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Degree
Options: Master of Environmental Science
The educational focus of the MEM degree, as with the Master of Science and PhD degree programs also offered through ESSP, is thematic, emphasizing practical experience, student-centered learning, integration of knowledge across traditional disciplinary boundaries, and active dialogue both in and outside the classroom. While the focus of a student’s education and research following any of the three degree offerings of the new program is at the intersection between science and human needs and values, the Master of Environmental Management (MEM) degree is specifically designed for students wishing to enter into fields related to natural resource management and policy for either private or public sectors. It is not intended primarily to be an intermediate step toward a PhD, although students who earn an MEM is adequately prepared for doctoral work in many disciplines. Since ESSP's proposed PhD program is a mentoring, highly individualized one, students who enter the MEM track with the intent it will be terminal but subsequently decide they wish to continue in the doctoral program should notify their advisory committee as soon as that decision is reached; in any case, certainly before they begin an internship.
The mission builds on the vision of "learning communities" consisting of people whose decisions determine the environmental and economic health of the northern Great Plains, plus the scientists, engineers, social scientists, educators, lawyers, and others whose research is dedicated to supporting those decisions. The ESSP program encourages people from diverse backgrounds and perspectives to work collectively on relevant problems with the common goal of serving humankind's needs for a sustainable and prosperous future. The objective is not solely to integrate research into the classroom; rather, it is to integrate the classroom into the world. The major theme of the program is sustainability, defined as meeting human needs and values while preserving the planet's life-support systems. Five major concentrations, listed below, support the central theme. Concentrations:
Objectives of the proposed program include:
What makes this program innovative and distinct from any existing ones is that the University becomes the catalyst for changes that lead to sustainability [Christopher Uhl and Amy Anderson, "Green Destiny: Universities Leading the Way to a Sustainable Future," BioScience 51, January 2001, 36]. The Upper Midwest Aerospace Consortium has initiated a trend toward that goal with some demonstrable success. An intent of the degree programs is to institutionalize that process so it can be perpetuated by future generations. MS Degree: read more >> PhD Degree: read more >> << back to Degree Options page |