Agriculture connects food, science with society
Mack Goller ’18 decided early on he wanted a major focused on farming
Independent major: Agriculture: food and society
On land: āI took a gap year after high school and spent three months on a kibbutz in Israel. I took a class on permaculture, which is a form of sustainable agriculture, and it was this eye-opening experience of āThis is what Iām meant to do with my life.ā I really feel connected to the land; I want to be on a farm, and I want to provide food for myself and for my community.ā
Starting out: āI wanted to do something with farming, but I didnāt know what that would be. It was during August orientation, the second day, when Dean Emerson [from the Filene Center] did a presentation on undecided majors, and in the last five minutes she mentioned the independent major. Immediately I knew I had to do that.ā
Two sides: āWith my major, thereās the food side, the scienceāwhat food is and where it comes from. And thereās the society partāwhat the role of farming and agriculture is in our world, now and in the future. So for science Iāve taken āEconomic Botany,ā āEdible Chemicals,ā āāEvolution and Ecology,ā āCells and Genesā and āEnvironmental Science.ā Then Iāve taken āFeast or Famineā (anthropology), āSmells and Bellsā (religion) and āFood and Societyā (sociology). I also took business and economics and āReligion and Ecology,ā which wasnāt specific to agriculture but about how people connect to the environment.ā
Complete education: āI like to tell people that Iām an agriculture major with a liberal arts twist. The education Iāve had at Wheaton I couldnāt have had at a major agriculture school, where there would be soil sciences and plant sciences but I wouldnāt get the social side. From my science courses I have an understanding of what a plant is and what food is, and from the social sciences I have a good understanding of how people interact with food and how our society uses food. Then my summers have been spent doing internships and work on different farms.ā
On the farm: āMy first summer, I did a cross-country trip through WWOOF [World Wide Opportunities on Organic Farms] with a Wheaton Fellowship. I worked for 10 days to three weeks on five farms in New York, Georgia, Missouri, Texas and Utah. The following summer I was the farm manager here at WheaFarm. Last summer I worked at two organic farms in Connecticut.ā
Owning your decision: āThereās a lot of pushback from facultyāin a good way. The biggest challenge was defining what was so special about my interests and my potential major that I couldnāt do it otherwise at Wheaton. The hardest part is the most important part; you are forced to push back and to really narrow down and decide what it means to be an independent major.ā
For more information about pursuing an independent major, please contact Academic Advising at 508-286-8215 or by emailingĀ [email protected].
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