MATT LEE
Vice President for Agriculture & Dean |
|
ALLEN RUTHERFORD
Associate Dean |
JENNIE SPARKS
Assistant Dean |
JOSHUA ALLRED
Manager of Student Services |
AMANDA FERGUSON
Academic Counselor II |
HENRY HEBERT
Director of Recruitment |
AIMÉE LEMANN
Director of Alumni & Donor Relations and Event Management |
AMBER HAYES
Coordinator of Recruitment |
106 Martin D. Woodin Hall
TELEPHONE 225-578-2065
FAX 225-578-2526 |
Departments, Schools, and Curricula
The dean, directors of schools, heads of departments, and members of the faculty of the college will consult with students on their choices of curricula. Requests for substitutions for required courses in any curricula in the college must have approval of the dean, upon recommendation of the head of the department or school. A maximum of six semester hours of basic ROTC and eight semester hours of advanced ROTC may be allowed for elective credit in any curriculum.
The College of Agriculture was established at LSU in 1908; however, its roots go back to the first graduation class that had, as one of its five graduates, a planter. The mission of today’s College of Agriculture is one rooted in business, science, and technology. The application of knowledge to meeting the world’s food and fiber needs remains the common thread that binds the college’s past to its future.
The college’s land-grant mission dates to 1862 and consists of three emphases: learning, discovery, and active engagement in our community. The discovery and engagement components of the college’s mission are often conducted in concert with the LSU Agricultural Center. Many faculty hold joint appointments with the Louisiana Agricultural Experimental Station or the Louisiana Cooperative Extension Service−the research and education units of the LSU Agricultural Center. The interlinking of learning, discovery, and engagement are hallmarks of the land-grant system and are likewise the cornerstones of the College of Agriculture’s strategic agenda for the future.
The College of Agriculture is home to 8 majors and nearly 40 areas of concentration within 10 academic departments and schools. All of the programs provide an interdisciplinary educational experience that reflects the latest in science and technology and is built on the five focus areas that are core to the college’s strategic agenda.
Degree Programs
All undergraduate degrees in the College of Agriculture are Bachelor of Science degrees. The following programs are offered by the College of Agriculture:
- Agricultural Business
- Agricultural and Extension Education
- Plant & Soil Systems
- Animal Sciences
- Nutrition & Food Sciences
- Textiles, Apparel & Merchandising
- Environmental Management Systems
- Natural Resource Ecology & Management
Vision
With a sharp focus on research, extension and teaching, we are finding solutions and making advancements that will benefit future generations and establish a legacy of success.
Mission
The LSU College of Agriculture provides innovative academic programs, creates essential knowledge, advances collaborative research, and drives outreach to solve local and global agricultural challenges.
Commitment to Access, Opportunity, and Success
The LSU College of Agriculture is committed to ensuring access to all academic and support-related resources every student needs to be successful. Moreover, through the promotion of opportunities for all students to engage in experiences capturing the alignment of our college mission with their interests, we promote a culture of success that emphasizes both academic and personal growth. This commitment to access, opportunity, and success undergirds our mission to educate the next generation of leaders and innovators for agriculture and related industries.
Strategic Agenda
To achieve our mission, the College of Agriculture has developed a strategic agenda focused on five interdisciplinary areas. These areas encompass broad fields of work and are, by their content, interdisciplinary and cross many administrative lines both within the college and in other administrative units. In particular, these areas coincide with and closely follow the research and development agenda of the LSU Agricultural Center.
- Environmental quality and renewable resource management
- Bioscience and technology in agriculture
- Processes and products for added value
- Agribusiness, consumer science, and global competitiveness
- Food quality, nutrition, and health
Coordination with the LSU Agricultural Center
The College of Agriculture, in coordination with the LSU Agricultural Center, offers students unique and unparalleled educational opportunities. The Louisiana Agricultural Experimental Station maintains research programs in Baton Rouge and at branch stations throughout Louisiana. The Louisiana Cooperative Extension Service disseminates knowledge throughout Louisiana through its network of specialists in Baton Rouge, county agents, and family and consumer sciences in every parish.
Close cooperation between the college and the Agricultural Center provides an instructional program of exceptional quality, combining knowledge and the latest in technology and application. Because many faculty members in the college also hold appointments in the Agricultural Center, students are exposed to the latest in cutting-edge research and how that knowledge is disseminated to the field through the extension service.
The College of Agriculture and the Agricultural Center are actively involved in disseminating new knowledge and methods throughout the world. Internationally experienced faculty and staff bring their insights and experiences into the classroom to further enhance the learning experience. The college and the Agricultural Center are currently active in Central and South America, Southeast Asia, West Africa, Europe, and countries of the former Soviet Union.
