This is an archived copy of the 2020-2021 catalog. To access the most recent version of the catalog, please visit http://catalog.ufl.edu.
About this Program
- College: Agricultural and Life Sciences
- School: Natural Resources and Environment
- Degrees: Bachelor of Arts | Bachelor of Science
- Credits for Degree: 120
- More Info
To graduate with this major, students must complete all university, college, and major requirements.
School Information
The School of Natural Resources and Environment (SNRE) offers campus-wide, interdisciplinary degree programs at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. SNRE is governed by the SNRE Advisory Board and advised by the SNRE Faculty Advisory Council.
Website
CONTACT
Email | 352.392.9230
P.O. Box 116455
103 BLACK HALL
GAINESVILLE FL 32611-6455
Map
Curriculum
The environmental science degree approaches complex environmental issues with reliable knowledge and interdisciplinary perspectives, and provides the full range of knowledge relevant to complex environmental problems. This includes biological and physical sciences, ethics, economics, policy and law.
The degree prepares graduates for jobs in environmental consulting companies, government environmental offices or land and water management agencies, or non-government organizations. About one-third of environmental science students advance to graduate or professional degree programs. The combination of the school's broad undergraduate degree with a subsequent degree is highly marketable.
The school also offers a combination-degree program offering a bachelor's degree in environmental science and a Master of Science in interdisciplinary ecology.
Core Requirements for Both Degrees
Students take a core of courses, including a general course in environmental science and courses in ethics, ecology, chemistry, earth science, global science, hydrologic systems, and policy and natural resource management.
The core provides 31-32 credits of coursework in physical, biological and social sciences. The B.S. and B.A. tracks are similar. The B.S. includes one course in policy and one in organic chemistry; the B.A. includes two policy courses and no organic chemistry.
Beyond the core requirement, each student selects 21-27 additional credits from electives for the major. During the fourth year, all students take a capstone course where critical thinking skills are developed.
The freshmen and sophomore years lay a foundation of coursework for building later expertise. Students need to know the natural sciences of physics, chemistry and biology, with laboratory experience in each area. Study of microeconomics and macroeconomics are required to understand the human economy. Introductory statistics empowers students to independently evaluate sets of numbers. College algebra and an introduction to calculus enable students to work with rates of change, the heart of ecological science.
Coursework in the core of the major provides a base of common knowledge and experience in subjects essential to environmental science. Then students diverge into electives chosen according to individual interest. Senior-year students return to a common course that develops critical-thinking skills by confronting conflicts of ecological and economic paradigms, synthesizing across physical, biological and social systems, and engaging diverse knowledge and views to help resolve key environmental problems.
The preprofessional courses for the Bachelor of Science prepare students for a more science-oriented major. The requirements for the Bachelor of Arts include less chemistry, physics and mathematics, in preparation for a major that is more focused on the sociopolitical aspects of environmental science.
Code | Title | Credits |
---|---|---|
Required Foundation Course | ||
EVS 3000 & 3000L | Environmental Science and Environmental Science Laboratory | 4 |
Environmental Ethics | ||
Select one: | 3 | |
Agricultural and Natural Resource Ethics (Gen Ed Humanities or Social and Behavioral Sciences) | ||
Ethics and Ecology (Gen Ed Humanities) | ||
Environmental Ethics and Politics | ||
Environmental Ethics (Gen Ed Humanities) | ||
Religion and the Environmental Crisis | ||
Religion Ethics and Nature (Gen Ed Humanities) | ||
Ecology | ||
Select one: | 3-4 | |
Agricultural Ecology | ||
Forest Ecology (Gen Ed Biological Sciences) | ||
Plant Ecology | ||
General Ecology (Gen Ed Biological Sciences) | ||
Organic Chemistry | ||
Select one for the B.S.; B.A. select none: | 0-4 | |
Elementary Organic and Biological Chemistry | ||
Fundamentals of Organic Chemistry | ||
Phase Partitioning in the Environment | ||
Organic Chemistry 1 | ||
Earth and Soil Science | ||
Select one: | 3-4 | |
Physical Geography and Physical Geography Laboratory (Gen Ed Physical Sciences) | ||
Physical Geology (Gen Ed Physical Sciences, B.S. only) | ||
Environmental and Engineering Geology (Gen Ed Physical Sciences) | ||
