Sustainable Agriculture and Food Systems, Bachelor of Science

Program Overview

The multidisciplinary Bachelor of Science degree in Sustainable Agriculture and Food Systems (SAFS) serves students interested in improving the sustainability of modern food and agricultural systems. This major prepares graduates to understand the interdisciplinary and systems-based aspects of sustainability and provides them with the knowledge, leadership skills, and experiences required to excel in agricultural and food systems professions. A degree in SAFS prepares students for a broad range of careers related to agricultural production (including plant, animal, and biofuels) and food system management, rural and urban community services, education and development, as well as careers in agricultural, environmental, and economic policy and analysis. Employers may include private industry, local, state and federal government, public service agencies, non-profit organizations, nature preserves, community organizations, or any other group that aims to produce, distribute, or improve access to food, to improve the quality and/or sustainability of food or food systems, to improve human health related to diet and nutrition, to work towards social justice related to food access or hunger, or to develop policy or social structures related to food or food systems. The SAFS major also prepares students for graduate studies in a wide range of fields related to agriculture, food, water, and energy systems.

 

Core Curriculum - 42 hours

The Core Curriculum serves as a broad foundation for the undergraduate degree. All candidates for a bachelor’s degree must achieve core student learning outcomes, including communication, critical thinking, empirical and quantitative skills, teamwork, personal responsibility and social responsibility, by completing courses within each category or component area of the Core Curriculum as outlined below.

The University has approved specific courses that satisfy Core Curriculum Requirements. Approved courses can be found on the Core Curriculum Page. Students seeking the most efficient way to complete the core curriculum and major or minor requirements are advised to take approved courses that can fulfill both requirements. Although core curriculum courses can also be used to fulfill major or minor requirements, earned credits hours are only applied once.

The courses listed below fulfill core curriculum and major requirements. Students who have completed a core curriculum category with courses other than those listed below will still be required to take the listed course(s) to meet major requirements.

020 Mathematics - 3 hours

Choose one:

MATH 1314College Algebra

3

MATH 1414College Algebra

4

030 Life and Physical Sciences - 6 hours

ENVR 1401Introduction to Environmental Science I

4

ENVR 1402Introduction to Environmental Science II

4

Three-credit hours apply from each course. 

080 Social & Behavioral Sciences - 3 hours

ECON 2301Principles of Macroeconomics

3

090 Integrative and Experiential Learning - 6 hours

BIOL 1406General Biology I

4

ENVR 1401Introduction to Environmental Science I

4

ENVR 1402Introduction to Environmental Science II

4

One credit hour from each required Life and Physical Science course applies.

Major Requirements - 68 hours

Required Courses - 33 hours

Sustainability Core:

Complete all of the following courses:
BIOL 1406General Biology I

4

BIOL 1407General Biology II

4

BIOL 3409Ecology

4

ENVR 3305Sustainable Agriculture

3

Three hours from BIOL 1406 apply.

Choose four:

Students must complete a minimum of four courses from the list below. Total minimum credit hours for this section is 12. Hours completed will vary based on student selection of three or four credit hour courses. Additional hours beyond 12 will be applicable to the minimum 120 hours required for the degree.
ANTH 4310Food and Culture

3

ECON 3355Development Economics

3

EEMS 4360Food Science

3

EEMS 4388Global Change Ecology

3

Or

BIOL 4388Global Change Ecology

3

ENVR 3301Natural Resources Conservation

3

ENVR 3304Sustainable Development

3

ENVR 4320Fundamentals of Soil Science

3

HIST 4333Food and Agricultural History

3

PHIL 4318Philosophy of Food

3

SAFS 4429Agroecology

4

Or

BIOL 4429Agroecology

4

Capstone:

Students will complete six hours from one pair:  CESL 3301 and CESL 3302 or EEMS 4381 and EEMS 4382 and one credit hour from EEMS 4193.
CESL 3301Community Engaged Scholarship and Learning Internship I

3

CESL 3302Community Engaged Scholarship and Learning Internship II

3

Or

EEMS 4381Community-Engaged Service Learning I

3

EEMS 4382Community-Engaged Service Learning II

3

And

EEMS 4193Interdisciplinary Synthesis & Communication

1

Prescribed Elective Courses - 35 hours

A minimum of 35 hours of prescribed electives are required.  Students are strongly encouraged to seek counseling early in the program to devise a course of study suitable for their career goals.  Students should always consider the prerequisites of desired courses when selecting electives. Students must also ensure that sufficient courses at the 3000 and 4000 level are taken to achieve the institutional minimum of 42 advanced hours. 

