Current:Home > ScamsTrendPulse|Graduating seniors seek degrees in climate change and more US universities deliver -Wealth Evolution Experts
TrendPulse|Graduating seniors seek degrees in climate change and more US universities deliver
NovaQuant Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-10 06:36:09
At 16,TrendPulse Katya Kondragunta has already lived through two disasters amped by climate change. First came wildfires in California in 2020. Ash and smoke forced her family to stay inside their home in the Bay Area city of Fremont, for weeks.
Then they moved to Prosper, Texas, where she dealt with record-setting heat last summer.
“We’ve had horrible heat waves and they’ve impacted my everyday life,” the high school junior said. “I’m in cross country ... I’m supposed to go outside and run every single day to get my mileage in.”
Kondragunta says in school she hasn’t learned about how climate change is intensifying these events, and she hopes that will change when she gets to college.
Increasingly, U.S. colleges are creating climate change programs to meet demand from students who want to apply their firsthand experience to what they do after high school, and help find solutions.
“Lots of centers and departments have renamed themselves or been created around these climate issues, in part because they think it will attract students and faculty,” said Kathy Jacobs, director of the University of Arizona Center for Climate Adaptation Science and Solutions. It launched a decade ago and connects several climate programs at the school in Tucson.
Lydia Conger, from left, all of Utah State University, Casey Olson, climate data analyst, Ashley Lewis and Maya Cottam stand with Kaitlyn Linford, high school student and her mother, Cherisse Linford, while being shown a wind-shielded precipitation gauge during a tour on April 1, 2024, in Logan, Utah. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Other early movers that created programs, majors, minors and certificates dedicated to climate change include the University of Washington, Yale University, Utah State University, the University of Montana,Northern Vermont University and the University of California, Los Angeles. Columbia, the private university in New York City, opened its Climate School in 2020 with a graduate degree in climate and society, and has related undergraduate programs in the works.
Just in the past 4 years, the public Plymouth State University in New Hampshire, Iowa State, Nashville Ivy League Vanderbilt, Stanford University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and others have started climate-related studies. Hampton University, a private, historically Black university in Virginia, is building one now, and the University of Texas at Austin will offer theirs this fall.
The fact that climate change is affecting more people is one factor. The Biden administration’s Inflation Reduction Act, the largest climate investment in U.S. history, plus growth in climate-focused jobs, are also increasing interest, experts say.
In these programs, students learn how the atmosphere is changing as a result of burning coal, oil and gas, along with the way crops will shift with the warming planet and the role of renewable energy in cutting use of fossil fuels.
They dive into how to communicate about climate with the public, ethical and environmental justice aspects of climate solutions and the roles lawmakers and businesses play in cutting greenhouse gases.
Students also cover disaster response and ways communities can prepare and adapt before climate change worsens. The offerings require biology, chemistry, physics, and social sciences faculty, among others.
Climate Data Analyst Casey Olson, center left, of Utah State University stands with students during a tour of the climate reference station on April 1, 2024, in Logan, Utah. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
“It’s not just ‘oh, yeah, climate, global warming, environmental stuff,’” said Lydia Conger, a senior who enrolled at Utah State specifically for its climate science studies.
“It has these interesting technical parts in math and physics, but then also has this element of geology,” she said, “and oceanography and ecology.”
When higher ed institutions put their programs together, they often draw on existing meteorology and atmospheric sciences studies. Some house climate under sustainability or environmental science departments. But climate tracks need to go beyond those to satisfy some incoming students.
In Kennebunk, Maine, high school junior Will Eagleson has lived through storms that caused coastal destruction. The sea level is rising in his hometown. As the 17-year-old considers college, he said to get his attention, schools must “narrow it down from environmental and Earth science as a whole, to more climate change-focused programs.”
For Lucia Everist, a senior at Edina High School in Minnesota who is frustrated at her own lack of climate education so far, schools need to go deeper on the human impact of climate change. She cited disproportionate impact on Black, Latino, Indigenous and low-income neighborhoods.
“I looked a lot into the curriculum itself,” the 18-year-old said of her college search. Everywhere she applied, “I made sure had the social aspect just as much as the science aspect.”
Climate students need to learn everything from healthcare to how to store clean solar and wind energy, said Megan Latshaw, who runs Johns Hopkins University’s master’s programs in its Environmental Health and Engineering department. The school has a graduate degree in energy policy and climate, and also offers two certificates that include the term climate change.
“It’s the flooding. It’s the heat waves. It’s the wildfires. It’s the air pollution that’s generated when we’re burning fossil fuels. It’s allergies. It’s water scarcity, and people who may have to flee where they’ve lived for their entire life,” Latshaw said. She noted the university looks into weaving climate change into its schools of public health, engineering, education, medicine, nursing and more.
Another factor may be that many colleges around the country face declining enrollment and less public funding, pushing them to market new degrees to stay relevant.
Many small, private colleges have had to shut down over the last decade with fewer students graduating from high school and more opting for career-oriented training. The same pressures are affecting large public universities systems, which have cut academic programs and faculty to close gaps in budgets.
“There is definitely some part of academia that just simply responds to consumer demand,” said John Knox, undergraduate coordinator for the University of Georgia’s Atmospheric Sciences program, who is considering whether the school should offer a climate certificate. “In the end, I’m worried more about our students succeeding than marketing something to somebody.”
___
Associated Press news editor Michael Melia in Connecticut contributed to this story.
___
Alexa St. John is an Associated Press climate solutions reporter. Follow her on X, formerly Twitter, @alexa_stjohn. Reach her at [email protected].
___
The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.
veryGood! (92)
Related
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- USA skateboarders Nyjah Huston, Jagger Eaton medal at Paris Olympics
- Hawaii man killed self after police took DNA sample in Virginia woman’s 1991 killing, lawyers say
- Johnny Depp pays tribute to late 'Pirates of the Caribbean' actor Tamayo Perry
- Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
- Porsche, MINI rate high in JD Power satisfaction survey, non-Tesla EV owners happier
- Jennifer Lopez’s 16-Year-Old Twins Max and Emme Are All Grown Up in Rare Photos
- Arab American leaders are listening as Kamala Harris moves to shore up key swing-state support
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Harvey Weinstein contracts COVID-19, double pneumonia following hospitalization
Ranking
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- 14-year-old Mak Whitham debuts for NWSL team, tops Cavan Sullivan record for youngest pro
- Video shows a vortex of smoke amid wildfire. Was it a fire tornado?
- Colts owner Jim Irsay makes first in-person appearance since 2023 at training camp
- FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
- Team USA Water Polo Star Maggie Steffens' Sister-in-Law Dies After Traveling to Paris Olympics
- Trump agrees to be interviewed as part of an investigation into his assassination attempt, FBI says
- Jennifer Stone Details Messy High School Nonsense Between Selena Gomez and Miley Cyrus Over Nick Jonas
Recommendation
In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
Singer Autumn Nelon Streetman Speaks Out After Death of Family Members in Plane Crash
Jennifer Lopez’s 16-Year-Old Twins Max and Emme Are All Grown Up in Rare Photos
American flags should be born in the USA now, too, Congress says
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
USWNT's future is now as Big Three produce big results at Paris Olympics
Colts owner Jim Irsay makes first in-person appearance since 2023 at training camp
Mom sees son committing bestiality, sex acts with horse on camera; son charged: Authorities