CALS students consider a "planetary health" approach, understanding that the health of people, communities, animals, plants, and ecosystems are linked. Their studies span a diverse spectrum and can encompass veterinary, animal, and plant sciences, as well as biological, microbiological, molecular, and biochemical sciences. They explore sustainable agriculture, food systems, and nutrition alongside the social sciences of agroecology, economics, and community development. Public communication skills are honed, empowering our students to build more just societies and create impacts that will lead to a better future for all.
What makes CALS unique
 
  
  Exploring Globally
 
  
  Community is the Classroom
 
  
  Embracing Innovation
By the numbers
- ~120 faculty across academic units and Extension
- 14 undergraduate majors
- 1,333 undergraduate students (Fall 2023)
CALS in the news
 
          Little Gems Everywhere: Biodiversity in the Maple Sugarbush
 
                  Green Mountain Job Retention Program Enters Third Year Awarding Graduates for Staying in Vermont
 
                  Tapping Into the Future
 
                  Animal Science Students Succeed As Members of Winning Dairy Teams
 
                  UVM’s Christina Barsky Publishes New Research on Library Employees and Politicization
Students, faculty, staff, and members of the public participating in VT-AES programs can access information about civil rights protections at the UVM Office of Equal Opportunity home page. Staff with the Office of Equal Opportunity are available to answer questions about reasonable accommodations, anti-discrimination policy, reporting, support measures, and related topics. Students interested in reasonable accommodations for a disability-related condition are encouraged to contact Student Accessibility Services.
 
  
                   
  
                   
  
     
  
        
        
     
  
        
        
    