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Interdisciplinary Ecology Graduate
Program
--Master of Science and Doctor of Philosophy degrees

Fish-eye aerial photo of 34th Street
and Archer Road, Gainesville FL
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The University of Florida School
of Natural Resources and Environment offers interdisciplinary coursework
in the basic
and applied science of ecology and the social, political, and economic
sciences, leading to M.S. and Ph.D. degrees. Choose from 347
courses, 283 faculty advisors, and 43 participating departments.
Research
areas of ecology graduate students range across natural resource
ecology, environmental policy, and sustainable development.
Environmental problems are fundamentally
human problems and should be understood in terms of human motivations
and actions in a biophysical context. Their solution requires holistic
thinking about dynamic ecological systems and the social, economic,
and political forces driving human action. To this end, the goal
of the Interdisciplinary Ecology graduate program is to provide
advanced training in ecosystems thinking and the main theories
and methodologies of the biophysical and social sciences to foster
integrative approaches to complex real-world problems.
Program of Study
The master's and doctoral degrees in Interdisciplinary Ecology promote
interdisciplinary thinking in natural resources and the environment
by combining (1) coursework in the basic and applied science of ecology
and the social, political, and economic sciences with (2) competence
in an approved program in one of these fields of study. The former
is achieved with a core-course and distribution requirement. The
latter is achieved by extra coursework for the master's degree and
a concentration for the doctoral degree. Requirements are:
» Two courses in advanced ecology (one in principles of ecology and
one in ecology of a particular life zone, region, or group of organisms).
» Electives from a list of courses identified by the faculty, in the
subject areas of resource-related natural science, environment-oriented
social science, and human sustainability studies. This distribution
requirement applies separately to the master's and doctorate.
» To provide a focus in a related discipline: For the master's degree,
6 credit hours of courses beyond the conventional minimum of 30 credit
hours. For the doctoral degree, a concentration (comparable to a
minor).
» A graduate course in statistics plus one (master's) or two (doctoral)
in other methodology.
» An original research thesis (master's) or dissertation (doctoral).
Alternatively, a non-thesis master's option enables students to complete
coursework and enter the job market rapidly, with less research experience.
» A graduate seminar taken in two semesters.
» The degree requirements are 36 credit hours for the master's degree
with thesis, 38 credit hours for the non-thesis master's degree,
and 90 credit hours for the doctoral degree.
About the Degree Program
This degree program is designed for students desiring an interdisciplinary
academic program related to the environment. It does not replace
the University's existing graduate programs in agriculture, architecture,
engineering, life sciences, and social sciences. Students seeking
a more specialized or traditional environment-oriented discipline
should major in the appropriate department.
A graduate student in Interdisciplinary Ecology is hosted in one
of 43 participating departments. The student's academic advisor
is one of the 283 faculty members affiliated with the School
of Natural Resources and Environment. The cross-departmental composition
of
the student's Supervisory Committee and of the curriculum empowers
the student to take an unusually broad, challenging program of study.
The curriculum includes more than 180 graduate courses.
If you need financial help to support your program of study, financial
support in the form of fellowships, teaching or research assistantships,
and tuition payments is available from the university, the school,
and faculty grants on a competitive basis.
When You Apply
To be successfully admitted into the Interdisciplinary
Ecology degree program, several things must happen. You must send
application materials,
a professor affiliated with the college must agree to be your major
advisor, the professor's department chair must agree to host your
activity, and you must be admitted by the school director. Financial
arrangements must be made or understood. After you apply,
the school director and professional advisor will help you make
these arrangements.
Your Statement of Purpose will enable the school
staff to help you identify potential advisors. We will contact potential
advisors
directly, circulate your application, and facilitate your communication.
It is your responsibility to communicate with potential advisors
to determine common interests, identify research opportunities, and
explore the
possibility of close collaboration during your degree work in Interdisciplinary
Ecology.
You may begin your own search for potential advisors, even before
you apply. We suggest that you look up the internet home pages of
appropriate departments and examine the Graduate Catalog. In the
process of narrowing your search, you should correspond directly
with individual faculty members. Once you have identified one or
a small number of potential advisors, you may decide to visit campus
to assess the situation and discuss your plans.
The school accepts applications at
all times and does not have formal deadlines. Knowing how our process
works will help you to
plan, however. Most offers of centrally administered financial support
are for students who begin in Fall semester (August), but students
may begin in Spring semester (January) or Summer semester (May),
because support from faculty grants or other sources may become available
at any time. Students who need financial support and seek to begin
class in Fall semester should apply during the previous fall (August
to December) or January, so that the application file is complete
no later than February 1. The college reviews applications as they
are completed, Starting January 2, and makes offers of admission
as soon as they become feasible. This means that decisions
on
how
to
allocate
the limited
funds available to support students are made starting in the first
week of January, continuing into February. Except for unusual circumstances,
all admission offers
for Fall semester
are made by April 15. Because most offers are made well before that
date, it is to your advantage to apply early.
Role of the Advisor and Supervisory Committee
At the University of Florida, the student has the
responsibility of designing the program of study and proposing it
to the Supervisory
Committee for approval and modification. This program must meet the
requirements of the school, but the student and Supervisory
Committee are empowered to make decisions in the best interest of
the student.
The school requires that, as part of the
application process, the student identify a faculty advisor to provide
guidance
on coursework
and research during the program of study. Prospective students should
discuss common interests and make collaborative arrangements with
an advisor by email (preferred for inital contact
by most faculty members), correspondence, telephone, or in person.
The advisor and student
are responsible
for ensuring
that
adequate
financial
resources are available to support the student's graduate program.
To implement the interdisciplinary nature of the
program, the school requires the student, by the end of the
first semester of graduate
study, to select an academic advisory committee representing more
than one traditional discipline, preferably with no majority of faculty
from a single department. (Students for whom an advisory committee
with
such a single-department majority would be appropriate should apply
instead to the appropriate department.) Only members
of the graduate faculty who are affiliate faculty of the school
may be appointed to a supervisory committee; this list is
updated frequently. The school recommends a slightly larger
supervisory committee than does the Graduate School. The committee
should consist
of three faculty members for a master's degree with a thesis, two
faculty members for a master's degree with no thesis,
and five faculty members for a doctoral degree. Supervisory committees
are nominated by the student's advisor, approved by the college
dean, and appointed by the Dean of the Graduate School. The Supervisory
Committee administers the qualifying examination and defense of thesis,
technical paper, or dissertation. Students seeking joint degrees
have two independent supervisory committees, operating according
to the rules of each program.
“ ..there does not exist a category
of science to which one can give the name applied science.
There are science and the applications of science, bound
together as the fruit to the tree which bears it.” --Louis
Pasteur, 1871
“..it is clear that the major failings
of earth systems are due to the artificial fracturing of
knowledge
in the name of scholarship. The task ahead is to counter
this tendency.”
--David Rapport, 2000
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Last
Modified: 9-Apr-08
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