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In this class, students will study the rich history of water in Colorado and the American West, how native communities used it, and the American approach to water management. Students will gain foundational knowledge of Colorado’s history of water management, from indigenous practices to the modern-day complexities of the Colorado River Compact states and prior appropriation rights.
Upon completion of this course, you will gain a basic understanding of:
Colorado Water and the American West runs February 3 – March 3, 2025. Students must register by February 10.
The four-week course is entirely online and self-paced. You can complete the class anytime within the four weeks the course is available.
The tuition for this course is $475, with a $35 transaction fee. No textbooks are required.
You will receive a certification of completion after you successfully complete all three Water Studies courses.
You may also request to receive a digital badge for each class that will be embedded with the competencies learned. This badge can be added to your resume, LinkedIn page, portfolio, or even share it with your current or future employer.
Instructor, Matthew S. Makley, PhD
Matt is a professor of History at MSU Denver, where he has taught for almost 15 years. Previously he taught at Arizona State University where he earned a Ph.D. in Native American History, and the History of the American West. The University of Nevada Press published Makley’s co-authored book, Cave Rock: Climbers, Courts, and a Washoe Indian Sacred Place, in 2010. His more recent book, The Small Shall be Strong: A History of Lake Tahoe’s Washoe Indians, was published in 2018, by the University of Massachusetts Press.
Matt was born in Lake Tahoe, and has spent his life in California, Nevada, Arizona, and Colorado. This has allowed him to explore the land, its people, its past, and its present. Each journey down a river canyon, up a mountain top, or upon a city street helps inspire and inform his professional practice.
Water in the west has become an area of particular interest for Makley. He recently helped produce a short documentary film about an Iris farm and its relationship with water in Boulder, CO called Long’s Gardens: An Urban Oasis.
The One World One Water Center (OWOW) is a collaboration between Metropolitan State University of Denver and Denver Botanic Gardens. The OWOW Center strives to prepare an educated, empowered, solution-oriented Colorado citizenry to protect and preserve our precious water resources.