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The Department
of Natural Resource Sciences is well-positioned to serve the educational
needs of students with an interest in a wide variety of natural
resource and environmental fields, issues and career aspirations.
Students with strong interests in areas such as:
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Forest
resources and sustainable management of forest ecosystems for
a broad range of social, economic, and ecological values;
- Wildlife biology, ecology, and
management;
- Wildlife biology - Pre-Vet School
option;
- Ecology of natural ecosystems;
- Biological diversity and conservation
biology;
- Ecological restoration;
- Watershed and aquatic ecosystem
management and improvement; and
- Social dimensions of natural resources,
including policy, pre-law and pre-law enforcement are strongly
encouraged to further explore the educational opportunities provided
by our Department.
Career options are diverse, including
work with state/federal land management or regulatory agencies, municipal
or county government, public interest groups, natural resource industries,
private land management, the consulting industry, or research/development
in either the private or public sectors. We
are a moderate-sized department with 20 permanent faculty,
17 of whom are stationed on the Pullman campus. Of these faculty,
15 currently contribute to our undergraduate and graduate teaching
programs. Over the past 5 years the Department's student body has
varied from about 130 to 180 undergraduate students and 20 to 30
graduate students each year, which creates very desirable student
to faculty ratios. Therefore, we are able to emphasize high
quality, individualized student advising and career mentoring.
Our programs also emphasize field
and other forms of experiential learning; and provision of opportunities
for student professional growth (including several professionally-oriented
student clubs/organizations). Laboratory and several field teaching/research
facilities of the department (such as the Bear Conservation Facility,
E.H. Steffen Center, Small Mammal Research Facility, and Colockum
Multiple Use Unit described elsewhere in this website) also provide
students invaluable opportunities for hands-on, experiential learning.
  
WSU's close proximity to the University
of Idaho (8 miles to the east) has created exceptional opportunities
for close cooperation in teaching between the Department of Natural
Resources at WSU and the College of Natural Resources at UI.
A large number of natural resource courses are currently cross-listed
to the benefit of students at both institutions. For natural resource
science students at WSU, this cooperation results in expanded access
to additional courses and faculty in such fields as forestry, wildlife,
and related specialty areas (e.g., Conservation Biology; Landscape
& Restoration Ecology) that provides significant opportunities
for educational enrichment. This environment of inter-university
educational cooperation is quite unique among major university natural
resource programs.
Because all disciplinary fields relevant
to natural resource sciences (wildlife, forestry, and related ecological
and social science subject areas) are integrated at the department
level at WSU, we are well positioned to provide students with a
diverse, interdisciplinary education in natural resources that is
essential to understanding and managing natural ecosystems. Such
disciplinary integration lays at the core of our educational philosophy
at WSU.
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Undergraduate
Programs Overview: |
The Department believes in ongoing
evolution of its undergraduate curricula to keep current with changing
student and professional needs as we begin a new millennium. As
a result of curricular revision in 2004, the Department offers an
expanded array of educational opportunities to baccalaureate students
that well-exemplifies the diversity of career opportunities in natural
resource sciences. The Department offers a single undergraduate
degree (B.S. in Natural Resource Sciences), under which students
may select and pursue one or more majors (Forestry, Wildlife Ecology,
and Natural Resources). Each major then provides opportunities for
further specialization via specific Options. The structure
of our undergraduate curriculum is summarized below.
B.S.
in NATURAL RESOURCE SCIENCES:
|
Forestry
Major |
Wildlife
Major |
Natural
Resource Major |
with Options in:
Forest
Management
Directed
Studies * |
with Options in:
Pre-Vet
School
Directed Studies
|
with Options in: Policy
Wetland/Aquatic
Resources
Directed
Studies * |
* Directed Studies Options are
individually designed to meet unique student needs; Minor
Studies Options involve completing a specified Minor in another
field. |
Under the above curricula and irrespective
of Major/Option, all students pursuing the B.S. in Natural Resource
Sciences will take a common array of foundational courses in biological,
physical and social sciences, mathematics, communications and arts/humanities.
They also will take a common core of natural resource science courses
designed to provide both breadth and integration among natural resource
disciplines. Thereafter, greater and more specific educational depth
is provided by required upper-division coursework within each Major
and Option. The structure of the curricula are such that it is very
feasible (with some additional time) to pursue either dual natural
resource majors or a Major in one and Minor in another natural resource
field. The Forestry Major is fully accredited by the Society of
American Foresters.
Additional
detail on the above undergraduate curricula may be found in the
Bachelor Degrees section of this website.
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Graduate
Programs Overview: |
The Department of Natural Resource
Sciences offers a wide range of graduate educational opportunities
designed to meet the following broad goals:
- To couple an atmosphere of scholarship
with research and educational opportunities that will produce
people capable of responding to the complex issues of understanding,
management, use and protection of natural resources,
- To foster the pursuit of research
in the natural resource sciences that will lead to better understanding
of the ecological, social and economic relationships inherent
to natural resource issues, and
- To produce scientists/practicing
professionals better prepared to assume leadership roles in educational,
research, management and/or other careers related to natural resources
and the environment.
We offer programs of graduate study leading
to both the M.S. and Ph.D degrees. Two degrees are available
at the Master's level:
- The M.S. in Natural Resource Sciences,
which is a thesis-based degree emphasizing the conduct of original
research by the student.
- The M.S. in Natural Resources,
which is a non-thesis, more coursework-intensive degree with options
in forestry, wildlife, and related areas of emphasis, such as
conservation biology and landscape and restoration ecology.
Both of the above degrees provide students
advanced education in principles and applications of natural resource
sciences, with the former (thesis) degree designed to provide greater
emphasis on research-derived education and the latter (non-thesis)
degree designed to provide greater opportunity for coursework-derived
education. The latter (non-thesis) degree also has particular value
for professionals seeking to upgrade their education. At
the doctoral level, the Department collaborates with the WSU Program
in Environmental Science and Regional Planning to offer the joint,
interdepartmental Ph.D. in Environmental and Natural Resource Sciences.
This degree requires original research leading to a dissertation,
and coursework supporting desired competences in five areas of advanced
knowledge: 1) ecosystems, 2) research methods, 3) issues and ethics,
4) interdisciplinary cognizance, and 5) subject area of doctoral
research. This doctoral degree is designed to offer students the
opportunity to attain an important, interdisciplinary terminal degree
that integrates among the various science fields related to environment
and natural resources. Graduates will be particularly well-prepared
to assume important roles in academia, other research organizations,
or advanced work in natural resource ecology and environmental management.
For
all of the above graduate degrees, students may pursue individualized
programs with specific educational/subject matter focus in a wide
array of physical, biological, ecological, managerial and social
science fields. Students are not required to have a prior degree
in a natural resource field to be considered for admission. The
Graduate Degrees section of this website should be consulted for
further, more detailed information on these opportunities for advanced
education.
©
2000
Department
of Natural Resource Sciences
Washington
State University
PO
Box 646410
Pullman,
WA 99164-6410
Phone:
509-335-6166
Fax:
509-335-7862
Last updated February 2006
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