M.S. in Agriculture

Program Description | Admission | Degree Requirements | Courses


Program Description


The graduate program in agricultural sciences is designed to further the professional competence of those individuals engaged in production agriculture, careers in agricultural and related agencies, businesses and industries, and/or agricultural education and extension.


The Agricultural Sciences program maintains four locations with working laboratories. The Agriculture Center is home to the Indoor Arena, Meat Science Lab, Equine Science Facilities, and a greenhouse. Nearby is the Horticulture Center with two greenhouses and a classroom. The William R. Harrell Engineering Technology Center provides excellent advanced teaching and research opportunities in the areas of power and machinery, electrification, geomatics, soil and water conservation, irrigation, drainage, landscaping, bio-fuels, and wood/metal construction and fabrication. The 1740-acre Gibbs Ranch is home to purebred and crossbred beef cattle herds and a meat goat flock, along with additional plant, soil and animal resources used for instructional and research purposes.


Admissions

Students seeking admission to the graduate program in Agricultural Sciences must submit the following to the Office of Graduate Admissions:

  1. Graduate Application
  2. Application fee
  3. Official transcripts of all college-level work, including the transcript that shows the date the undergraduate degree was conferred in agriculture, industrial technology, technology or related field from an accredited four-year institution (Note: Applicants without an acceptable background in agriculture or technology must complete 12 hours of undergraduate stem work earning a minimum GPA of 3.0)
  4. GRE scores
  5. Two letters of recommendation from faculty in the undergraduate major field of study (not required for SHSU Agriculture graduates)

     

A holistic review of each student’s application file will be completed on a competitive basis.


Degree Requirements

This degree is designed to be a broad-based degree, including thirty-seven hours of coursework. A minimum of fifteen hours from agri-business, agricultural education, agricultural engineering technology, animal science, horticulture/crop sciences, and/or agronomy is required. In addition, the curriculum includes courses in research methodology and agricultural statistics, and a graduate seminar. The remaining semester hours are designated as electives and can be taken in agriculture or from a related field. The degree is designed to provide comprehensive knowledge and capabilities in several fields of agriculture.

Plan 1 - M.S. in Agriculture - Thesis Option

Item
Requirement
Options
Hours
Required
1
Specified
Courses
Required courses:
AGRI 5375 <AGR 575> Statistical Methods in Agriculture
AGRI 6140 <AGR 614> Graduate Seminar
AGRI 6350 <AGR 635> Techniques and Interpretation of Research
7
2
Electives
Choose eight from:
Graduate courses in AGRI1
or approved courses from other departments
24
3 Thesis Choose all from:                                                                              AGRI AGRI 6099 <AGR 639> Thesis
AGRI 6398 <AGR 638> Thesis
6
TOTAL
37
Notes:
1 At least eighteen hours must be at the 5000-level.
 

 


Approved Electives (may be 4000- [6 hours maximum], 5000- or 6000-level)            24 SCH



The thesis option must have prior approval by the chair of the thesis committee and includes an oral comprehensive exam and thesis defense. Once enrolled in a thesis class, AGRI 6099, a student must be continually enrolled until graduation.

Plan 2 - M.S. in Agriculture - Non-Thesis Option

Item
Requirement
Options
Hours
Required
1
Specified
Courses
Required courses:
AGRI 5375 <AGR 575> Statistical Methods in Agriculture
AGRI 6140 <AGR 614> Graduate Seminar
AGRI 6350 <AGR 635> Techniques and Interpretation of Research
7
2
Electives
Choose ten courses from:
Graduate courses in AGRI1
or approved courses from other departments
30
TOTAL
37

Notes:

Approved Electives (may be 4000- [6 hours maximum], 5000- or 6000-level)                  30 SCH

 The non-thesis option includes the thirty-seven hours listed above followed by a written or oral comprehensive capstone exam.


Courses

Agriculture (AGRI)

4000 Level Agriculture (AGRI), AGED or out of department courses must be approved by Committee Chairperson or Graduate Coordinator.

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