Main navigation
- Programs
- Subjects
- Universities
- Destinations
- Advice
During high school, your geography lessons likely emphasized maps and places, yet the discipline encompasses far more. Geography connects the natural and social realms, employing both scientific and humanistic approaches to understand, forecast, and explain humanity's influence on Earth and vice versa.
Geography graduates from UWM develop outstanding analytical skills—both conceptual and technical—for examining spatial, environmental, and societal data and their interconnections. They excel at synthesizing disparate information by integrating varied facts and perspectives. Additionally, they master visual data presentation techniques, such as cartography.
Contemporary geographers investigate diverse subjects including climate shifts, land utilization trends, environmental equity, racial divides, human displacement, natural disasters, and wildlife movement patterns.
Geographic Information Science (GIS) represents an expanding geography specialization. This technical framework collects, manages, and interprets location-based data, improving decision-making across industries. Municipalities might apply GIS to optimize emergency service placement considering wildfire risks and demographics, while businesses could utilize it for retail site selection based on consumer behavior and transportation flows.