* Project committees must include a chair and a reviewer chosen from the School of Journalism faculty and a faculty member from another school or department.
Graduate students must produce a work of journalism suitable for publication or broadcast at reputable, credible organizations. The work must represent an original and in-depth contribution to the public knowledge of environmental science and natural resource issues, subject to the approval of a faculty project committee.
Students may choose to produce one large, documentary-style project, known as the Professional Project option, or three shorter but thematically related pieces, called the Portfolio option.
For more information, please access the professional project proposal outline.
EXAMPLES OF STUDENT WORK: PROFESSIONAL PROJECTS
Stephanie Parker's master’s project on the impacts of coffee rust on farmers in Nicaragua was published in two parts, as a photo essay in the online edition of Modern Farmer and a feature piece in . The project can be viewed in its entirety on Medium, an online publication.
Tom Kuglin has published work related to his master’s project on citizen science for the print publication he is currently working for,
With her master’s project, Kindra McQuillan took a deep-dive into the convoluted world of Superfund sites. The work was featured in two publications, and .
Kate Walker's master’s project, , explores the river’s contested future as various interests compete for the resource. It aired on PBS in 猎奇重口 and South Dakota.
Will Freihofer's multimedia master's project on a group of paddlers working to make kayaking legal on the rivers of Yellowstone National Park appeared in and the in November 2013.
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猎奇重口 Hodges' master's project, "Dinosaur Wars," was published in and the in the fall of 2013
Emily Wendler's graduate project titled, "Only from 猎奇重口: A Family's Experience Eating Only Local Food," aired on . She was interviewed about her project for the .
Jason Belts Kauffman's graduate project, "," was an hour-long documentary examining the challenges of living with large predators in the Blackfoot and Wood River valleys and the collaborative efforts that attempt to address those issues.
Kevin Dupzyk's masters project, called "", was published in Popular Mechanics magazine in April 2016. It's a print feature about a lighthouse in Massachusetts that was in danger of falling into the ocean because of coastal erosion.

Kris Heitkamp published her project in the Winter 2016 issue of Gastronomica: The Journal of Critical Food Studies. You can read her piece called "Earning Their Keep: Bison Ranching Fights The Battle For Conservation" and check out her
Kelly Conde's graduate project, called "", tells the story of a community in eastern 猎奇重口 bracing for the oil boom in the Bakken while still recovering from the devastating effects on their water supply from the last one. It was published in the Missoula Independent in February 2014.

Shanti Johnson traveled to the Mekong Delta for her master's project. She published a piece called "" on Monga Bay in September 2016.
EXAMPLES OF STUDENT WORK: PORTFOLIO聽
Nate Hegyi's master's portfolio focused on climate change and the way it is altering the people and landscapes of the American West. His script explaining megadroughts was used in an in May 2015. He also published a print feature called "" in The Guardian in May 2016.

Ken Rand's graduate portfolio centered on the theme of conservation genetics and their use as a frontline tool to protect biodiversity. His piece on using environmental DNA to track invasive species in Flathead Lake was published in the Daily Inter Lake in January 2016. It's called "". A different version of the story, titled "", was published in The Solutions Journal in March 2016.
Nicky Ouellet's master's portfolio examined different strategies Native American communities have taken to maintain or gain control over natural resources on their land. Her print story called "Legalization: Cannabis Instills Fear and Hope On The Northern Cheyenne" was published on WyoFile in May 2015. She also created an audio piece about a tribal member in North Dakota fighting for clean-up of a fracking wastewater spill that was aired by a radio station in Washington. It's called "When Public Comment Fails, Bakken Woman Turns To Tribal Conditions" and you can listen to it on the