Facilities
Facilities for instructional purposes include more than 4,500 acres of farm and timber land and buildings for the care and study of crops and plants, livestock and poultry, and wildlife and forests.
Computer facilities, laboratories, and related research facilities are used for teaching purposes. Land and facilities at branch research stations throughout Louisiana also play a part in the teaching program, particularly at the graduate level. The state’s land and water resources; plant, animal, and aquatic life; and its communities and people strengthen instruction through a constantly changing complex of hundreds of research projects throughout the state that are coordinated with the teaching program. Similarly, research, teaching, and extension activities in foreign countries are made an active part of the classroom instruction.
Animal resources include beef and dairy cattle, goats, sheep, swine and poultry that are used in extension, teaching and research. We have modern facilities to conduct animal activities as well facilities for processing meat, poultry and dairy products.
Admission Requirements
- Agriculture and Extension Education and Evaluation
- Agriculture Business
- Textiles, Apparel, & Merchandising
- Animal Sciences, Environmental Management Sciences, Natural Resources Ecology & Management, Nutrition & Food Science, Plant & Soil Systems
*For Plant and Soil Systems (Medicinal Plants, Horticulture Sciences, Turf & Landscape Management, and Sustainable Production Systems) BIOL 1001 and CHEM 1001 may be used in place of BIOL 1201 and CHEM 1201 .
Degree Requirements of the College
The baccalaureate degree is conferred on students who fulfill the following requirements:
- Students must complete their curricula with at least a 2.00 grade point average on all work taken not resulting in grades of “P,” “W,” or “I.” Students must have a 2.00 average on work taken at this university, as well as a 2.00 average on the entire college record.
- Teacher Education Program only: Minimum grade point average of 2.50, cumulative and LSU; passage of all state-required sections of the PRAXIS II Series; minimum grade of “C” in coursework as specified by the Louisiana Board of Elementary and Secondary Education.
- The last 30 semester hours of the degree program must be taken in residence in the College of Agriculture. Distance Learning Programs courses taken in the last 30 hours will not be considered residence credit without prior approval of the department head concerned and the dean of the college.
- Graduation check-out must be completed and approved by the Dean’s Office during the semester prior to graduation.
Enrollment in Two Degree Programs
With the dean’s approval, a student may be enrolled in two degree programs concurrently. A student can enroll as a dual registrant using one of the following procedures:
- Dual Enrollment within the College of Agriculture−By completing residence and academic requirements for two degree programs, a student may earn one bachelor of science degree with two majors. By completing residence and academic requirements and earning 30 hours over the degree requiring the fewer number of hours, a student may earn two separate bachelor’s degrees.
- Dual Enrollment in the College of Agriculture and a Second Academic College−By completing residence and academic requirements for two degree programs and earning 30 hours more than the degree requiring the fewer number of hours, a student may earn two bachelor’s degrees. The student must be accepted for admission to both colleges and must adhere to the regulations of both colleges. In addition, the student must declare a home college where registration will be initiated and permanent files maintained. It is the student’s responsibility, however, to maintain contact with the second college to ensure that satisfactory progress is being made toward that degree.
Scholastic Requirements
In addition to university requirements, the College of Agriculture has additional scholastic requirements:
- Students must complete at least one general education English composition course and one general education analytical reasoning course with a “C” or better within the first 30 hours of study.
- Students who fail to earn a 2.00 average in each of two consecutive regular semesters and whose LSU or cumulative grade point average is below a 2.00 will be declared ineligible to continue in the College of Agriculture.
- Seniors who have completed the first semester of the senior year, are degree candidates, and are under scholastic suspension from the university may be placed on probation for one additional semester at the discretion of the dean of the College of Agriculture.
Readmission to the College
Students who have completed terms of scholastic suspension from the university may apply for readmission through the Office of Enrollment Management. They may be readmitted only with the approval of the head of the appropriate department/school and the dean of the College of Agriculture. Readmission is not guaranteed.
Distance Learning Programs Courses
Up to one-fourth of the number of hours required for the baccalaureate degree may be taken through Distance Learning Programs courses. Before scheduling such work, however, students should obtain approval from the dean of the college.
Graduate Programs
Through the Graduate School, the college offers master’s and doctoral degrees in the fields of agricultural economics, animal and dairy sciences, entomology, food science, human ecology, plant, environmental management, and soil sciences, plant pathology and crop physiology, and renewable natural resources. In addition, a master’s degree is offered in applied statistics. For further details, consult “The Graduate School “ section of this catalog.