Sustainable Agricultural Production:

BIOL 4408Plant Pathology

4

BIOL 4429Agroecology

4

EEMS 4191Interdisciplinary Seminar Series Fall

1

EEMS 4192Interdisciplinary Seminar Series Spring

1

MARS 3350General Aquaculture

3

SAFS 1101Introduction to Sustainable Agriculture Lab

1

SAFS 1103Introduction to Agricultural Engineering Lab

1

SAFS 1115Sustainable Horticulture Lab

1

SAFS 1301Introduction to Sustainable Agriculture

3

SAFS 1303Introduction to Agricultural Engineering

3

SAFS 1315Sustainable Horticulture

3

Sustainable Societies and Environmental Governance:

ANTH 4310Food and Culture

3

ANTH 4314Environmental Anthropology

3

EEMS 4191Interdisciplinary Seminar Series Fall

1

EEMS 4192Interdisciplinary Seminar Series Spring

1

ENVR 4301Environmental Regulations

3

ENVR 4357Urban Sustainability

3

HIST 3335American Environmental History

3

HIST 4333Food and Agricultural History

3

POLS 4356U.S. Environmental Policy

3

SOCI 1301Introduction to Sociology

3

SOCI 1323Social Problems

3

Natural Resource Management:

BIOL 3404Conservation Biology

4

BIOL 3413Genetics

4

BIOL 4316Environmental Toxicology

3

BIOL 4388Global Change Ecology

3

BIOL 4423Wildlife Ecology and Management

4

ENVR 3301Natural Resources Conservation

3

ENVR 3304Sustainable Development

3

ENVR 4301Environmental Regulations

3

ENVR 4302Environmental Impact Analysis

3

Food Science & Technology:

BIOL 4318Ethnobotany

3

EEMS 4360Food Science

3

EEMS 4366Nanotechnologies for Food and Agriculture

3

SAFS 1129Introduction to Food Science Lab

1

SAFS 1329Introduction to Food Science

3

SAFS 4306Medicinal Food Chemistry

3

Organismal Sciences Related to Production:

BIOL 3345Animal Nutrition

3

BIOL 3408Plant Morphology

4

BIOL 4318Ethnobotany

3

BIOL 4402Marine Zoology

4

BIOL 4404Ichthyology

4

BIOL 4405Plant Physiology

4

BIOL 4408Plant Pathology

4

BIOL 4410Marine Botany

4

BIOL 4411Ecological Physiology of Animals

4

BIOL 4414Plant Taxonomy

4

BIOL 4415Entomology

4

BIOL 4426Marine Ecology

4

BIOL 4430Coastal Ecology

4

BIOL 4432Animal Behavior

4

MARS 3350General Aquaculture

3

Chemistry and Biochemistry:

CHEM 1111General Chemistry I Lab

1

CHEM 1112General Chemistry II Lab

1

CHEM 1311General Chemistry I

3

CHEM 1312General Chemistry II

3

CHEM 2123Organic Chemistry I Lab

1

CHEM 2125Organic Chemistry II Lab

1

CHEM 2323Organic Chemistry I

3

CHEM 2325Organic Chemistry II

3

CHEM 3101Inorganic Chemistry Lab

1

CHEM 3303Biochemistry I

3

CHEM 3401Environmental Chemistry

4

CHEM 4320Nutritional and Exercise Biochemistry

3

SAFS 4306Medicinal Food Chemistry

3

NUTR 3201Phytochemicals and Herbal Medicine

2

Microbiology, Toxicology, and Epidemiology:

BIOL 2401Anatomy and Physiology I

4

BIOL 2402Anatomy and Physiology II

4

BIOL 3311Mammalian Physiology

3

BIOL 3401General Microbiology

4

BIOL 3403Medical Microbiology and Immunology

4

BIOL 3412Cell Biology

4

BIOL 3414Invertebrate Zoology

4

BIOL 4316Environmental Toxicology

3

BIOL 4317Disease Epidemiology

3

BIOL 4319Medical Entomology

3

BIOL 4413General Virology

4

BIOL 4415Entomology

4

BIOL 4428Medical Genomics

4

Nutrition and Dietetics:

BIOL 1322Human Nutrition

3

HLTH 3372Nutrition and Health

3

HPRS 3316Nutrition Concepts for Allied Health Practitioners

3

NUTR 2351Introduction to Clinical Nutrition

3

NUTR 3201Phytochemicals and Herbal Medicine

2

NUTR 3354Food Systems Management

3

NUTR 3452Culinary Nutrition

4

NUTR 4310Nutritional Education and Counseling

3

NUTR 4357Research Methods in Nutrition

3

Data Analysis, Statistics, and Forecasting:

