Video: Welcome to EEPS
Graduate Program Introduction
The Department of Earth, Environmental and Planetary Sciences at Rice University offers an unusual combination of quality, resources, opportunity and cultural richness to its graduate students. The department offers two graduate thesis programs: a Master’s and a Ph.D. Each program is customized to the individual student’s interests, strengths and academic background. The focus in on providing the intellectual and physical environment that will enable students to generate original groundbreaking research, presentations, and publication in professional journals. Students are required to complete one semester as a teaching assistant during their graduate work, but they can do more if there is personal interest or by individual faculty request.
Most students in the thesis degree programs receive full tuition waivers and receive nationally-competitive stipends that enable them to live comfortably in Houston — an exciting, diverse, and culturally-rich city.
Houston is both the center of the international energy industry, and also home to NASA’s Johnson Space Center and the Lunar and Planetary Institute, giving the city an unusually vibrant earth science community. About 20 local energy and space science professionals serve as adjunct faculty in our department, greatly expanding the intellectual breadth, opportunities and areas of instruction and research available to our students. We have several visiting scientist programs that support extended research visits by prominent earth scientists from institutions around the world, further enriching the department’s intellectual life.
Research
Students work very closely with an internationally-known and respected faculty that has research projects all over the world. Faculty members have joint research projects with scientists at over 100 institutions worldwide, giving an international scope to the department with research programs on all the continents, in all of the oceans, and on four planets. Their research interests span a wide range of topics and fall broadly under two principal research themes: Earth Structure and Dynamics and Earth Systems Science. Many departmental research programs involve substantial field activities, both on land and at sea. Similarly, several course offerings include field trips to a variety of destinations and geologic settings. The Department sponsors Rice field trips, enabling faculty, students, and researchers to visit classic geologic features, sites, and provinces locally and around the world. Recent field trips include travel to Antarctica, Hawaii, Cuba, the Alps, the Canadian Cordillera, Spain, Morocco and Turkey.
Rice’s size encourages interdepartmental research. Earth Science faculty conduct multi-disciplinary research projects with faculty in a number of other Rice science and engineering departments, in particular, Chemistry, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Computational and Applied Mathematics, Civil and Environmental Engineering, and Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering. In addition, the Department of Earth Science hosts the collaborative research center, the Center for Computational Geophysics, and collaborates with other interdepartmental research centers, such as the Energy and Environmental Systems Institute, the Institute for Biosciences and Bioengineering, the Center for the Study of the Environment and Society, the Shell Center for Sustainability, the Ken Kennedy Institute for Information Technology, and the Center for Lunar Science Exploration.
Graduate Degree Programs
Our graduate thesis degree programs are customized to individual student interests, strengths, and academic background. Each student’s course of study is flexible, developed in consultation with an advisory committee and the department Graduate Committee. A cross-disciplinary program with departments in Rice’s Brown School of Engineering is available for graduate students wishing to emphasize computational research in the earth sciences. Incoming students should have or should acquire a strong background in physics, chemistry, and mathematics and should have a broad grounding in fundamental earth science. Students who majored in any science or in mathematics are encouraged to apply.
All graduate students enrolled in either the thesis master’s or doctoral program are required to take a written qualifying exam covering general earth science knowledge, usually in the second semester. Starting in their second year they are also required to make a progress research presentation annually within the department and submit short progress reports of their research and coursework to the Graduate Committee.
MS students generally must complete one semester of residency and 30 credit hours. The thesis must include a least one manuscript that has been submitted to a recognized peer-review journal with the student as the lead author. PhD students must complete either 60 or 90 credit hours, depending on whether or not they are entering the program with a relevant master’s degree. Doctoral students are expected to submit an annual paper for publication starting in the second year. The doctoral thesis must include at least three manuscripts that have been submitted to a recognized peer-review journal with the student as lead author, and at least one of the manuscripts must be in press or published at the time of the thesis defense.
The department also plays key roles in two Professional Master of Science tracks: 1) Subsurface Geoscience and 2) Environmental Analysis and Decision Making, which train professionals for exploration and production in the petroleum industry, and for science management roles in the environmental industry.
