|
The
MS program requires a minimum of 24 semester hours of graduate course
work and 6 semester hours of thesis research and writing for a total
of 30 semester hours. This degree program allows students to obtain
a specialized advanced degree in any of the subject areas within
the Arthur Temple College of Forestry (ATCOF), including Forest
Management, Forest Economics, Recreation Management, Resource Interpretation,
Wildlife Management, Agroforestry, Wood Science, Urban Forestry,
Forest Entomology, Hydrology, Forest Ecology, Silviculture, Soil
Science and Spatial Science. The M.S. degree program is appropriate
for students who have an undergraduate degree in forestry or a related
field and also for students with degrees in other areas. Background
work may include courses in each of the following areas: Forest
Biology, Forest Resources Inventory, Social Forestry, Forest Ecosystem
Management and Forest Resources Administration.
The
MF is a non-thesis cooperative program between the Colleges of Forestry
and Business and requires a minimum of 38 semester credit hours
of graduate course work. This degree is intended for professional
foresters with at least five years of experience who wish to further
their education in the areas of Business, Forest Management or Forest
Economics. A final comprehensive exam (either written, or oral or
both) is required during the last semester enrollment.
Immediately
after admission and enrollment for the first semester of course
work, the student must consult his/her major professor and develop
an advisory committee. This committee will consist of no fewer than
three members of the graduate faculty; two must be from the ATCOF.
The advisory committee, chaired by the major professor, will then
assist the student in the development of a degree plan that includes
the required background courses and the graduate course work needed
for the field of interest of the student. This degree plan should
be filed with the associate dean during the first semester of course
work. Subsequent duties of the advisory committee are to assist
the student in the development of a formal research proposal (applicable
only to M.S. students) that should be completed prior to initiating
the research activity and to serve as the examining committee. It
is the student's responsibility to insure that all paperwork is
completed prior to deadlines as stipulated in the university calendar.
The proposed MSRI program has been approved by
the SFA Board of Regents. Final approval by the Texas Higher Education
Coordinating Board is under review.
Once finalized, this web-based MS
degree in Resource Interpretation program will enable interpreters
to apply the philosophy and techniques, the curriculum and training,
and the certification review process of the National Park Service's
Interpretive Development Program (IDP) to their graduate studies
in interpretation.

Steps
for a successful master's program (Adobe pdf file)
Master of Science (MS)
Degree Plan
Master of Forestry
(MF) Degree Plan
Master of Science in Resource Interpretation Degree Plan
Master of Science in Spatial Science Degree Plan
Spatial
Science Minor Form
Petition
to Change Graduate Degree Plan
Thesis Proposal Approval
Form
Admission to Candidacy
Application for
Thesis Examination
Report of Thesis
Examination
Senior
Year Overlap Graduate Program*
Download
a free Acrobat
Reader program to read the pdf files.
Return to the Top
|