Four children playing in playground

Any student enrolled in a UW–Madison doctoral program, other than Human Ecology, can pursue a doctoral minor in Human Ecology. The graduate program within the School of Human Ecology (SoHE) provides rich interdisciplinary training and scholarship focused on exploring the human condition and well-being in relation to ecological settings—physical, social, community, and built surroundings. The school's philosophy is that individual development and well-being are promoted through interactions with ecological settings. Research, creativity, teaching, and outreach are directed toward a positive impact on these settings and the patterns of human behavior within them. Faculty members possess expertise in areas as diverse as longitudinal modeling, community-based research, interpretive interviewing, program evaluation, observational methods, survey methodology, action research, and ethnography. 

Admissions

Any graduate student outside of the School of Human Ecology interested in pursuing an option A, external doctoral minor, as part of their breadth requirement should complete the SoHE Doctoral Minor Form.

All graduate students must utilize the Graduate Student Portal to add, change, or discontinue any doctoral minor. Log in to MyUW, click on Graduate Student Portal, and then click on Add/Change Programs. Select the information for the doctoral minor for which you are applying.

Requirements

Grade Requirement

Students must receive a grade of B or better in each course. 

Required Courses

The Human Ecology Doctoral Minor requires at least 9 credits taken through a combination of coursework in at least two different School of Human Ecology departments: Civil Society and Community Studies (CSCS); Consumer Science (CNSR SCI), Design Studies (DS), Human Development and Family Studies (HDFS), and Interdisciplinary–Human Ecology (INTER-HE). At least 6 of the 9 credits must be in courses numbered at least 700 and above. Human Ecology courses that are cross-listed with another department should be enrolled in through the respective Human Ecology department.