Faculty participate in SNRE through affiliation,
part-time appointments, joint appointments or as senior fellows. Dr.
James C. Cato provides leadership to the SNRE in his role
as Senior Associate Dean and Director of the SNRE. Dr.
Stephen R. Humphrey serves
as Director
for Academic
Programs. Research and Outreach/Extension programs are co-ordinated
by Dr. Stephen S. Mulkey,
Director for Research and Outreach/Extension and Ms. Nancy
J. Peterson, Associate Director for Research and
Outreach/Extension.
Click
here to view the SNRE Organization Chart.
Click here to view the Constitution
and Bylaws, ratified as of April 12, 2004.
SNRE Academic
Programs Overview | SNRE
Research and Outreach/Extension Overview
ACADEMIC
PROGRAMS
The mission of the school is to provide interdisciplinary environmental
degree programs with university-wide scope and to develop leaders
with integrated thinking about natural and social systems, ready
to face challenges in natural resources and the environment with
reliable knowledge and good judgment.
The school's undergraduate degree tracks are
science-based, interdisciplinary, and academically rigorous.
The curriculum
spans the range of human knowledge needed to solve complex environmental
problems not amenable to narrowly based solution. It offers access
to 200 courses taught in 56 departments, uniting much of the
University's academic program in a future-oriented liberal science.
The curriculum combines the basic and applied sciences needed
to diagnose problems, the engineering needed to devise solutions,
and the social sciences of human processes and institutions needed
to take action. The degree does not replace the related, more
specialized degrees offered in the University's departments of
engineering, life, and social sciences.
The school's graduate degrees
combine (1) coursework in the basic and applied science of
ecology and the social, political,
and economic sciences with (2) competence in a recognized discipline
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 and a minor for the doctoral
degree. A thesis or dissertation provides first-hand experience
with the creation of reliable knowledge. Alternatively, the
professional (non-thesis) master's option provides rapid, advanced
preparation
for the job market in 3-4 semesters, without a research background.
Master's and doctoral students each take a course in principles
of ecology and one in ecology of a particular type of system.
Students also undertake advanced study of three domains of
thought integral to interdisciplinary ecology: resource-related
natural
sciences, environment-oriented social sciences, and human sustainability
studies. Choices among 150 courses are custom-fitted by the
student and interdisciplinary Supervisory Committee to meet the
student's
specific needs and interests. Course requirements are 36 semester
hours for the master's degree, 38 hours for the non-thesis
master's degree, and an additional 60 hours for the doctoral
degree.
The school operates horizontally across UF's elaborate structure
of academic disciplines. The school has two dually appointed faculty positions which are shared with other Schools. However, the bulk of participating faculty are in existing discipline-centered
departments in other colleges. Approximately 290 members of the
University of Florida faculty in 56 departments of 11 colleges
are formally affiliated with the School of Natural Resources
and Environment.
"[one] who has been educated in a subject
is a good judge of that subject, and [one] who has received
an all-round education is a good judge in general."
- Aristotle, 300 BC
"The history of humanity has always been a race between
learning and disaster."
- H.G. Wells
RESEARCH AND OUTREACH/EXTENSION
Mission:
To lead initiatives to resolve natural resource and environmental
issues by facilitating multi-disciplinary collaborations among
UF faculty and external stakeholders.
Core Services: