S.J. and Jessie E. Quinney College of Natural Resources
Department of Environment and Society
Director: Courtney Flint, Department of Environment and Society
Location: Natural Resources 316
Phone: (435) 797-8653
E-mail: courtney.flint@usu.edu
Graduate Program Description
The Natural Resources and Environmental Communication and Engagement Post-Baccalaureate Certificate (NRECE) Program is administered by the Department of Environment and Society, S.J. and Jessie E. Quinney College of Natural Resources. The Department of Environment and Society is an interdisciplinary department focused on research, outreach/extension, and teaching on human-environment interactions; it espouses community engagement in research, outreach, and learning and is USU-designated as a community-engaged department.
The NRECE Program provides an opportunity for, and certification of, knowledge- and skill-building in environmental communication and community engagement. Program outcomes focus on a broad range of communication strategies within the knowledge and action domains of natural resource management and the socio-ecological and environmental sciences. The program emphasizes a modern, two-way approach to collaborating and partnering with communities and stakeholders, with a more critical perspective on improving how environmental science communication occurs. Curriculum draws on a suite of courses with communication and engagement content both within and beyond the Department of Environment and Society.
The certificate curriculum consists of three components, for a total of 14-16 credits: (1) four courses (for a minimum of 10 credits) with communications and/or engagement content from an approved list of course options; (2) one departmental seminar course (1 credit) that introduces a range of environmental science topics; and (3) a three-credit capstone requirement met either through a communication, engagement, or outreach component of the student’s master’s thesis or doctoral dissertation or through an independent project, whichever works best for the student.
Certificate
Students who complete the program receive a certificate in Natural Resources and Environmental Communication and Engagement. Notification of this certificate appears on the student’s transcript.
Admission Requirements
For admittance into the NRECE Post-Baccalaureate Certificate Program, a graduate student must: (1) be accepted by the School of Graduate Studies at Utah State University for graduate study (current or provisional); and (2) meet with the NRECE Program Director to discuss personal interest in completing the NRECE Certificate with respect to professional goals.
Student Advisement
Graduate students seeking to complete the NRECE Certificate will work with their major faculty advisor, as well as with the NRECE Program Director, for support in understanding and meeting the requirements of the certificate.