Endowment
The department has a large endowment that helps maintain state-of-the-art facilities including classrooms, offices, research equipment such as the ICP-MS and the Malvern particle analyzer, and extensive computing technology, labs, and workstations. The endowment also provides generous graduate fellowships and support for student research, travel, and equipment. Department research expenditures are over $2M annually, with faculty research programs sponsored by a number of federal agencies, notably the National Science Foundation, NASA, and the Department of Energy, as well as by the energy industry.
Career Opportunities
Houston is both the center of the international energy industry as well as home to NASA’s Johnson Space Center and the Lunar Planetary Institute. The department maintains strong ties with the oil and gas exploration industry, in which many of our alumni are now employed. Each year, over a dozen oil and gas companies recruit students in the department for summer internships and full time employment. Our PhD students find many employment opportunities in both academics and in industry.
Student Life
The department has a very active student organization, known as the GeoUnion, for both graduate and undergraduate students. GeoUnion hosts visiting speakers, is involved with campus and national professional societies (AAPG, AGU, GSA, SEG, SEPM), sponsors social and professional gatherings, holds an annual, industry-funded field trip, and coordinates earth science outreach and other graduate activities on campus. Rice also has a very active Graduate Student Association (GSA) that offers many additional resources, social opportunities and activities to the graduate community. International graduate students receive special support and services through the Rice Office of International Students and Scholars (OISS).
Guidelines for Advanced Degrees in the Department of Earth Science
- Ph.D. Qualifying Exam Forms
- MS Thesis Proposal Forms
- Rubrics
- Guidelines Forms Appendix [pdf]
Rice and the department of Earth, environmental and planetary sciences offers a combination of department and university resources for both the personal and professional success of our graduate students.
EEPS Resources
Ombudspersons
Within EEPS, Ombudspersons are a formal option for counsel; a faculty member who is not a member of the Graduate Committee serves in this role. The Department has two Ombudspersons who are available to assist students involved in conflicts with faculty or other students.
Dr. Kirsten Siebach (ksiebach@rice.edu)
Dr. Mark Torres (mt61@rice.edu)
What students can expect from a department ombudsperson:
The ombudsperson will listen and make recommendations, and/or make referrals to other resources on campus. Although the recommendations from the ombudsperson are not binding, faculty and students are expected to make good faith efforts to implement the recommendations.
Faculty-Student Liaison
EEPS also offers graduate students the opportunity to speak directly with a faculty liaison about anything beyond the role of the ombudspersons.
Dr. Sylvia Dee (sylvia.dee@rice.edu)
What students can expect from the faculty-student liaison:
- Promote open lines of communication between the faculty and student body;
- Communicate broad student issues to faculty, and faculty to students, as well as relay questions;
- Provide information regarding departmental activities and decisions;
- Provide access to resources for work-life balance, departmental environment and culture, expanding your mentoring network, career development;
- Enhance student quality of life;
- Field any other concerns students may want to communicate to the liaison.
University Resources
Interpersonal Misconduct Prevention and Support offers care management and navigation to students who are reporting an incident of interpersonal violence perpetrated against them and to students who have been accused of perpetrating interpersonal violence. The Office also provides prevention education to the Rice community on sexual and domestic violence, sexual harassment, stalking and Title IX and Clery Act requirements.
The Wellbeing and Counseling Center supports student development and success by providing a good first point of contact for students who want to talk to someone about solutions to their wellbeing and mental health concerns.
The Office of Access, Equity and Equal Opportunity works closely with faculty, administrators and staff to increase tolerance, opportunity and diversity within the Rice Community and to ensure that the University complies with the letter and spirit of the federal and state laws and regulations governing these programs.
The Ethics and Compliance site provides guidance on reporting suspected or actual wrongful conduct at Rice, anonymously, for government reporting, or whistleblower reporting.
To file a report, you will need to go to the Rice University EthicsLine site, a secure site from which to access and submit the appropriate form.
The Center for Academic and Professional Communication serves as the communication support hub of the university. Our mission is to assist all members of the Rice community in effectively communicating their ideas to a wide range of audiences, using various written, oral, and visual modes of communication. Our staff and peer consultants support undergraduates, graduate students, post-docs, faculty, and staff through one-on-one consultations, workshops, and online resources.
The Center for Career Development (CCD) is located in Huff House and exists to help you find and make your place in the world by: Educating you on knowledge of self, career options and resources, Connecting you with opportunities through the global Rice network, and Empowering you with skills, tools, and confidence.