Historical Geology (Gen Ed Physical Sciences; B.S. only) | ||
Introduction to Soils in the Environment and Introduction to Soils in the Environment Laboratory (Gen Ed Physical Sciences) | ||
Soil, Water and Land Use (Gen Ed Physical Sciences) 1 | ||
Global Systems | ||
Select one: | 3 | |
Extreme Weather | ||
Climatology (Gen Ed Physical Sciences) | ||
Oceans and Global Climate Change | ||
Introduction to Oceanography | ||
Hydrologic Systems | ||
Select one: | 3-4 | |
Environmental Hydrology: Principles and Issues | ||
Forest Water Resources | ||
Principles of Geographic Hydrology (Gen Ed Physical Sciences) | ||
Hydrogeology and Human Affairs | ||
Wetlands | ||
Water Resource Sustainability | ||
Environmental Policy | ||
Select one for the B.S.; B.A. select two: | 3-6 | |
Agricultural and Natural Resource Law | ||
International Development Policy (Gen Ed Social and Behavioral Sciences) | ||
Natural Resource Policy and Economics | ||
Politics of the World Economy | ||
International Institutions (Gen Ed Social and Behavioral Sciences and International) | ||
Natural Resource Management | ||
Select one: | 3 | |
Environment, Food and Society | ||
Agricultural and Environmental Quality | ||
Energy and Environment (Gen Ed Physical Sciences; B.A. only) | ||
Introduction to Fishery Science | ||
Forests, Conservation and People | ||
Foundations of Natural Resources and Conservation | ||
Forest Economics and Management (Gen Ed Physical Sciences) | ||
Park Management | ||
Principles of Plant Science | ||
Soil, Water and Land Use (Gen Ed Physical Sciences) 1 | ||
Special Topics in Soil and Water Science (Forest and Soil Ecosystem Services) | ||
Required Capstone Course | ||
EVS 4021 | Critical Thinking in Environmental Science | 3 |
Total Credits | 28-38 |
1 | If taken from one group, this course does not satisfy the requirement for a course from the other group. |
Preprofessional Requirements for Both Degrees
Each student must fulfill preprofessional requirements that differ slightly for the B.S. and B.A. degrees. These consist of courses in chemistry, physics, biology, calculus, statistics and economics, totaling 39-46 (typically 43) credits for the B.S. and 31-39 (typically 34) credits for the B.A.
In addition to the preprofessional requirements, all students are responsible for completing the university's general education and the writing requirement.
Certain preprofessional requirements simultaneously satisfy 18-21 credits (depending on courses selected) of the general education mathematics, physics, biology, and social and behavioral science. Remaining general education requirements include 15-18 credits (depending on preprofessional courses taken) in composition, humanities and social and behavioral sciences.
The 12 credits of writing requirements include 3-12 credits taken for general education and preprofessional requirements, depending on selections. The six credits of math requirements are satisfied by preprofessional requirements.
For efficiency, freshmen should seek to maximize overlap of preprofessional requirements with general education and the writing requirement, as outlined below:
- Science preprofessional requirements satisfy up to 12 credits of physical and biological sciences (the basic nine-credit requirement plus the variable three credits from a category). Students should allocate the variable three credits to physical and biological sciences to reduce the humanities requirement from nine to six credits.
- Economics preprofessional requirements satisfy up to eight of the nine-credit social and behavioral sciences requirement (eight if satisfied with ECO 2013 and ECO 2023; four if satisfied with AEB 3103).
- Policy preprofessional requirement (POS 2041) for B.A. students satisfies the remaining social and behavioral sciences requirement. B.S. students can satisfy the remaining social and behavioral sciences requirement with certain core courses, under ethics (AEB 4126) and policy.
- Satisfying the preceding requirements leaves 18 credits: six for humanities, three for composition and nine for writing.
- Students should take humanities, composition and writing courses that also satisfy the three-credit international studies requirement, such as LIT 2110 or LIT 2120, and the three-credit diversity requirement with a REL 2388 or WST 2611 overlap.
Bachelor of Arts
The Bachelor of Arts degree in environmental science focuses on the social sciences that connect the natural sciences and engineering to society.
Electives in the areas of policy, law, public administration and resource economics make this the preferred specialization for students interested in advancing to law school or to the policy aspects of environmental consulting and public agency work.
Critical Tracking records each student’s progress in courses that are required for progress toward each major. Please note the critical-tracking requirements below on a per-semester basis.
