Geography · Texas
Geography colleges in Texas
Geography program coverage in Texas is being verified. Use the filter-first search at /results to find related programs offered in the state.
Geography studies the spatial patterns of physical environments and human activity, suiting students who want to combine fieldwork, mapping, and data analysis to understand places.
We're still verifying Geography programs in Texas. Try a broader search at /results?q=Geography or browse all colleges in Texas.
What you'll study in a Geography program
- Physical geography (landforms, climate, hydrology, biogeography)
- Human geography (population, urbanization, economic and cultural patterns)
- Geographic information systems (GIS) and spatial databases
- Remote sensing and interpretation of satellite and aerial imagery
- Cartography and map design
- Spatial statistics and quantitative methods
- Field methods and data collection
- Regional geography and a senior research project or capstone
Where a Geography degree can lead
- Geographers
- GIS Analyst
- Cartographer
- Remote Sensing Analyst
- Urban or Regional Planner (often with a master's)
- Environmental Consultant
Typical pay: BLS, 2024 geographers median $97,200
A Geography major examines where things happen on Earth and why, spanning physical geography (landforms, climate, hydrology, biogeography) and human geography (population, urbanization, economic and cultural patterns, political boundaries). Most programs are bachelor's degrees that pair regional and thematic coursework with a methods sequence: geographic information systems (GIS), remote sensing, spatial statistics, cartography, and field methods. Departments often offer concentrations such as environmental geography, urban and economic geography, or geospatial technology, and many require a senior research project or capstone built around original spatial analysis.
Graduates apply spatial reasoning across government, environmental and planning consultancies, utilities, logistics, and tech, frequently in GIS analyst, cartographer, and remote-sensing roles where a bachelor's degree is the typical entry point. The job title "Geographer" itself is narrower and more research-oriented: the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $97,200 for geographers, with a bachelor's degree as the typical entry-level education, though many research and academic positions in the field expect a master's or doctorate. BLS also projects employment of geographers changing by -3.1% (projected decline), so students often broaden their prospects by pairing the major with GIS, statistics, environmental science, or planning skills that transfer to a wider set of geospatial jobs.
Geography in other states
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