ECON 3341Econometrics

3

ECON 3342Business and Economics Forecasting

3

MATH 2412Precalculus

4

MATH 2413Calculus I

4

GEOL 4411Introduction to Geographic Information Systems

4

GEOL 4412Advanced Geographic Information Systems

4

POLS 2470Introduction to Political Science Research

4

QUMT 2341Business Statistics I

3

QUMT 2398Decision Analytics

3

QUMT 3341Business Statistics II

3

QUMT 4343Prescriptive Analytics

3

SOCI 3301Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences

3

STAT 2336Statistical Computing and Data Management

3

STAT 3301Applied Statistics

3

STAT 3352Introduction to Linear Models

3

STAT 4332Experimental Design and Analysis

3

Economics:

ECON 2302Principles of Microeconomics

3

ECON 3343Economics of the Government Sector

3

ECON 3351Macroeconomic Theory

3

ECON 3352Microeconomic Theory

3

ECON 3353International Trade

3

ECON 3355Development Economics

3

ECON 3358Labor Economics

3

ECON 3360Managerial Economics

3

Political Science:

POLS 2330Introduction to Globalization

3

POLS 2340Introduction to Political Theory

3

POLS 2350Introduction to Political Economy

3

POLS 3310U.S. State and Local Government

3

POLS 3321Comparative Politics of Developing Nations

3

POLS 3333Gender Theory in World Politics

3

POLS 3341Modern Political Theory

3

POLS 3351Interest Groups and Political Movements

3

POLS 3355U.S. Public Policy

3

POLS 3356U.S. Economic Policy

3

POLS 4313U.S. Legislative Process

3

POLS 4316U.S. Latin@ Politics

3

POLS 4332International Organizations

3

POLS 4333U.S. Mexico Border Relations

3

POLS 4350Political Socialization and Civic Engagement

3

POLS 4356U.S. Environmental Policy

3

Entrepreneurship:

ACCT 2301Introduction To Financial Accounting

3

ACCT 2302Introduction To Managerial Accounting

3

ENTR 3340New Venture Creation and Innovation

3

ENTR 3356Introduction to Entrepreneurship

3

FINA 3380Introduction to Finance

3

FINA 3388Fundamentals of Financial Planning

3

FINA 3393Entrepreneurial Finance

3

MARK 3300Principles of Marketing

3

MARK 3330Business Ethics and Corporate Social Responsibility

3

MGMT 3361Principles of Management

3

Communications:

COMM 1315Public Speaking

3

COMM 3321Public Relations: Theory and Practice

3

COMM 4338Communication Campaigns

3

COMM 4345Conflict Management

3

Connected Humanities:

ANTH 1324Human Evolution

3

ANTH 2311Global Health and Social Justice: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Illness and Inequality

3

ANTH 4310Food and Culture

3

ANTH 4314Environmental Anthropology

3

ANTH 4385Topics in Anthropology

3

HIST 3302World Environmental History

3

HIST 3332Mexican-American History

3

HIST 4333Food and Agricultural History

3

MASC 2301Introduction to Mexican American Studies

3

PHIL 1300Critical Thinking

3

PHIL 1312Introduction to Social and Political Philosophy

3

PHIL 4318Philosophy of Food

3

PHIL 4322Political Philosophy

3

PHIL 4328Environmental Philosophy

3

Sociology:

SOCI 3312Environmental Sociology

3

SOCI 3348Disaster and Society

3

SOCI 4310Sociology of Gender

3

SOCI 4313Race and Ethnic Relations

3

SOCI 4352Social Stratification

3

SOCI 4380Social Protest and Social Movements

3

Free Electives - hours will vary

Free electives credit hours required may vary to achieve the institutional minimum of 120 hours for a degree. 

Free elective credit hours at the advanced level may be needed to achieve the institutional minimum of 42 advanced hours. 

Total Credit Hours: 42

Total Credit Hours: 120

 

View this program’s recommended roadmap to graduation.

 

UTRGV Roadmaps are a suggested sequence of courses designed to assist students in completing their undergraduate degree requirements. This is a term-by-term sample roadmap of courses required to complete the degree. Students must satisfy all requirements in their catalog including, but not limited to course prerequisites, grade point average and course grade benchmarks, progression requirements, and graduation requirements. 

 

Students should meet with their academic advisor every semester to discuss their individualized path toward completion. Degree progress within this roadmap depends upon such factors as course availability, individual student academic preparation and readiness, student time management, work and personal responsibilities, and financial considerations. Students may choose to take courses during summer terms to reduce course loads during long semesters.