Equivalent critical-tracking courses as determined by the State of Florida Common Course Prerequisites may be used for transfer students.
Semester 1
- Complete 2 of 9 critical-tracking courses, excluding labs: BSC 2005/BSC 2005L, CHM 2045/CHM 2045L, CHM 2046/CHM 2046L, ECO 2013, ECO 2023, MAC 1147, PHY 2020 or PHY 2004, POS 2041, STA 2023
- 2.0 GPA required for all critical-tracking courses
- 2.0 UF GPA required
Semester 2
- Complete 2 additional critical-tracking courses, excluding labs
- 2.0 GPA required for all critical-tracking courses
- 2.0 UF GPA required
Semester 3
- Complete 2 additional critical-tracking courses, excluding labs
- 2.0 GPA required for all critical-tracking courses
- 2.0 UF GPA required
Semester 4
- Complete 2 additional critical-tracking courses, excluding labs
- 2.0 GPA required for all critical-tracking courses
- 2.0 UF GPA required
Semester 5
- Complete all 9 critical-tracking courses, including labs
- 2.0 GPA required for all critical-tracking courses
- 2.0 UF GPA required
Semester 6
- Complete at least 2 core classes
- 2.0 upper division GPA required
- 2.0 UF GPA required
Semester 7
- Complete at least 2 core classes
- 2.0 upper division GPA required
- 2.0 UF GPA required
Semester 8
- Complete EVS 4021 (capstone) and the remaining courses for the degree
- 2.0 upper division GPA required
- 2.0 UF GPA required
To remain on track, students must complete the appropriate critical-tracking courses, which appear in bold. These courses must be completed by the terms as listed above in the Critical Tracking criteria.
This semester plan represents an example progression through the major. Actual courses and course order may be different depending on the student's academic record and scheduling availability of courses. Prerequisites still apply.
Semester One | Credits | |
---|---|---|
BSC 2005 & 2005L |
Biological Sciences and Laboratory in Biological Sciences (Critical Tracking; State Core Gen Ed Biological and Physical Sciences) |
4 |
MAC 1147 | Precalculus Algebra and Trigonometry (Critical Tracking; State Core Gen Ed Mathematics) 1 | 4 |
Quest 1 (Gen Ed Humanities) | 3 | |
Gen Ed Composition (according to placement) | 3 | |
Credits | 14 | |
Semester Two | ||
ECO 2013 | Principles of Macroeconomics (Critical Tracking; State Core Gen Ed Social and Behavioral Sciences) | 4 |
STA 2023 | Introduction to Statistics 1 (Critical Tracking; Gen Ed Mathematics) | 3 |
State Core Gen Ed Composition; Writing Requirement | 3 | |
State Core Gen Ed Humanities with Diversity or International | 3 | |
Elective | 3 | |
Credits | 16 | |
Semester Three | ||
CHM 2045 & 2045L |
General Chemistry 1 and General Chemistry 1 Laboratory (Critical Tracking; Gen Ed Biological Sciences and Physical Sciences) 2 |
4 |
ECO 2023 | Principles of Microeconomics (Critical Tracking; Gen Ed Social and Behavioral Sciences) | 4 |
Select one: | 3 | |
Introduction to Principles of Physics (Critical Tracking) 3 | ||
Applied Physics 1 (Critical Tracking; Gen Ed Physical Sciences) 3 | ||
Gen Ed International or Diversity | 3 | |
Credits | 14 | |
Semester Four | ||
CHM 2046 & 2046L |
General Chemistry 2 and General Chemistry 2 Laboratory (Critical Tracking; Gen Ed Biological Sciences and Physical Sciences) |
4 |
EVS 3000 & 3000L |
Environmental Science and Environmental Science Laboratory |
4 |
POS 2041 | American Federal Government (Critical Tracking; Gen Ed Social and Behavioral Sciences) | 3 |
Elective | 3-4 | |
Credits | 14-15 | |
Semester Five | ||
Earth and soil science elective 4 | 3-4 | |
Ecology elective 4 | 3-4 | |
Environmental ethics elective 4 | 3 | |
Environmental policy elective 4 | 3-4 | |
Elective | 3 | |
Credits | 15-18 | |
Semester Six | ||
Environmental law elective 4 | 3-4 | |
Environmental policy elective 4 | 3-4 | |
Global systems elective 4 | 3 | |
Hydrologic systems elective 4 | 3-4 | |
Natural resource management elective 4 | 3 | |
Credits | 15-18 | |
Semester Seven | ||
Environmental policy/public administration elective 4 | 3-4 | |
Environmental policy/public administration elective 4 | 3 | |
Resource economics elective 4 | 3-4 | |
Electives for the major 4 | 6 | |
Credits | 15-17 | |
Semester Eight | ||
EVS 4021 | Critical Thinking in Environmental Science (Critical Tracking) | 3 |
Electives for the major 4 | 9 | |
Electives | 5 | |
Credits | 17 | |
Total Credits | 120 |
1 | If students take MAC 1140 and MAC 1114 in place of MAC 1147, the extra credits count toward the degree as electives. |
2 | If CHM 1025 was taken in preparation for CHM 2045, the extra credits count toward the degree. |
3 | These courses may be used as substitutes: |
4 | From master list. |
Approved Electives | 9 courses | 27 credits
Students can substitute appropriate graduate courses for electives, with approval of the school and permission of the instructor. To substitute a 5000-level course or higher, the student must have senior standing and a minimum junior/senior-level GPA of 3.0.
