The Natural Systems Thinking Process uniquely empowers people to create authentic, connective, sensory moments in Nature. This genuine contact of our psyche with its origins in nature’s renewing powers enables us to realign our unreasonable bonds to destructive relationships. We reap benefits and rewards as we let natural systems compost and recycle our hurtful bonds and addictions into cooperative participation.M.B. Jones
ertification qualifies graduates to instruct or facilitate NatureConnect classes and workshops using the Natural Systems Thinking Process. This certificate is suitable for use for personal healing and development, on its own as a technical certification for professional work, or as an enhancement to a professional degree in education, counseling, coaching, or healing work.
Graduates have mastered the basics of the Natural Systems Thinking Process and The Webstring Model of Natural Attraction Ecology and are qualified to teach introductory courses and workshops or incorporate beginning NatureConnect activities and sensory restoration work into their personal life and/or professional practice.
Duration: 1 year
Tuition: $765.00
Curriculum:




Wherever possible, the Project NatureConnect program integrates the fundamentals of Natural Attraction Ecology in its philosophy, systems, and procedures. Examples of this are self-organizing classes, sliding scale tuition, and student involvement in every level of program administration in mutual beneficial interdependent relationships. In this course, students experience, explore, and identify the differences between organizational processes in play in traditional industrial society organizations (processes which separate the “human” from the “natural”), and the way we follow nature’s flow in the Project NatureConnect program.
Students learn experientially through participation in mutually supportive relationships in group classes, in the online community discussions, in self-organizing work groups arising out of the attractions of students, faculty and staff, in the use of consensus building, asking permission, and respecting attractions as valid guides to personal choices.
Students volunteer to play support roles and offer services that tap their skills, talents and inclinations. Read more about volunteer support roles. A student may offer any service they believe would help the organization by contacting the Executive Director (Dr. Cohen). Students help build web pages, manage the online community, edit text, write advanced curriculum, offer ideas for research and development, orient and guide less experienced students, and help to refine and increase the extent to which the program functions as a natural community.
Students also learn how to make connections with others, nurture appreciation and excitement for reconnecting with nature, and invite others to learn the process, through engagement in public education and networking. Read more about public education.
Students participate in a minimum of 90 hours of activity (45 hours per credit).

Graduates have gained a more in-depth understanding of the function of natural attraction in both natural systems and interpersonal relations and of the dynamics of attraction and consent in the web of life. They have attained an intermediate level of expertise in guiding sensory restoration and nature-centered personal growth work with students and clients. They are qualified to develop and facilitate intermediate courses or workshops, or conduct individual sessions with individuals integrating the Natural Systems Thinking Process.
Duration: 1 year
Tuition: $1700.00
Prerequisite: Level 1 Certificate
Curriculum:




Participants select two of the following course modules for a total of 6 credits:

Prerequisites: ECO 500/600 and ECO 501/601.
While they are teaching and researching sensory ecology, students will seek, read and critique methods and materials from their own library research. Students carefully explore the literature and prepare an annotated bibliography. As the principal course assignment, participants will prepare a scholarly paper of at least 15 typewritten double-spaced pages discussing problems and solutions to important issues and practice of Applied Ecopsychology/Integrated Ecology.
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ECO 503/603- Exploratory Readings In Applied Ecopsychology (103.9 KB)

Prerequisites: ECO 500/600 and ECO 501/601.
Students will investigate a library of recent references related to their particular career field or interests that reflect upon the issues relevant to sensory ecology. Students will read and discuss the literature with Dr. Cohen and other professionals. Students will gather a bibliography of literature in their professional field or interest that supports work in Integrated Ecology and prepare an annotated bibliography. Students will prepare a reflective paper of at least 15 typewritten double-spaced pages discussing how the literature has informed their understanding of the opportunities for integration of Applied Ecopsychology/Integrated Ecology concepts within their career field.

Prerequisites: ECO 501/601 and ECO 502/602.
Students gain further insights into the 53 senses, their natural origins and existence and their cultural applications, by exploring each sense individually. Under the direction of the instructor, students establish and identify a class of four or more students with whom they work online and/or onsite. Students will keep a reflective journal of their experiences or a database of their online activity postings. Course participants will commit to doing nature-guided, independent study of at least two senses per week in order to finish the class within a six month time frame. At the completion of the course, students will prepare a scholarly summary paper (at least 15 typewritten pages) reflecting their experiences.

Prerequisite: ECO 501/601.
Students survey the field of Public Relations and Marketing to determine the most significant means to promote, implement and produce support for their involvement in the natural systems thinking process. They identify what that makes each technique and strategy worthwhile, select those that make the most sense to them, defend them, and apply them in areas that add to the field of nature connected psychology and their personal interests. The student writes a three page progress report that documents their work and learning in this area and that would assist others who read it.

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Graduates have attained a deep understanding of Natural Attraction Ecology and the Natural Systems Thinking Process. They have attained an advanced level of personal sensory restoration and are qualified to develop and teach advanced classes and workshops, guide individuals and groups in re-integration with the natural community through sensory restoration and the practice of Natural Attraction Ecology.
Duration: 1 year
Tuition: $255.00
Prerequisites: Level 1 & Level 2 Certificates
Curriculum:

Courses are regionally accredited by the Northwest Commission on Colleges and Universities. CEU’s and individual course academic credits are available through Portland State University for an additional $55 per credit.
