Forest Ecosystem Management
This product does not have fixed starting dates and/or places.
The course aims to give you a thorough grounding in the disciplines needed by a professional forester, together with an appreciation of the wider issues facing all …
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The course aims to give you a thorough grounding in the disciplines needed by a professional forester, together with an appreciation of the wider issues facing all natural resource managers. We challenge you to think critically of the importance of forests as ecosystems while assessing their benefits to mankind. What can this course lead to? In the UK, professional foresters are recruited by various employers, including forest management companies, the Forestry Commission and charities. Looking overseas, NGOs, consultancies and larger companies want to employ managers with a sound understanding of wider forestry issues. Resources and facilities The staff of the National School of Forestry have extensive experience of forest management and research, gained in academic institutions and professional practice. They have worked right across the world on diverse projects, including the development of forest management in Bhutan, social forestry schemes in sub-Saharan Africa, combating illegal logging in China and Russia, and community forestry in Scotland.
A fee discount is offered to graduates of the University of Cumbria. Holders of undergraduate degrees obtained since 2008 can obtain a 20 percent discount on their first postgraduate course of study.
Entry requirements1st or 2nd class honours degree
Students with other qualifications may be admitted to the course via APL procedures
More about levels and credits
Credit and UCAS requirements Credit: 180 credits Additional contact information Find out more at www.cumbria.ac.uk/forestry Modules There are core modules in Forest Ecology and Ecosystems, Silviculture, and Forest Management (with an optional overseas field course). Optional modules include GIS, Project Planning, Conservation Biology and Global Environmental Issues. The dissertation gives you the chance to study in depth a topic of your own choice.Taught modules make extensive use of fieldwork, in our own woodlands or the Lake District, and the range of contacts built up by the National School of Forestry over the last forty years. Research seminars complement the formal teaching. In addition this programme is fully accredited by the Chartered Institute of Foresters. Course summary The MSc course is delivered full-time over 12 months, or by part-time or distance learning over a minimum of two years. The distance-learning course may require occasional attendance on campus. Successful completion of taught modules may lead to the award of a Postgraduate Certificate or Diploma.
The six taught modules are assessed by a mixture of coursework and examination. Many of these modules include field visits and practice. The dissertation accounts for the final three modules of the programme.
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