Code | Title | Credits |
---|---|---|
Environmental Law | ||
Select one: | ||
AEB 4085 | Agricultural Risk Management and the Law | 3 |
AEB 4123 | Agricultural and Natural Resource Law | 3 |
BUL 4310 | The Legal Environment of Business | 4 |
Environmental Policy/Public Administration | ||
Select two: | ||
AEB 4283 | International Development Policy 1 | 3 |
PAD 3003 | Introduction to Public Administration | 3 |
POS 4931 | Special Topics (Environmental Politics in the Global South) | 3 |
PUP 4224 | Florida Environmental Politics | 3 |
Resource Economics | ||
AEB 3450 | Introduction to Natural Resource and Environmental Economics 1 | 3 |
ECP 3302 | Environmental Economics and Resource Policy | 4 |
Other Electives | ||
Select five: | ||
ACG 2021 | Introduction to Financial Accounting | 4 |
AEB 3133 | Principles of Agribusiness Management | 3 |
AEB 3300 | Agricultural and Food Marketing | 3 |
AEB 4085 | Agricultural Risk Management and the Law | 3 |
AEB 4123 | Agricultural and Natural Resource Law | 3 |
AEB 4242 | International Trade Policy in Agriculture | 3 |
AEB 4283 | International Development Policy (Gen Ed Social and Behavioral Sciences) 1 | 3 |
AEB 4343 | International Agribusiness Marketing | 3 |
AEC 3030C | Effective Oral Communication | 3 |
AEC 3033C | Research and Business Writing in Agricultural and Life Sciences (Writing Requirement) | 3 |
AEC 3073 | Intercultural Communication | 3 |
AEC 3414 | Leadership Development | 3 |
AEC 4052 | Communication Campaign Strategies in Agricultural and Life Sciences | 3 |
AEC 4500 | Program Development and Evaluation | 3 |
ALS 3133 | Agricultural and Environmental Quality | 3 |
AMH 4930 | History Research Seminar: US (Florida Environmental History) | 3 |
ANT 3141 | Development of World Civilization | 3 |
ANT 3514C | Introduction to Biological Anthropology | 4 |
ANT 4403 | Environment and Cultural Behavior | 3 |
BOT 2011C | Plant Diversity | 4 |
BOT 3151C | Local Flora of North Florida | 3 |
DEP 3053 | Developmental Psychology | 3 |
ECO 3101 | Intermediate Microeconomics | 4 |
ECO 3203 | Intermediate Macroeconomics | 4 |
ECO 3532 | Public Choice | 4 |
EDF 3110 | Human Growth and Development | 3 |
EDF 4430 | Measurement and Evaluation in Education | 3 |
EES 4316 | Industrial Ecology | 3 |
ENC 3250 | Professional Communication | 3 |
ENC 3310 | Advanced Exposition | 3 |
ENC 3312 | Advanced Argumentative Writing | 3 |
ENY 3030C | Insect Field Biology | 3 |
EVR 3323 | Introduction to Ecosystem Restoration | 4 |
EVS 4949 | Environmental Science Internship | 1-3 |
FIN 3403 | Business Finance | 4 |
FNR 3131C | Dendrology/Forest Plants | 3 |
FNR 4070C | Environmental Education Program Development | 3 |
FNR 4343C | Forest Water Resources | 3 |
FNR 4623C | Integrated Natural Resource Management | 3 |
FNR 4660 | Natural Resource Policy and Economics | 3 |
FOR 3202 | Society and Natural Resources | 3 |
FOR 3214 | Fire Ecology and Management | 2 |
FOR 3214L | Fire Ecology and Management Laboratory | 1 |
FOR 4664 | Sustainable Ecotourism Development | 3 |
FOS 4731 | Government Regulations and the Food Industry | 2 |
FYC 3401 | Introduction to Social and Economic Perspectives on the Community | 3 |
GEO 3315 | Geography of Crop Plants | 3 |
GEO 3352 | The Human Footprint on Landscape | 3 |
GEO 3427 | Plants, Health and Spirituality | 3 |
GEO 3502 | Economic Geography | 3 |
