Chesapeake Semester Makes Connections Real for Students
Students take interdisciplinary approach to studying the Bay, moving from classroom to field experiences repeatedly through the semester.

Anna McCabe ’28 was one of 12 students who participated in the Washington College Chesapeake Semester this past fall. Through the Chesapeake Semester, students study the complex history, ecology, and culture of the Chesapeake Bay as a microcosm of the challenges and transitions confronting coastal communities and the world. McCabe, an environmental science major and member of the softball team, shares her thoughts on the experience below.
Having just completed Chesapeake Semester this fall, I can safely say that it was an experience I will cherish and always look
back on in awe now knowing how special it was. I am so grateful it turned out that
way too, as Chesapeake Semester was a main selling point as to why I chose to come
to Washington College.
The big thing that sets the program apart from typical schooling is its commitment
to teaching about our beloved local body of water, the Chesapeake Bay, in an interdisciplinary
fashion through experiential learning opportunities. This meant learning inside the
classroom for a week or two and then going out and talking to field experts about
what we learned while being in places significant to the topics discussed, such as
cattle farms, museums, Smith Island, and even Belize, where we saw how certain environmental
and social issues are the same no matter where you are!
Through this program 11 other students and I gained a whole new appreciation for the
Chesapeake Bay as we examined it from several academic lenses. Getting to immerse
ourselves in the rich culture of the Bay by talking to people who live and breathe
it, like the watermen, really helped me open my mind to how intertwined all the aspects
of the Bay could be.
One of our classes discussed the Indigenous people of Maryland and how they lived
in sync with the Bay. Another examined the Bay on a more scientific level and why
and how it has changed over time. Then, the next day we would be looking at artworks
showcasing portrayals of both the Bay and Indigenous people of the area and learning
how to understand what message these paintings were trying to get across at the time
they were made. No matter what subject we were supposed to be learning there was always
overlap, which is always something that I had been told would happen in a major like
environmental science because it is inherently interdisciplinary, but I was never
quite able to understand that until I saw it unfolding right in front of me.
Not
only did Chesapeake Semester give me extensive knowledge of the Bay, but it also gave
me a family of people who I know I can rely on regardless of our program's semester
coming to a close. Starting off as a group of 12 relative strangers who get thrown
into a week of "team bonding" and then get carted around in the same transit van across
Maryland every few weeks does something to a group. Especially when you are cooking
meals, journaling and creating art, pitching tents, freezing in farm fields, doing
assignments, living in an Airbnb on a remote island, and exploring coral reefs all
together; you are bound to get attached.
Going through so much constant change and starting to get familiar with "being comfortable
being uncomfortable" (a famous Ches Sem saying) made us grow both as individuals and
as a group.
Not only did I have all the support in the world from my peers when things got a bit
too overwhelming, but I also had the support of my amazing professors, who we spent
almost as much time with. It truly is the people who make the program, and there is
no other group that I would rather have started off with struggling to remember the
names of during the hundreds of ice breakers we did and end up laying under the stars
on a dock in Belize reminiscing about how far we had come.
Now having completed
Chesapeake Semester and getting to explore such a unique location as the Bay so deeply,
I can safely say I couldn't be happier to have participated in this program. I learned
so much about myself this semester and how I have already grown and will continue
to grow now with a whole new array of people who have my back. I cannot wait to see
how Chesapeake Semester will continue to shape my path forward and allow me to look
back on what currently is, and probably always will be, my favorite semester experience
at Washington College.
—Anna McCabe '28