b.s. forestry · nr 220; f 230; stat 201 or 301; and math 141 econ 202 or equivalent f 230, 311 and...

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B.S. Forestry Forestry Business Concentration Sustainable Timber See the business side of forestry. Learn how to incorporate ecologic and economic principles into a renewable timber industry. A part of Warner College of Natural Resources Degree Checklist

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B.S. ForestryForestry Business Concentration

Sustainable Timber

See the business side of forestry. Learn how to incorporate ecologic and economic principles into a renewable timber industry.

A part of Warner College of Natural Resources

DegreeChecklist

FRESHMAN YEAR

SOPHOMORE YEAR

PrerequisitesAUCC

CategorySemester CreditsCourse

1

________________________________________

NR 193BZ 120CHEM 107CHEM 108CO 150MATH 141SPCM 200

F, SF, SF, S, SSF, S, SSF, S, SSF, S, SSF, S, SS

1441333

3 + 336

Required for all first semester CSU students in FRS---MATH 117 + or concurrent enrollment in MATH 118 +CHEM 107 or concurrent enrollmenttest or scores, or CO 130MATH 118 or test

First Semester SeminarPrinciples of Plant BiologyFundamentals of ChemistryFundamentals of Chemistry LabCollege CompositionCalculus in Management SciencesPublic SpeakingArts & HumanitiesGlobal and Cultural AwarenessElectives

---3A3A3A1A1B---3B3E---

____________________________________

ACT 205ECON 202LIFE 320SOCR 240STAT 204 WR 304 F 310 F 312

F, S, SSF, S, SSF, SF, SF, S, SSF, SF, SF, S

333433316

---MATH 117 or higherBZ 120 or equivalent and MATH 141, 155 or 160CHEM 107 or equivalentMath placement exam or 1 credit of 100 level MATHCompletion of the AUCC 1B MATH requirementBZ 120 or any intro. biology, F 312 concurrent enrollmentF 310 concurrent enrollment

---3C---------------------

Fundamentals of AccountingPrinciples of MicroeconomicsEcologyIntroductory Soil ScienceStatistics for Business StudentsPrinciples of Watershed ManagementForest and Rangeland EcogeographyDendrology LabElectives

Major in ForestryForestry Business Concentration

AUCCCategory

JUNIOR YEAR

___________________________

BSPM 365JTC 300F 311F 321F 322F 325F 330MKT 305NR 320

FF, S, SSF, SFF, SSSF, S, SSF, S

433333333

BZ 120 or equivalentCO 150 or HONR 193LAND/LIFE 220 or LIFE 320NR 220; F 230; STAT 201 or 301; and MATH 141ECON 202 or equivalentF 230, 311 and NR 220F 230 or 321AREC 202 or ECON 101 or 202Junior Standing

---2------------------3D

Integrated Tree Health ManagementProfessional and Technical CommunicationForest EcologyForest BiometryEconomics of the Forest EnvironmentSilvicultureTimber Harvesting and EnvironmentFundamentals of MarketingNatural Resources History and Policy

1(+) = or higher F = Fall S = Spring SS = Summer Session

2

SENIOR YEAR

___________________________

BUS 205F 421F 422F 326FIN 305MGT 301MGT 305NR 425

F, S, SSFFFF, S, SSF, S, SSF, S, SSS

343333334

---F 230, 321, 322, and 325F 321 and 322LAND/LIFE 220 or LIFE 320ACT 205 or 201 and ECON 204Sophomore Standing---NR 320

---4A, C---------------4B---

Legal and Ethical Issues in BusinessForest Stand ManagementQuantitative Methods in Forest ManagementWildland Fire Behavior and ManagementFundamentals of FinanceSupply Chain ManagementFundamentals of ManagementNatural Resources Policy and SustainabilityElectives

Students wishing to continue in an MBA program should consider subsituting MGT 320.

MATH 117 and 118 are considered review courses, but are necessary prerequisites for MATH 141.

2

Degree Requirements: 120 credits (42 credits at 300-400 level); 2.0 GPAStudents are responsible for knowing and meeting requirements in the

University catalog (AUCC courses). *Verify all information on this form regularly as course information can change frequently.

A part of Warner College of Natural Resources

Having at least 200 hours of acceptable professional work experience in the student’s field prior to graduation is required. This can include summer/seasonal/school semester employment in natural resource management through paid summer jobs, an approved internship, volunteer positions, or work study experience. Acceptable work experience includes (but is not limited to) working for federal, state, non-governmental, private and university organizations that research or manage natural resources.