By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Earning a college degree is a rather traditional
pursuit, but Mississippi State University offers several
degrees in some fairly non-traditional fields. In
addition to engineering, education, mathematics and science,
MSU students can earn degrees in such varied areas as sports
turf, precision agriculture, cotton ginning, landscape
architecture, retail floristry and food science. Gary
Jackson, associate dean of MSU's College of Agriculture and
Life Sciences, said these degrees fill specific needs of
graduates and of the agricultural and life sciences fields.
Many of these degrees and specializations are found in the
curricula of the College of Agriculture and Life
Sciences. "We
offer a variety of degrees to prepare our students to meet
the demands of the workplace," Jackson said. "Our faculty is
heavily involved with private industry, public agencies, the
Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station and
the MSU Extension Service. They know what our clientele
needs, and that knowledge helps us design and offer degree
programs that boost our graduate's success rate." The
College of Agriculture and Life Sciences maintains a job
placement rate at graduation of about 90 percent. Jackson
contends that this rate reflects the real-world usefulness
of these speciality-area degrees, along with all the more
traditional fields of study. "Our
curriculum is very contemporary," Jackson said. A
degree in human sciences with a specialization in interior
design is one of several degrees that bring out the artistry
in students. Others are degrees in landscape architecture
and landscape contracting and management. These landscape
design programs have about 300 students each year who shape
people's relationship with the environment. "Students
study the ecosystem and focus on physical properties that
are installed in the environment that accommodates people,"
Jackson said. "The graduates' designs are both functional
and aesthetic while being environmentally sound and
sustainable." These
graduates go to work for private landscape firms,
architectural firms and contractors, as well as go into
business for themselves. Within
the traditional field of horticulture is a little-known
retail floristry management specialization. These graduates
combine design skills in floral arrangements with a plant
science and floriculture knowledge base. Students also study
business and management. The
food science and technology degree program prepares students
to enter the wide-ranging food industry. This field
encompasses all food processing, taking raw food from the
farm and preparing products for consumers, with emphasis on
quality and safety. Students do ingredient testing and
tasting, working with such things as fat-free hot dogs,
fruit, sweet potatoes, catfish, seafood and dairy
products. Charles
White, Food Science and Technology Department head, said the
three options within this program are science,
processing/business and food safety. These prepare students
to work in product development and research, or in various
positions in the food processing industry. The food safety
option is a pre-vet major for students trying to enter
veterinary college. "We
teach a course called food products evaluation that teaches
students the mechanics of tasting, how to use taste panels,
how to correct off-flavors and how to make a good product
taste even better," White said. "Another course is new food
development that combines basic sciences such as
microbiology and chemistry as students try to develop new
food products." Students
can pursue several agriculture-related degrees at MSU. One
of these in the Department of Agricultural and Biological
Engineering is an emphasis in cotton ginning through a
degree known as agricultural engineering technology and
business, with an option in gin management and technology.
This specialization came at the request of a major industry
organization which was having trouble recruiting competent
gin managers. "Another
relatively new option offered in with this degree is that of
precision agriculture, which uses remote sensing and
high-tech instrumentation to address problems in
agricultural production," said Jerry Gilbert, Agricultural
and Biological Engineering department head. MSU
offers a degree in biochemistry and molecular biology that
includes bioengineering. "This
field is in the forefront of the revolution we're seeing in
biology," Jackson said. "With its heavy emphasis in natural
sciences, biochemical methods, cell physiology, tissue
cultures and related fields, it is probably the leading
degree in the rapid changes in biology." On a
lighter note, students can earn specializations in golf and
sports turf management while pursing degrees in agronomy.
Mike Goatley, professor and agronomist, is an advisor for
this program. "We
have a mandatory cooperative education requirement where our
students have to complete three semesters of on-the-job
training while maintaining a 2.5 cumulative grade point
average," Goatley said. He said
most students in this major intend to manage a golf course
or maintain athletic fields. Some go into sales of turf
equipment and chemicals, while others with this degree have
started their own commercial sod operations. The
course load includes numerous horticultural topics,
ornamental and turf pathology, entomology, machinery
management, conversational Spanish and golf course
design. "This
is a very popular curriculum across the country, and we
place every one of our graduates. Usually there are more
jobs than there are students ready to fill them," Goatley
said. Not
only is MSU's program one of the largest of its kind in the
country with about 100 students per semester, it is also
unique in that under supervision, the students maintain both
the MSU golf course and the athletic fields. These
and other non-traditional degrees offered at MSU equip
graduates with the tools they need to compete and succeed in
the workforce. Released:
July 23, 2001
Community
News
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Unique degrees
make job-ready
graduates
For more information, contact:
Dr.
Gary Jackson, (662) 325-2110
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:14
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