Dec 06, 2025  
2025-2026 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
2025-2026 Undergraduate Catalog

Food Science and Industry - Science (BS)

Location(s): Manhattan Campus


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This curriculum deals with all aspects of the food industry—both theoretical and practical—from producing raw materials through processing and packaging to marketing finished foods. The curriculum balances fundamental principles and practical applications of food science within a flexible program that permits students to tailor education to personal career goals. Students choose between three options, science, food business and operations management or technology for their degree. The program is approved by the Institute of Food Technologists.

Graduates are needed to manage and supervise sophisticated food manufacturing industries that produce poultry, fresh and processed meat, dairy products, bakery goods, frozen and canned fruits and vegetables, confections, and snack foods.  Job placement and starting salaries have been excellent.

Imaginative and well-trained people are needed in research and product development to create new and innovative products and processes. Some graduates work with producers to improve the quality of raw materials. Persons trained in HACCP and food safety, microbiology, quality assurance, and evaluation are needed to help food processors meet more stringent consumer and government requirements. Others are involved in selling, merchandising, advertising, or managing food operations. Government regulatory agencies also hire food scientists to assure public health, nutrition, and food labeling. If students have foreign language capabilities, international food industry jobs are available.

Very important to the student’s course of study is the flexibility of restricted electives that the student selects by consultation with their academic advisor. This gives the student an opportunity to design a personalized, well-rounded curriculum. Often students can obtain a minor in such areas as business, cereal chemistry, economics, agribusiness, agricultural technology management, and leadership by careful selection of required minor courses.

The nature of the courses required in this curriculum is very compatible with course requirements of students interested in pre-veterinary medicine and other pre-professional curriculums such as dentistry, pharmacy, and nursing. A BS in food science provides excellent training for these students and offers them other job opportunities if needed.

Kansas State University Core: 34-36 Credit Hours


K-State Core  is the foundation for an impactful life and career after time at K-State.

The K-State Core framework covers six disciplinary areas: English, Communications, Mathematics & Statistics, Natural & Physical Sciences, Social & Behavioral Sciences, and Arts and Humanities. In addition, a seventh area is reserved for institutionally designated use, which K-State is keeping as free electives. In total, the framework takes up 34-35 credit hours of 100 and 200-level coursework. Students who complete their general education elsewhere cannot be required to take additional general education coursework in the disciplinary areas of the framework without permission from KBOR to continue requiring courses in the K-State Core.

General Education: K-State Core  

Program


The curriculum for this major assumes students enter college prepared to take Calculus.

Quantitative Studies: 3 credit hours


The courses with a KSC designation are required if not met through University Core Requirements.

Food Science Foundations: 0-1 credit hours


Processing and Professional Electives: 14 credit hours


Processing Electives: minimum of 8 credit hours


Minimum 8 credit hours from at least 2 commodity areas – Dairy, Grain, Meat, or Fruit/Vegetable. Both lecture and lab components are required in instances where lecture and lab components are separate course numbers.Credits earned beyond the minimum required for the processing elective block can be applied toward the professional electives block.

See departmental list

https://www.ag.k-state.edu/academics/student-handbook/departcourselists.html

Professional Electives: up to 6 credit hours


Up to 6 credit hours. Credits earned beyond the minimum required for the processing elective block can be applied toward the professional electives block.

See departmental list

https://www.ag.k-state.edu/academics/student-handbook/departcourselists.html

Unrestricted electives as needed to meet 120 credit hours



 

Total Hours Required for Graduation: 120


Unless the requirement block specifies otherwise, courses in the K-State Core can be used to meet one additional degree requirement, with the exception of a degree requirement that is specified as an overlay. K-State Core classes cannot be used to meet requirements for unrestricted electives. Courses outside the K-State Core can only be used to meet one degree requirement, unless the degree requirement is specified as an overlay.

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