Louisiana Consortium of Public Agricultural Colleges (LCPAC)
Louisiana State University is a member of the Louisiana Consortium of Public Agricultural Colleges (LCPAC). The consortium has developed a 60-hour, two-year core curriculum to facilitate the transfer of agricultural students among Louisiana public colleges and universities. The articulation policy for the LSU College of Agriculture is shown below.
Click to view the LSU Course Equivalencies for the LCPAC Core.
Minor Field Requirements (Optional)
Students in the College of Agriculture are not required to pursue a minor. They may choose to do so by the guidelines outlined below:
- A minor is the student’s field of secondary academic emphasis. A minor consists of a minimum of 15 hours of related coursework designed to provide breadth and depth in a student’s undergraduate program
- The specific requirements are determined by the department offering the minor.
- Students may not minor and major in the same degree program.
For a list of all other minors within the College of Agriculture, please see the individual departmental links above.
Minor in Agriculture
The College of Agriculture also offers a minor in Agriculture. To graduate with a minor in agriculture: Choose nine hours from the following: AGEC 2003 ; AGRI 1005 ; AGRO 1001 ; ANSC 1011 ; EMS 1011 ; ENTM 2001 ; NFS 1049 ; NFS 1110 ; HORT 2050 ; AEEE 2001 ; TAM 2045 ; RNR 1001 .
Choose nine hours from any course (3000/4000-level) within the College of Agriculture.
Minor in Plant Biotechnology and Crop Development
An undergraduate minor in plant biotechnology and crop development is available to students in all majors except Plant and Soil Systems. To graduate with this minor, students must complete 18 hours consisting of the following courses: PLHL 3060 (BIOL 3060 ) and AGRO 4064 and ten additional hours from among AGRO 3010 , AGRO 4052 , AGRO 4056 , AGRO 4071 , ENTM 4006 , HORT 2860 , HORT 4096 , PLHL 3900 , PLHL 4000 , PLHL 4001 , PLHL 4444 .
Pre-Veterinary Medicine
Students interested in Veterinary Medicine may follow traditional 4 year tracks in Animal Sciences or Natural Resource Ecology & Management. The most common concentrations for pre-vet students are Science and Technology (ANMLS-STANI) and Wildlife Ecology (NREM-WLDECL). Veterinary School applications are submitted during the fall of a student’s senior year.
Some students may qualify to pursue the 3+1 LSU SVM concentration which involves three years of training−at least 66 semester hours−prior to application to the LSU School of Veterinary Medicine. Students interested in attending veterinary school can pursue a degree program in one of two areas listed below and enter the LSU School of Veterinary Medicine after completion of the first three years of the chosen curriculum. The pre-veterinary program allows students to pursue an undergraduate degree in either of the following areas: Animal Sciences or Natural Resource Ecology and Management. After successful completion of the first year of work at the LSU School of Veterinary Medicine, students are awarded a Bachelor of Science degree in the chosen undergraduate field of study. Students then complete the remainder of the professional curriculum required for a Doctorate of Veterinary Medicine.
Pre-Medicine and Pre-Dental
The College of Agriculture at LSU provides unique opportunities that prepare students to enter careers in medicine, dentistry, and allied health fields. Programs within the School of Animal Sciences and the School of Nutrition and Food Sciences offer appealing options for students; however, students in the college’s departments and schools can fulfill pre-medical or pre-dental course requirements while pursuing a major in an area that matches their own career interest. The College of Agriculture not only provides students with an exceptional academic basis for professional careers in medicine or dentistry, but also enhances their education with communication, leadership skills, and opportunities in community service and research. Alumni of these programs have been accepted at prestigious medical schools such as Columbia, Emory, Johns Hopkins, and the LSU Health Sciences Centers in New Orleans and Shreveport.
Gamma Sigma Delta
Gamma Sigma Delta is an honor society that promotes the advancement of all disciplines associated with agriculture and their contributions to mankind. We encourage high standards of scholarship and worthy achievements as well as excellence in practice in all branches of agricultural and related sciences.
Members of the LSU chapter include graduate and undergraduate students, faculty members, and administrators representing research, teaching, and outreach. We represent a diversity of disciplines including textiles, renewable natural resources economics, business, nutrition and food science, human resources, workforce development, veterinary medicine, horticulture, and traditional agricultural animals and crops.
Undergraduate Career Plan
Students are encouraged to enrich their studies and prepare for their careers by using the Four Year Career Plan, as provided by the Olinde Career Center, in addition to their academic course of study.