New Graduate Certificate in Environmental Studies
Environmental Studies
Graduate Certificate
(Minimum of 12 credits required)
Program coordinator:
Stacey Balkan, Associate Professor, English & Environmental Humanities
The Graduate Certificate in Environmental Studies introduces students to the intersecting fields of Environmental and Climate Science, Environmental Humanities (inclusive of Literature, Languages, and Linguistics) and Environmental Social Science (inclusive of Political Science, Anthropology, Sociology, History, and Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies). Careers in Environmental Journalism, Environmental Consulting, Climate Change Mitigation, and Postsecondary Education in Environmental Humanities and Environmental Studies require interdisciplinary study across the Humanities, Geosciences, and Social Sciences; and the expanding academic disciplines of Environmental and Energy Humanities, which recognize that our environmental dilemmas are fundamentally problems of ethics and political power, demand fluency in these expanding fields of study.
The graduate certificate in Environmental Studies provides an academic forum for understanding environmental issues in their historical and material contexts. Students may earn this certificate by completing 12 credits (four courses) in relevant disciplines.
Admission to this certificate program is open to students currently enrolled in graduate programs at Florida Atlantic University as well as to non-degree seeking students. For degree-seeking students, credits earned for graduate degree programs may also count for the certificate if approved by advisors in both programs. Applications for the Graduate Certificate should be submitted to the Coordinator of the Environmental Studies Certificate Program upon successful completion of the required courses with a minimum grade of “B” in each course.
Learn more here.
Latest Student Announcements
- RSVP for a lecture by award-winning science journalist Carl Zimmer: Is Artificial Intelligence Going To Figure Out Life Itself?Thursday, Nov. 21 at 5:30 p.m. In this talk, Carl Zimmer draws on his reporting for The New York Times and in books like Life Itself to take his audience on a mind-bending trip into the not-so-distant future, when computers… Read more ›
- Off the Page: Events for Readers and Writers with author Steven HaleJoin us for the next Off the Page Reading Series event, which is both a celebration of the latest issue of Don’t Shake the Spoon, a literary magazine of writing by folks incarcerated in South Florida prisons and a reading by… Read more ›
- Fall Research Poster SymposiumThursday, Nov. 21; 2 – 4 p.m.; SR149, Jupiter Campus. Coffee and light refreshments. Featuring research from Morton Research Fellows and undergraduate and high school researchers on the Jupiter Campus. Hosted by Jupiter Office of Academic Affairs and Wilkes Honors… Read more ›
- Neuroscience Seminar Series with Carmen Vivar, Ph.D.Join Carmen Vivar, Ph.D., Professor, Department of Physiology, Biophysics and Neuroscience, CINVESTAV, Mexico for a presentation on Running From Stress: The Role of Serotonin in the Hippocampus, Tuesday, Nov. 26, at 4 p.m. in MC-22, Room 101, Jupiter Campus. Register here.
- RSVP Lecture With Award-Winning Science Journalist Carl Zimmer: Is Artificial Intelligence Going To Figure Out Life Itself?Thursday, Nov. 21, 5:30 – 7:30 p.m.; Barry and Florence Friedberg Auditorium, Osher Lifelong Learning Institute, Boca Raton campus. RSVP here.
- Celebrate a Game Changer: MRI Research and Discovery CenterAttend the grand opening of Florida Atlantic’s newest game changer for human health research – the MRI Research and Discovery Center. RSVP to attend on Thursday, Nov. 21 at 2 p.m. at the Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine Learn… Read more ›