At 16, Katya Kondragunta has already lived through two disasters amped by climate change. First came wildfires in California in 2020. Ash and smoke forced her family to stay inside their home in the Bay Area city of Fremont, for weeks.
Then they moved to Prosper, Texas, where she dealt with record-setting heat last summer.
''We've had horrible heat waves and they've impacted my everyday life,'' the high school junior said. ''I'm in cross country ... I'm supposed to go outside and run every single day to get my mileage in."
Kondragunta says in school she hasn't learned about how climate change is intensifying these events, and she hopes that will change when she gets to college.
Increasingly, U.S. colleges are creating climate change programs to meet demand from students who want to apply their firsthand experience to what they do after high school, and help find solutions.
''Lots of centers and departments have renamed themselves or been created around these climate issues, in part because they think it will attract students and faculty,'' said Kathy Jacobs, director of the University of Arizona Center for Climate Adaptation Science and Solutions. It launched a decade ago and connects several climate programs at the school in Tucson.
Other early movers that created programs, majors, minors and certificates dedicated to climate change include the University of Washington, Yale University, Utah State University, the University of Montana,Northern Vermont University and the University of California, Los Angeles. Columbia, the private university in New York City, opened its Climate School in 2020 with a graduate degree in climate and society, and has related undergraduate programs in the works.
Just in the past 4 years, the public Plymouth State University in New Hampshire, Iowa State, Nashville private university Vanderbilt, Stanford University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and others have started climate-related studies. Hampton University, a private, historically Black university in Virginia, is building one now, and the University of Texas at Austin will offer theirs this fall.