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More Colleges and Universities in the U.S. Creating Climate Change Study Programs

More Colleges and Universities in the U.S. Creating Climate Change Study Programs

“students also study ways to communicate about climate change with the public”

This will probably end up going the same way as DEI did and become an industry within higher education. Where else are all the graduates of these programs going to work?

Voice of America reports:

More US Universities Deliver Climate Change Programs

Colleges and universities in the United States are increasingly creating climate change study programs. They are meeting the demand from students who want to help find ways to deal with the effects of climate change.

Kathy Jacobs is director of the University of Arizona Center for Climate Adaptation Science and Solutions, which launched 10 years ago. She said, “Lots of centers and departments have renamed themselves or been created around these climate issues.”

The aim, she added, is to appeal to students and professors.

Students are increasingly interested in climate-related study programs. For some, the interest comes from seeing the effects of climate change in their own lives. For others, a rise in climate-related jobs is driving their interest, experts say.

In the last four years, schools like Stanford University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have started climate-related studies. The University of Texas at Austin plans to have climate studies offerings in the fall. And Hampton University, a private, historically Black university in Virginia, is building one now.

Columbia University in New York City opened its Climate School in 2020. It offers graduate degrees now and is working on creating undergraduate programs.

Other schools that have created climate-related education programs include the University of Washington, Yale University and Utah State University.

In these programs, students study the science of climate change. The offerings require professors who teach biology, chemistry, physics, and social sciences, among others.

But students also study ways to communicate about climate change with the public. They look at the ways communities can prepare and deal with climate change before it worsens. And they learn about the roles lawmakers and businesses play in cutting greenhouse gasses.

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Comments

A degree in climate change? Sure. That and $5 will get you a cup of coffee at Starbucks.

    randian in reply to MarkJ. | June 9, 2024 at 7:23 pm

    This isn’t about making any of these people employable. This is about influencing future government policy. Many of these people will enter government, since they aren’t competent to do anything else and are budding tyrants besides, and bring their “education” with them.

      henrybowman in reply to randian. | June 10, 2024 at 4:43 pm

      “Where else are all the graduates of these programs going to work?”
      I vote for tundras, deserts, and sandbar islands.

drsamherman | June 9, 2024 at 4:23 pm

Great…a STEM-lite “studies” degree program with no actual scientific content. Sigh…..

For some, the interest comes from seeing the effects of climate change in their own lives.

Oh, what effects would those be?

The Gentle Grizzly | June 9, 2024 at 8:05 pm

Climate Change STUDIES. it’s the S-word again.

Just like in a business startup developing new technology requiring lots of money and followers you have meetings whereby, principals stray from the truth and leave those meetings believing their own lies. It gets easier and easier the more you do it. So many bright people with degrees from prestigious universities with absolutely no common sense whose only real objective is to secure in the easiest way the best tasting Kool-aid and guzzle it down, God forbid should I confront and challenge.

Huh…I thought the study of climate was called Climatology or even Meteorology and a number of schools have very good programs.