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The Meteorology program is housed in the Earth and Atmospheric Science Department at the Metropolitan State University of Denver located on the Auraria campus in downtown Denver. Our program offers a Meteorology major and minor as well as a Climate Change minor. The Professional Meteorology concentration fulfills the U.S. federal government civil service requirements for classification as a meteorologist and the American Meteorological Society‘s recommendations for undergraduate meteorology programs. Meteorology students can also choose an Applied Meteorology concentration that has more flexibility within the curriculum.
MSU Denver students and alumni at the annual American Meteorological Society meeting just across the street from campus in 2023.
Find a list of staff advisors here
Learn about the requirements to earn a bachelor's degree in meteorology
Learn how to get a meteorology minor in 19 credits, building from two General Studies courses in the Natural and Physical Sciences
Learn how to get a climate change minor in 18 credits, building from two General Studies courses in the Natural and Physical Sciences
Check out our meteorology courses
Learn about how to build experience on air
Check out our field courses.
Join our student club
Scroll through photos from alumni events
MSU Denver students have the advantage of the following opportunities:
The Meteorology program is located in the Science building on the Auraria Campus in downtown Denver, just a bus or light rail ride to the surrounding suburbs and towns. The MSU Denver Meteorology computer laboratory is a state-of-the-art computer lab with an 11-monitor weather wall that displays the current weather and forecasts using the same software as the National Weather Service. Students use the lab to create weather visualizations for analysis.
Located on Colorado’s high plains with the mountains to our west, the MSU Denver campus offers you the opportunity to observe Colorado’s extreme weather patterns first-hand. From severe weather to heavy snowfalls and blizzards to Chinook wind events and fire weather, the Front Range is a fascinating place to study the weather and climate.
Watch: Taken by Storm
Beyond the exciting Colorado weather, we are also located in close proximity to some of the largest concentrations of atmospheric scientists in the world at national labs such as the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the National Weather Service (NWS), the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR), the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) and the National Renewable Energy Lab (NREL). This gives you the opportunity to begin working with world-renowned professionals through internships, part-time jobs and summer experiences. This also means our part-time faculty are drawn from this community.
The Student Chapter of the American Meteorological Society goes to the national AMS meeting each year, tours the national labs, helps at the local news stations for holiday forecast hotlines, hosted an eclipse booth, and more. The more senior students help other students with their coursework and the club helps build a sense of community.
AMS 100 year anniversary in Boston in 2020, Dr. Ng took a large group of students
Although most of our students prefer to do meteorology behind the scenes, a few of our meteorology majors and minors go on to be broadcast meteorologists on television. Some are Emmy-winning! Learn more about how students prepare themselves for this career from this MSU Denver RED article.
The mission of the meteorology program is to provide students with an understanding of the chaotic atmosphere. Meteorology is an applied science that combines the fields of physics, chemistry, mathematics, and computer science into an application of understanding the atmosphere. The program exposes students to all of these disciplines, while in parallel applying these hard science concepts to mesoscale, synoptic, and global scale phenomena. Students will be prepared for careers in a wide range of atmospheric science vocations, as well as further studies in graduate school. Students will be prepared to communicate forecasts verbally and in written form using their own imagery, explain the reasoning for the forecast as well as the uncertainty and the reasons for uncertainty involved to a wide range of audiences.
Upon completion of this program, students will be able to:
The meteorology faculty at MSU Denver have complementary expertise, but all have one thing in common, they love teaching! The program has three full time professors (below) and several part-time professors, Dr. Scott Landolt, an NCAR researcher with instrumentation expertise; Mike Chapman, a forecast expert with CDOT; Bob Glancy, former NWS-Boulder forecaster; and Chris Spears, broadcast meteorologist. Because of our proximity to several national labs and some of the highest density of meteorologists on the planet, there is never a shortage of excellent professors. Our class sizes are manageable at MSU Denver and you’ll find yourself in classes of 32 or less, ensuring the faculty can work more closely with you, removing the anonymity you might feel in introductory courses at other types of universities.
Sam Ng, Ph.D.
Professor Sam Ng teaches a fieldwork course called Observations of Severe Weather and is an expert on weather forecasting, winter weather, convective storms and Mesoscale meteorology.
Keah Schuenemann, Ph.D.
Professor Keah Schuenemann teaches about the fluid dynamics of the atmosphere, large scale weather systems like mid-latitude cyclones, and climate change.
Rich Wagner, Ph.D.
Emeritus Professor Rich Wagner has been deeply involved in MSU Denver life and in promoting Meteorology to students who lack access or are unfamiliar with opportunities in the field.
Have a question? We can answer it!
Whether you have a question about a prerequisite, need help registering for a course, or you would like to chat about one of our majors, we are here to help. Click below to send us an email!
Phone: 303-615-1177
Email: [email protected]
Office Location:
Science Building
2nd Floor – #2028
Auraria Campus
Mailing Address:
Metropolitan State University of Denver
Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences
Campus Box 22
P.O. Box 173362
Denver, CO 80217-3362