GIS 3043 | Foundations of Geographic Information Systems | 4 |
INR 4035 | Rich and Poor Nations in the International System | 3 |
INR 4350 | International Environmental Relations | 3 |
JOU 3101 | Reporting | 3 |
JOU 4308 | Magazine and Feature Writing | 3 |
LEI 3120 | Introduction to Outdoor Recreation and Parks | 3 |
LEI 4321 | Ecotourism | 3 |
MAN 3025 | Principles of Management | 4 |
MMC 2100 | Writing for Mass Communication | 3 |
POS 2112 | American State and Local Government | 3 |
POS 4674 | Political Change and Legal Development | 3 |
POT 3503 | Environmental Ethics and Politics | 3 |
SWS 4245 | Water Resource Sustainability 1 | 3 |
SWS 4550 | Soils, Water and Public Health | 3 |
SWS 4932 | Special Topics in Soil and Water Science (Forest and Soil Ecosystem Services) | 3 |
SYA 4930 | Special Study (Social Institutions and Environment) | 3 |
SYD 3410 | Urban Sociology | 3 |
SYD 4020 | Population | 3 |
SYD 4021 | U.S. Population Issues | 3 |
SYO 4530 | Social Inequality | 3 |
URP 4000 | Preview of Urban and Regional Planning | 3 |
URP 4273 | Survey of Planning Information Systems | 3 |
WIS 4523 | Human Dimensions of Natural Resource Conservation | 3 |
ZOO 4205C | Invertebrate Biodiversity | 4 |
ZOO 4307C | Vertebrate Biodiversity | 4 |
ZOO 4403C | Marine Biology (counts as one or two courses) | 4 |
ZOO 4472C | Avian Biology | 4 |
1 | If this course was taken to fulfill the core requirement, it cannot fulfill the elective requirement. Students must select a substitution from the electives for the major. |
Environmental science is the science of humanity's role in natural systems, the basis of our economy. This program accesses courses university-wide and provides numerous opportunities for international study. Students will acquire reliable knowledge and interdisciplinary perspectives of complex environmental issues, gaining the full range of knowledge relevant to a professional understanding of complex environmental problems in the biological and physical sciences, ethics, economics, policy and law.
Before Graduating Students Must
- Complete at least one course in each of the foundation areas.
- Complete requirements for the baccalaureate degree, as determined by faculty.
Students in the Major Will Learn to
Student Learning Outcomes (SLOs)
Content
- Acquire knowledge and demonstrate understanding of basic terminology, concepts, methodologies and theories in the physical and biological sciences that describe environmental systems.
- Acquire knowledge of essential concepts in the social sciences that describe human activity in the environment.
Critical Thinking
- Apply the scientific method to develop reasoned solutions to environmental problems.
Communication
- Communicate knowledge, ideas and reasoning clearly, effectively and objectively in both written and oral forms.
Curriculum Map
I = Introduced; R = Reinforced; A = Assessed
Courses | SLO 1 | SLO 2 | SLO 3 | SLO 4 |
---|---|---|---|---|
EVS 3000 and EVS 3000L | I | I | I | I |
EVS 4021 | A | A | A | A |
Earth and Soil Sciences | R | |||
Ecology | R | R | R | |
Environmental Ethics | R | R | R | |
Environmental Policy | R | R | R | |
Global Systems | R | |||
Hydrologic Systems | R | |||
Human Dimensions | R | R | R | |
Natural Resource Management | R | R | R |
Assessment Types
- Oral presentation or written essay