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It enables further innovation and partnerships while addressing best practices for the Northwest campus and agricultural sciences.Īs a proponent for ag advocacy and education, Terry believes the facility will advance Northwest’s ag sciences programming for youth while assisting Nodaway County, regional and national producers. In addition to enhancing the School of Agricultural Sciences and its curriculum, it addresses infrastructure needs at the 448-acre R.T Wright Farm related to academic facilities, parking and farm production. Opened during the summer of 2021, the 29,500-square-foot multipurpose facility features laboratories, a kitchen, classrooms, study spaces and offices as well as a large exposition space and an outdoor education plaza. Terry became aware of Northwest’s plans to build the ALC through conversations with Barr and Laurie Long, a senior gift planning officer with Northwest’s Office of University Advancement. Their commitment to the Agricultural Learning Center is a testament to their focus on promoting agriculture and education within Nodaway County and beyond.” “Having known them for a number of years, they focus not only on the agricultural industry, but they recognize the importance of service to the community and region in which they live. “We are very appreciative of the financial support from Terry and Susan,” Barr said. Rod Barr, the director of Northwest’s School of Agricultural Sciences, said. Their support of the Agricultural Learning Center is an extension of their regional and state service, Dr. Francis Hospital Foundation board in Maryville. In addition to serving with state and national soybean boards, Terry is a member of the Missouri Highways and Transportation Commission and is past-president of the Nodaway County Farm Bureau, for which he coordinated its centennial celebration in 2018. The Eckers have an interest in service, too. She also earned a master’s degree in social work from the University of Missouri-Columbia. She studied psychology at Northwest for two years before transferring to Tarkio College where she completed her bachelor’s in psychology. Susan, in addition to growing up on a farm in Holt County and supporting the Eckers’ operation, is a licensed clinical social worker and practices mental health counseling. The Ecker family was the American Salers Association Commercial Producer of the Year in 2011. Terry is a fifth-generation Nodaway County farmer near where his great-great-grandfather, John Martin Ecker, settled in 1868 outside of Elmo, Missouri. Today, Terry and Susan operate Ecker Farms Inc., raising row crops, including grass and hay, for their Saler-crossed cattle operation. “Since I came back to the farm, I’ve tried to stay involved with what was going on with the ag department.” “Growing up, I’ve been very familiar with Northwest and always thought it was a good school,” Terry said, acknowledging he attended the University of Missouri-Columbia, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in agriculture, because he wanted an experience further from home. The Eckers are members of the University’s Homesteaders society of alumni and friends who have provided leading support with gifts of $25,000 or greater toward the ALC. Those connections inspired them to further support Northwest and its future ag programming by contributing to the University’s Agricultural Learning Center (ALC). Growing up on farms in northwest Missouri, Terry and Susan Ecker have long had an affinity for agriculture and Northwest Missouri State University’s support of the industry through its programming and focus on preparing graduates for success in the field.








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