- Academics
- Overview
- Catalog
- General Education
- Majors & Minors
- All Majors & Minors
- Art
- Biology
- Business
- Business Management
- Chemistry
- Ecological Restoration
- Education
- Education
- Faculty Profiles
- Broad Field Science Education Major (B.S)
- Broad Field Social Studies Education Major (B.S.)
- Elementary/Middle Education (Middle Childhood to Early Adolescence) Major (B.S.)
- Secondary (Early Adolescence to Adolescence) Education Major (B.S.)
- Education Department Website
- Career Opportunities
- Photo Gallery
- Schedule a Visit
- Environmental Geosciences
- Fisheries Ecology & Management
- Geology
- Humanities
- History
- Humanity and Nature Studies
- Mathematical Science
- Meteorology
- Music
- Native American Studies
- Natural Resources
- Outdoor Education
- Pre-Professional Programs
- Public Affairs Management
- Sociology and Social Justice
- Sustainable Community Development
- Spanish Program
- Water Science
- Wildlife Ecology & Management
- Writing and English
- Course Offerings
- Off-Campus Programs
- Academic Calendar
- Faculty Profiles
- Advising
- Accreditation
- Registrar
- Policy and Procedures
- Lecture Series
- Library
- Admissions
- Overview
- Admissions Checklist
- Application for Admission
- Financial Aid
- Tuition Match - Access Guarantee
- Affordability Tips
- Parents
- Transfer Students
- International Students
- High School Counselors
- Alumni Success Stories
- Admissions Staff
- Visits and Events
- Request Information
- Student Life
- Athletics
- Sustainability
- Sigurd Olson Environmental Institute
- Overview
- LoonWatch
- History
- Nature Writing Awards
- Lake Superior Binational Forum
- Chequamegon Bay Area Partnership
- Student Opportunities
- SOEI Staff
- Support the SOEI
- Contact Us
- Visit the SOEI
- ARELab
Student Life
- Campus Life
- Residential Life
- Learning Outside the Classroom
- Career Education Center
- Student Support
- First-Year Students
- Student Resources
- Get Involved
- Student Life Staff
- Photo Gallery
- Video Gallery

Erin S.
Appleton, WI

Check out videos to see some of what it’s like to be a student here. Watch Videos
Part of Something Great.
Student Life, that's the living and learning that takes place outside of the classroom and it's a big part of your college experience. It includes where you live, how you make connections, and that hard-to-define essence, or culture that separates Northland from other colleges. Northland College has its own ambience. We chalk it up to the presence of Lake Superior and northern forests, the friendly attitude of your professors and peers, and the companionship you feel when people call you by name. The Northland "style" takes on the spirit and character of each one of us, which strengthens our community. It takes a whole community to graduate a student. You might be thinking, "What kind of student chooses Northland?" Well, all kinds. We have athletes and academics and activists (sometimes in the same person). Explore all the dimensions of what it means to be a Northland student by browsing through our guides and services.
Michele Meyer
Dean of Student Life
Oct 11, 2012, Oct 14, 2012, Oct 15, 2012, Oct 16, 2012, Oct 17, 2012, Oct 18, 2012, Oct 19, 2012, Oct 20, 2012
SOEI
Timber Wolf Awareness Week
Oct 11, 2012, Oct 14, 2012, Oct 15, 2012, Oct 16, 2012, Oct 17, 2012, Oct 18, 2012, Oct 19, 2012, Oct 20, 2012
Location Information
SOEI
With a public presentation on October 17
Adrian Wydevan, DNR Carnivore Specialist
Topic: “Ecology, History and Management of Wolves in Wisconsin, including the new Wolf Hunting Season”
Thursday, Oct. 17 7:00 pm SOEI
Adrian P. Wydeven was born in the Netherlands in 1952, and his family immigrated to the U.S. and Fox Valley region of northeast Wisconsin in 1959. Adrian grew up reading stories of the last wolves disappearing from the state, and the possibility that there might be one or 2 loners left roaming along the Wisconsin/Michigan border. Adrian obtained BS degrees in Biology and Wildlife Management at University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point in 1976, and a MS degree in Wildlife Ecology from Iowa State University at Ames in 1979. His master’s research focused on food habitats, habitat use, and competitive interactions of elk with other mammalian herbivores. From 1980 through 1982, he worked as an assistant wildlife area manager in northeast Missouri. Adrian returned to Wisconsin in 1982 to work for the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources as a wildlife manager. Over the next 8 years he worked at stations in Oshkosh, Appleton, and Shawano. In 1990 Adrian began work as a non-gam! e biologist in Park Falls, heading up the state wolf recovery program, and other programs on non-game wildlife in northern Wisconsin. His title was changed to mammalian ecologist in 1993, as his focus became mainly mammals, especially the carnivores. Since August 2012 his title has changed to Carnivore Specialist in Wildlife Management in the DNR. Along with heading up the state wolf program, Adrian has been involved with monitoring and management of American martens, surveys for lynx, investigations of cougar observations, surveys of other carnivores, serving on the state wolf, furbearer, elk, marten advisory committees, as well as other state and federal wildlife advisory committees. Adrian lives near Cable, Wisconsin, with his wife Sarah Boles, a professor at Northland College.








