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Five
Minutes with
Michael Seipel
Michael
Seipel,
professor and
chair of the
Agricultural
Science
Department, has
been a member of
the Truman
faculty since
August 1998. He
received a
bachelor of
science degree
in agricultural
economics and a
Ph.D. in
rural sociology
from the
University of
Missouri-Columbia.
Tell
us a little bit
about what you
teach:
You might say
that my teaching
focuses on the
human dimensions
of agricultural
systems; my
courses involve
applying
concepts and
tools of social
science and
business to the
economic and
cultural system
that is
agriculture. One
of my courses,
Ethical Issues
in Sustainable
Agriculture, is
a
discussion-based
class in which
students not
only grapple
with the
ethicality and
sustainability
of agricultural
technologies and
practices
(biotechnology,
animal welfare,
etc.) but become
familiar with
how different
groups (urban
consumers,
farmers,
environmental
advocates) may
differently
perceive these
technologies and
practices.
Another class
takes an
interdisciplinary
look at issues
in rural
America, such as
immigration,
population
change,
education,
voting behavior
and more. Other
classes focus on
topics such as
commodity
futures markets,
agricultural
policy and
agricultural
entrepreneurship.
How
would you
describe your
teaching
philosophy:
Learning is a
social process
and teaching
should begin
with that in
mind. At the
core of my
teaching
philosophy is a
belief in the
need to model
for students a
commitment to
lifelong
learning. In
order to do
that, I try to
make a practice
of holding my
own knowledge
and core values
up for scrutiny,
reflection and
change on a
regular basis. I
frequently use
guest speakers
in my classes so
that students
have direct
exposure to
“practitioners”
who are
grappling with
the issues
covered in that
class in their
own personal
and/or
professional
lives.
What
do you like best
about teaching:
Teaching is like
doing the same
dance over and
over, but with a
different
partner each
time. That
combination of
familiarity and
newness is
simultaneously
fun, rewarding
and terrifying.
I would identify
these related
things about
teaching that
are among my
favorites: the
sort of seasonal
rhythm that goes
with each
succeeding
semester
beginning and
ending where,
periodically,
all things are
made new again;
having a
repeated
opportunity to
share knowledge
and interest in
a subject that
one is
passionate about
with a new group
of students and
seeing a
proportion of
those students
come to share
that passion;
watching new
students come
into the
department or
into a
particular class
and having the
opportunity to
see them mature
and develop over
the course of a
semester or
their entire
college career
and then,
sometimes,
having an
opportunity to
keep in touch
with them as
alumni and
seeing that
development
process continue
over a lifetime.
What
is the last
thing that made
you laugh:
My
seven-year-old
son has a gift
for mangling
common phrases,
unintentionally
modifying song
lyrics and the
like. This is a
constant and
free source of
entertainment
for the rest of
the family. One
family favorite
is his rendition
of the Pat
Benatar song “I
Love
Rock-n-Roll”
which, when
Gregory sings
it, goes,
“I love rock and
roll, so put
another dime in
the juice box
baby…” I’m
pretty sure my
most recent good
laugh was this
or another
Gregory-ism.
What
do you like to
do when you’re
not working:
My
family and I
have the good
fortune to live
on a farm in
rural Macon
County, on land
that has been in
my wife’s family
for
approximately 75
years. Farming
is an avocation
and constant
distraction for
me. We raise
beef cattle and
sheep which we
market both
through
conventional
auction market
channels and
directly to area
consumers as
natural,
grass-fed meat.
Our three
children also
have swine and
poultry for
their 4-H
projects. On a
weekend or
holiday from the
University, I
will most likely
be found tending
to some task on
the farm, from
caring for the
animals to
cutting wood to
building fence.
If
you weren’t
teaching, what
would you be
doing:
Between earning
my bachelor’s
degree and
returning to
graduate school
to work on my
Ph.D., I worked
for three
and one-half
years for two
different
agricultural
cooperatives,
both having
grain marketing
and/or
processing as
their primary
business. I
worked first as
a commodity
price analyst
and then
as a junior
grain
merchandiser. If
I wasn’t
teaching, I
suspect I
would be working
in grain
marketing or
some related
area of
agricultural
business.
What
is the most
rewarding part
of your job:
Hearing from
former students.
It is very
gratifying to
get those
emails, calls or
notes and not
only hear about
the difference
that our Truman
alumni are
making in their
careers, their
families, their
communities, but
to also hear the
sometimes
surprising
things that they
remember about
their time in
Kirksville.
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