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Hydrology and Water Security

Hydrology and Water Security at the University of Oklahoma

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OU Online M.S. in Environmental Science: Hydrology & Water Security

The Online M.S. in Environmental Science: Hydrology and Water Security at the University of Oklahoma is a 32-credit graduate degree, completed in about 21 months and delivered fully online. Created through a partnership between the School of Civil Engineering and Environmental Science (Gallogly College of Engineering), the School of Meteorology, and the Department of Geography and Environmental Sustainability, it is anchored in the National Weather Center ecosystem and designed from the ground up for students who want rigorous training without leaving their jobs or home communities.

The program is administered through the OU Graduate College and OU Online, and maintains an active community presence via social media:

OU Graduate College: https://online.ou.edu/program/mes-in-hydrology-and-water-security/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/OUHydrologyOnline

Since launched in 2018, OU HWS Hydrology and Water Security Program has graduated 300+ master’s degree students, currently average 120+ MS. student enrollment, ranked among the Nation’s Top 10 Online program in environmental science.

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HWS Preparing Water Leaders for a Changing World

Water is the quiet engine of economies, ecosystems, and everyday life. It powers our cities, feeds our farms, sustains our rivers, and defines the severity of floods and droughts. In the 21st century, water security is no longer a local concern; it is a global challenge at the intersection of climate, energy, food, equity, and national security.

The University of Oklahoma’s Hydrology and Water Security (HWS) program was created to meet that challenge head-on. Conceived in 2018 as a cross-campus, cross-college initiative, HWS was designed from day one to be both globally relevant and locally grounded—linking world-class science with the real needs of communities, agencies, and industry. 

Today, HWS has grown into one of the nation’s leading graduate platforms for training the next generation of water professionals, with:

  • A fully online M.S. in Environmental Science: Hydrology & Water Security, typically completed in 21 months while working full-time. 
  • On-campus M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Hydrology and Water Security. 

Since launch, the program has enrolled more than 100 students per year from across the United States and abroad and has already graduated well over 300 master’s students in its first five years—building a rapidly growing network of OU-trained water leaders in utilities, consulting, agencies, NGOs, and the private sector.


Why OU for Hydrology & Water Security?

The short version:

  • Unmatched integration of hydrology, meteorology, engineering, geography, and social science in a single water-focused program.
  • Unique location in the NOAA National Weather Center ecosystem, with direct connections to federal partners and operational systems.
  • Proven track record of transitioning research to operations—satellite/radar QPE, hydrologic models, hydrometeorology, flash-flood guidance, etc—that students see from the inside.
  • Flexible pathways that serve both early-career and mid-career professionals, on campus and online.
  • Demonstrated impact in training hundreds of graduates who are already shaping water decisions across the U.S. and globally.

In an era when water extremes are reshaping landscapes, economies, and societies, the Hydrology and Water Security program at the University of Oklahoma is not just another graduate degree—it is a strategic platform for building the human infrastructure we need to navigate a water-stressed future.

Vision

To build an internationally well-known research and graduate education program in Hydrology and Water Security at the National Weather Center that produces future leaders capable of understanding complex water systems and managing them effectively, equitably, and sustainably—while reducing the impacts of water-related hazards such as floods and droughts. 

Mission

The Mission of the HWS graduate program is to provide unique opportunities for graduate-level learning, research and engagement at the nexus of water, weather, climate, agriculture, energy, policy, and sustainability. Students learn to think across the full “water column”—from groundwater to atmosphere—and across the full “human column”—from individual communities to global supply chains.

