the curriculum remains the standard Exchange structure, students explore each subject through an environmental lens.

They learn how interdependence, compassion, and mindfulness can inform ecological responsibility, and how monastic life offers a model for sustainable and conscious living. The programme provides a rare experience where environmental insight grows from culture, community, and contemplative practice rather than theory alone.

 

Learning Goals

Students develop a foundation in Tibetan Buddhism while understanding ecological responsibility through lived experience:

  • Build functional Tibetan language skills to engage with ecological vocabulary, rituals, and community life
  • Understand the roots of environmental ethics through Buddhist philosophy and Mahayana foundations
  • Practice meditation as a method to cultivate ecological awareness and emotional balance
  • Experience monastic routines that model sustainability, simplicity, and mindful consumption
  • Engage in community service that reflects environmental care and compassion
  • Recognize Tibetan art, symbols, and ritual objects as expressions of interdependence
  • Develop confidence participating in daily rituals, chanting, and foundational debate
  • Cultivate ecological Bodhicitta through direct cultural immersion

 

Program Duration & Study Format

The programme is intentionally flexible, allowing students to shape their path through selected topics.:

  • Duration: 4 to 10 months depending on the number of chosen topics
  • Credits: 24 to 36 credits variable
  • Campus only, with direct monastic immersion
  • Students choose among twenty topics including language, debate, ethics, meditation, rituals, translation, art, philosophy, and advanced retreat
  • Environmental understanding grows through observation, community work, and reflective practice embedded in each topic
  • Optional independent study with a mentor supports environmental research projects

Environmental Studies enters through research themes, elective choice, commentary focus, and field projects guided by faculty

 

Assessment & Advancement

Evaluation honors the experiential nature of the programme.

  • Language assessments through reading, chanting, and simple translation
  • Meditation journals emphasizing ecological awareness and emotional presence
  • Participation in debate practicum to strengthen reasoning and clarity
  • Community service reports reflecting responsibility and compassion
  • Short reflection essays linking Buddhist philosophy with environmental observation
  • Optional retreat report documenting contemplative insight into interdependence
  • Certificate of Completion awarded upon fulfilling selected topics

 

Who Should Apply

This path is ideal for students seeking experiential learning grounded in Dharma and ecological sensitivity:

  • International students exploring Tibetan Buddhism through cultural immersion
  • Environmental students seeking contemplative perspectives
  • Practitioners wishing to experience sustainable monastic life
  • Early-stage researchers in Buddhist environmental ethics
  • Anyone seeking a short yet transformative study abroad programme

 

Degree Requirements

Environmental Studies Major
Course Title Duration Description
Language & Literacy

  • EX101 – Tibetan Language Immersion (3 credits)
  • EX102 – Tibetan Reading & Script (2 credits)
 

2 months
1.5 months

 

Rapid Tibetan language acquisition through full immersion.
Reading simple texts and daily liturgy.

Logic & Debate 

  • EX111 – Introduction to Logic & Debate (3 credits)
  • EX112 – Debate Practicum for Internationals (2 credits)
 

2 months
1.5 months

 

Basic reasoning, debate posture, call-and-response.
Daily practice with simplified structures.

Monastic Ethics & Culture

  • EX121 – Monastic Ethics & Life (2 credits)
 

1.5 months

 

Introduction to monastic discipline and community living.

Meditation Foundations

  • EX131 – Meditation Foundations I (2 credits)
    EX132 – Meditation Foundations II (2 credits)
 

1.5 months
1.5 months

 

Calm-abiding basics; mindfulness and posture.
Insight-based contemplations and emotional awareness.

Ritual & Chanting 

  • EX141 – Ritual & Chanting Basics (2 credits
 

1.5 months

 

Learning daily chants, mudrā, offering practices.

Buddhist Philosophy 

  • EX151 – Buddhist Philosophy Survey (3 credits)
  • EX152 – Mahāyāna Foundations (2 credits)
 

2 months
1.5 months

 

Overview of core Buddhist doctrines & tenet systems.
Bodhicitta, emptiness, six perfections.

Art & Symbolism

  • EX161 – Tibetan Buddhist Art (2 credits)
  • EX162 – Tibetan Ritual Objects (2 credits)
 

1.5 months
1.5 months

 

Iconography, symbols, thangka structures.
Bell, vajra, damaru, torma, conch shell.

Teaching & Translation

  • EX171 – Teaching Practicum for Internationals (2 credits)
  • EX172 – Tibetan–English Translation Basics (3 credits)
1.5 months
2 months
Introduction to instructing basic Dharma topics.
Translating simple passages & liturgy.
Community Engagement

  • EX181 – Monastic Service Practicum (2 credits)
1.5 months Community work: kitchen, cleaning, ritual support.
Advanced Options

  • EX191 – Extended Retreat Module (3 credits)
  • EX192 – Independent Study with Mentor (3 credits)
2 months
2 months
Meditation retreat combined with teachings.
Guided self-study with a monastic teacher.

 

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