Master of Wildlife Science
The overall goal of this non-thesis graduate degree program is to provide working natural resource professionals with an understanding of the interrelationships among ecology, policy, culture and economics as factors that influence natural resource management.
Requirements
A professional Master's degree via distance education requires thirty-six credit hours. Twenty-four of these hours will consist of wildlife and fisheries sciences courses and selected courses from other TAMU departments. Six elective credits may be applied toward the degree, 6 credits for a professional paper, and may include up to 9 credits of undergraduate 300- or 400-level courses. All courses will be determined through consultation between you and your advisory committee, and is based on your subject area needs. You will be required to take a final exam covering completed courses, held on the Texas A&M University campus, and submit a professional paper.
Up to 12 hours of courses taken in residence at an accredited U.S. institution with a grade of B or greater may be considered for transfer credit if, at the time the courses were completed, the student was in degree-seeking status. Any transfer work is subject to review and approval by the student’s graduate advisory committee, department head and the Office of Graduate Studies.
Acceptance into the program will be limited and will require a B.S. or B.A. degree, a 3.0 GPA on the last 60 undergraduate hours, and admission to the graduate program at Texas A&M University. A complete application (including application, fees, all transcripts, GRE scores, statement of career goals, and 3 letters of recommendation) must be received by September 1 for the next Spring semester, and by May 1 for the next Fall semester.
Program objectives
Provide working or in-service natural resource professionals with:
- Additional academic training that supplements student's understanding of the full range of considerations in natural resources management.
- A rigorous graduate degree program that supplements job skill requirements
- A program delivery strategy that accommodates on-the-job obligations
For More Information
For additional information about the Masters of Wildlife Science degree program, please visit http://agonline.tamu.edu/MFSC.html.
Felix Arnold
Academic Advisor II
Department of Wildlife Fisheries Sciences
(979) 845-5768
fwarnold@tamu.edu
Dr. Del Gatlin
Associate Department Head
Department of Wildlife Fisheries Sciences
(979) 847-9333
d-gatlin@tamu.edu



