School of the Environment

118 Science Research and Teaching Center (SRTC)

503-725-2070

www.pdx.edu/environment

environ@pdx.edu

  • M.S. Systems Science
  • Ph.D. Earth, Environment, & Society
  • Ph.D. Systems Science
  • Graduate Certificate in Computer Modeling and Simulation
  • Graduate Certificate in Computational Intelligence


The School of the Environment was formally established in 2009. This School is made up of four participating departments (Environmental Science and Management, Geography, Geology, and Systems Science), associated faculty from across the university, and several affiliated groups (USGS Oregon Water Science Center, the Oregon Natural Heritage Information Center, the Institute for Natural Resources, and others). Multi-disciplinary research groups, institutes, and centers within the School support its efforts in problem-based research. The School of the Environment administers the Earth, Environment, & Society doctoral program, the Systems Science doctoral program, and the Systems Science master's program. For more information on the composition of the School, please see www.pdx.edu/environment.

Earth, Environment and Society Ph.D.

Systems Science M.S.

Systems Science Ph.D.

Graduate Certificates

Systems Science M.S.

Students choose a combination of systems science courses plus approved courses in associated disciplines. Topics and subject areas are the same as those for the Ph.D. program. Students learn a wide variety of systems ideas, use them for modeling and analysis in conjunction with ideas and methods from other disciplines, and gain expertise in problem solving and integrative thinking.

Admission Requirements

Admission is based on the applicant’s academic transcript, two letters of recommendation, a statement of interests and objectives, and other background material. GRE scores are recommended but not required. Students admitted to the Ph.D. program need not apply separately for admission to the master’s program, but must complete and submit a GO-19D form to the program.

Degree Requirements

See general requirements for master’s degrees. In addition, students must meet the requirements below and submit the necessary Graduate Studies Office forms. All students will be required to complete 24 credits of graded courses (pass/no pass are not applicable) listed under Systems Science in the PSU catalog numbered SySc 510-599 or SySc 610-699. Up to 3 credits of SySc 507 (with a Pass grade) may be included to satisfy the 45 credit hour requirement. Note: There is a seven-year limit on courses for the master’s degree. This is not true for the Ph.D. The master’s program has three options:

1. Thesis option

An additional 12 credits of Systems Science courses (numbered as above) and/or approved courses from other departments (see document entitled, Approved Resource Courses for the Master of Science Program in Systems Science); and 9 thesis credits. A student selecting the thesis option must form a thesis committee of at least three faculty members (one of whom must be a Systems Science core faculty), and pass an oral thesis defense.

2. Examination option

An additional 21 credits of Systems Science courses (numbered as above) and/or approved courses from other departments (see document entitled, Approved Resource Courses for the Master of Science Program in Systems Science). Up to 4 credits of Systems Science by-arrangement credits may be used to satisfy this requirement.

A student selecting the examination option will be required to pass two written comprehensive exams, each of which covers a minimum of 16 credit hours of coursework. The comprehensive exam requirement is to be successfully completed within 5 years of admission to the master’s program. One of the examiners must be a Systems Science core faculty member. Students admitted to the Ph.D. program who pass their comprehensive exams meet this requirement automatically.

3. Coursework only option

An additional 8 credits of graded courses listed under Systems Science (numbered as above), plus 13 credits of courses that may be either Systems Science courses (numbered as above) or approved courses from other departments (see document entitled Approved Resource Courses for the Master of Science Program in Systems Science). Up to 4 credits of System Science by-arrangement credits may be used to satisfy this requirement.