The master's programs in agricultural, food and resource economics may be designed to serve either as final preparation for professional employment or as the foundation for a doctoral program.
In addition to meeting the requirements of the university and of the College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, students must meet the requirements specified below.
Agricultural, Food and Resource Economics - Master of Science
Agricultural, Food and Resource Economics - Master of Science
About
Requirements
Entry Requirements
Applications to the Master of Science Degree in Agricultural, Food and Resource Economics are evaluated by an s committee formed by the Department Chairperson and chaired by the Graduate Program Director.
Several criteria are used to evaluate applications including:
- Academic preparation including review of previous degrees and grades, Graduate Record Examination (GRE), and Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) scores.
- Letters of recommendation.
- Match between the applicant’s background, interests, and educational objectives, and the department’s research, teaching, and/or outreach programs.
- The applicant’s contribution to the diversity and balance of the department’s graduate study body.
Many undergraduate programs provide background for graduate study in agricultural, food and resource economics. However, a student with inadequate background in areas deemed important to the program of study may be required to complete collateral courses in addition to the minimum credit requirements for the degree and may be admitted on a provisional status until some deficiencies are remedied. All applicants for to graduate degree programs in agricultural, food and resource economics are required to submit scores for the General Test of the Graduate Record Examination.
Additional details on requirements and procedures are outlined on the department Web site at http://www.canr.msu.edu/afre/graduate/applying.
Requirements for the Master of Science Degree in Agricultural, Food and Resource Economics
The student may elect either Plan A (with thesis) or Plan B (non-thesis research paper). The student's plan of study should be approved by the department prior to the beginning of the second year of enrollment in the program.
A total of 30 credits is required for the degree under Plan A, and a total of 33 credits is required for the degree under Plan B.
Requirements for Both Plan A and Plan B:
- Complete a minimum of 3 credits of microeconomic theory in AFRE 805 or its equivalent.
- Complete a minimum of 9 credits of quantitative methods by enrollment in AFRE 801 and AFRE 802, or equivalent, and 3 credits of an elective, usually AFRE 835. A grade point average of 3.0 or greater is required in all three quantitative methods courses.
- Complete an additional 12 credits of advanced course work at the 800- or 900-level, at least 9 credits must be AFRE courses.
- Pass a final oral examination at which the student presents their thesis or research paper results.
- Have a grade point average of at least 3.0 in the student’s approved course program before the student can be certified for graduation. Collateral courses are not included in this calculation.
Additional Requirements for Plan A:
- Complete 6 credits of AFRE 899 Master's Thesis Research.
- Complete 3 credits of AFRE 898 Master's Research.
- Complete 6 credits within or outside AFRE in consultation and approved by the Graduate Program Director.
Guidance Committee
New students are assigned a temporary major professor by the Graduate Program Director, in consultation with the student and faculty member. The student is responsible for assembling a long-term major professor and guidance committee via consultation with faculty and, if desired, the Graduate Program Director. Students must have a major professor and guidance committee by the end of their second semester. The guidance committee consists of three or more Michigan State University regular faculty members. A majority of the guidance comittee members must have appointments in the Department of Agricultural, Food and Resource Economics.
English Program Requirements
Due to cancellations of many international English language proficiency tests, MSU will be temporarily accepting the following tests for international students applying for fall semester 2022. In addition, MSU will be expanding the ability for students to receive provisional admission. If a provisionally admitted student is able to take a test that meets our regular admission standards prior to enrollment, we will update their admission status to regular.
Fee Information
Tuition Fee
USD 47,916How to Apply
Request that all secondary schools, colleges, universities attended and/or examination boards send original or attested copies of all transcripts, marks sheets, certificates and diplomas earned directly to the Office of Admissions at Michigan State University. These can be sent through the online services listed below or by mail. If sending by mail, any hard copy of academic records must be sent in an official, sealed envelope.
Parchment
Common App
Coalition for College
Naviance
eScrip-Safe
National Student Clearing House
Office of Admissions
Hannah Administration Building
426 Auditorium Road, Room 250
East Lansing, MI 48824-2604
In addition, if the original documents are not issued in English, an official translation of each document must be provided along with the original language documents. Translations may be done by the school, college or university attended or an authorized/official translator in the country of study. Review MSU's International transcript requirements for country-specific transcript information.
Note: Documents submitted to MSU as part of the application process will not be returned.
As a freshman you do not have to officially declare your major yet, however you will be asked to select your major preference on the application. If you are undecided, select the "Exploratory preference" option.
Changing your major preference
After submitting the application, fall freshman applicants have until May 1 to change their major preference in their account. Any student who applies, or is admitted, after May 1 cannot change their major preference until they meet with an academic adviser at New Student Orientation (NSO).
Have the testing agency (TOEFL, IELTS, SAT, MSUELT or MELAB accepted) provide proof of English proficiency directly to MSU if your first language is not English. MSU's TOEFL code is 1465. MSU is test optional, which means international students are encouraged, though not required, to submit SAT or ACT scores. The SAT code is 1465; the ACT code is 2032.
Review our full overview on English language proficiency for details on temporary exceptions due to the impact of the novel coronavirus — including additional tests being accepted and expanded opportunities for provisional admission.
Agricultural, Food and Resource Economics - Master of Science
Michigan State University
United States of America,
East Lansing
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