Fish and Game Warden

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AVG. SALARY

$78,560

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EDUCATION

Bachelor's degree

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JOB OUTLOOK

Decreasing

What To Learn

High School

Suggested Steps to Prepare for a Fish and Game Warden Career (Grades 6-12)

Check out the recommended classes, activities and skills below for each grade level. These recommendations are very general -- discuss your specific course plan with your school counselors and teachers.

AI-assisted and curriculum-reviewed guidance. Talk with your counselor or teacher about your specific plan.
Grades 6-8

Helpful Classes

  • Physical Education
  • Social Studies
  • Communication
  • Health

Things to Try

  • Practice observing surroundings, following procedures, and reporting what happened clearly, Learn basic emergency response, first aid awareness, or team drills, Compare how rules and routines help keep schools and communities safe, Interview a fish and game warden about responsibility, communication, and readiness

Focus Skills

  • Observation
  • Judgment
  • Communication
  • Teamwork
  • Procedure-following

Helpful Classes

  • Criminal Justice
  • English
  • Health
  • Civics
  • Physical Education

Recommended Learning Areas

  • situational awareness
  • teamwork
  • public service
  • communication
  • personal safety

Things to Try

  • Join public safety, emergency response, or school security awareness activities, Practice writing short incident summaries based on a mock situation, Learn how teams use radios, checklists, and procedures during emergencies, Shadow a fish and game warden or public safety worker to see how information is handled

Focus Skills

  • Observation
  • Judgment
  • Communication
  • Teamwork
  • Procedure-following

Helpful Classes

  • Criminal Justice
  • Public Safety
  • Psychology
  • English
  • Physical Education

Recommended Learning Areas

  • incident response
  • public safety systems
  • reporting
  • conflict management
  • fitness

Things to Try

  • Role-play de-escalation, communication, and decision-making during a controlled scenario, Observe how safety workers monitor people, locations, or evidence and document details, Practice chain-of-command and teamwork during drills or service projects, Compare different response options and explain which is safest and why

Focus Skills

  • Observation
  • Judgment
  • Communication
  • Teamwork
  • Procedure-following

Helpful Classes

  • Public Safety
  • Psychology
  • Government
  • Report Writing
  • Physical Conditioning

Recommended Learning Areas

  • evidence and reporting
  • emergency procedures
  • de-escalation
  • chain of command
  • ethics

Things to Try

  • Complete a public safety project involving reports, procedures, and risk assessment, Practice documenting incidents, witness statements, or evidence clearly and accurately, Study emergency plans and explain how agencies coordinate during events, Interview safety professionals about ethics, judgment, and community trust

Focus Skills

  • Observation
  • Judgment
  • Communication
  • Teamwork
  • Procedure-following

Helpful Classes

  • Public Safety Practicum
  • Government
  • Psychology
  • Report Writing
  • Health Science

Recommended Learning Areas

  • incident documentation
  • emergency coordination
  • legal procedures
  • risk assessment
  • community safety

Things to Try

  • Build a portfolio with scenario reports, safety plans, procedure notes, and reflection logs, Complete a capstone tied to emergency response, incident documentation, or risk reduction, Compare pathways in law enforcement, security, fire service, dispatch, and military roles, Practice legal, ethical, and communication standards used in public safety work

Focus Skills

  • Observation
  • Judgment
  • Communication
  • Teamwork
  • Procedure-following

Beyond High School

Here's a list of programs that you should consider if you're interested in this career:

Education Level

Education training and experience are required at different levels for success in different occupations.

Bachelor's degree

Fish and game wardens typically need a bachelor's degree; desirable fields of study include wildlife science, biology, or natural resources. Federal Wildlife Officers and some state-level fish and game wardens may not need a bachelor's degree.

Insider Info

Additional Information

Applications for fish and game wardens can be made directly to the Department of Fish and Game.

Training for a fish and game warden includes going through a rigorous academy. Fredrick Cole is a fish and game warden in California. He has a degree in criminal justice and says that a minimum requirement to enter the fish and game warden academy is 60 credits of college. Usually, those 60 credits are in police science or natural biological science.

Cadets spend 22 weeks in resource training and 10 weeks in field training. Then they move into a field position, where they are on probation for a year.

Many schools offer intern and cooperative learning programs. That's a great way to get your foot in the door of any agency involved in fish enhancement and protection.

In the U.S., fisheries officers at the federal and state levels all receive police training.