A Truly Interdisciplinary, Cross-College Program

Hydrology and water security do not live in a single department, so HWS deliberately does not either. The program is jointly led by:

  • School of Civil Engineering and Environmental Science (Gallogly College of Engineering)
  • School of Meteorology and Department of Geography & Environmental Sustainability (College of Atmospheric & Geographic Sciences)

and is tightly integrated with:

  • The WaTER Center (Water Technologies for Emerging Regions)
  • Oklahoma Water Survey and Plains Institute
  • Advanced Radar Research Center (ARRC)
  • Center for Spatial AnalysisClimate Survey, and other campus units
  • On-site federal partners at the NOAA National Severe Storms Laboratory (NSSL) in the National Weather Center

Faculty span hydrometeorology, surface and groundwater hydrology, radar and remote sensing, river hydraulics, water quality, water law and economics, socio-hydrology, risk communication, and natural hazards policy. 

The result is an ecosystem where engineers, meteorologists, geographers, lawyers, economists, and social scientists teach and supervise within a single, coherent HWS curriculum.


HWS Curriculum: From Raindrop to Policy

The HWS portfolio offers multiple entry points for different backgrounds and career stages. The HWS curriculum was built around a simple but powerful idea: water problems are never “just” physical, and they’re never “just” social. The course grid therefore spans:

  • Physical Science & Engineering
    • Hydrology and Groundwater Hydrology
    • Hydrometeorology I & II (land–atmosphere interaction; storm systems)
    • Fluid Mechanics, River Hydraulics, Sediment Transport
    • Radar & Remote Sensing Hydrology
    • Quantitative & Stochastic Hydrology
    • Hydroinformatics and Modeling in Hydrology
  • Water Quality & Technology
    • Water Quality Management
    • Aquatic Chemistry
    • Water Technologies for Emerging Regions
  • Water Security & Society
    • Water Resources Management
    • Global Change Hydrology and Ecohydrology
    • Socio-hydrology and Hydroclimatology
    • Water Law and Water Economics
    • Natural Hazards and Policy
  • Data & Decision Tools
    • GIS and spatial analysis
    • Parallel programming, multicriteria optimization (through OU data science offerings)
    • HWS Seminar and Webinar Series, connecting students to global experts and real-world case studies

Students can tailor their path toward careers in:

  • Hydrologic and climate services
  • Water utilities and infrastructure agencies
  • Environmental and engineering consulting
  • Insurance and catastrophe modeling
  • NGOs and international development
  • Research careers in academia, NASA/NOAA centers, national water centers, and more

Online by Design, Global Impact: Human Capacity Building

From its inception, the HWS program has been about more than course catalogs. It is a deliberate investment in human capacity for water resilience.

Scale and Reach

  • Enrollment: Over 100 students per year enrolled across HWS tracks, representing a broad mix of backgrounds—engineering, environmental science, policy, law, public health, and more.
  • Graduates: More than 300 master’s graduates in the past five years, with rapidly growing alumni networks in utilities, state and federal agencies, consultancies, and international organizations.
  • Geographic footprint: Students and alumni span all U.S. regions and multiple countries, bringing OU’s water expertise into river basins, cities, and rural communities that would never otherwise be connected to the National Weather Center’s ecosystem.

Workforce and Leadership Outcomes

Graduates occupy roles such as:

  • Hydrologists and water resources engineers in public utilities and consulting firms
  • Flood risk and climate resilience specialists in state and federal agencies
  • GIS and remote sensing analysts supporting water, agriculture, and disaster programs
  • Policy, planning, and regulatory professionals with a deep understanding of hydrologic science
  • International development practitioners working on water security, WASH, and climate adaptation

Many online students are mid-career professionals who use the HWS degree to step into leadership roles, bringing modern hydrologic tools—remote sensing, modeling, and risk analysis—directly into their organizations.

Research and Societal Impact

Because HWS is embedded in a research powerhouse, students are exposed to:

  • Cutting-edge work on satellite precipitation, radar hydrology, flash-flood forecasting, and global water extremes
  • Operational systems like NOAA’s MRMS/FLASH and NASA-linked applications, many of which were developed or co-developed at OU
  • Interdisciplinary projects spanning hydrology, climate, infrastructure, Indigenous resilience, and water justice

Students and alumni help translate this research into practice: improved flood warnings, smarter infrastructure design, better drought planning, more equitable water policies.

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