Skip to main content

Vegan Farming Student Wins Case Against College, Will Not Be Required to Watch Bull Castration

College student Fiji Willetts did not want to participate in the mandatory farm husbandry module because she is vegan. Only after she took her complaint to the exam board did the college agree to provide an alternative module. 


1,825 Likes

An 18-year-old student at South Gloucestershire and Stroud College in Bristol, England has won a discrimination case against the college after she was told she had to take a mandatory module on animal farming or fail the course. Fiji Willetts, who is currently studying animal management and has been vegan for four years, discovered after enrolling in the program that she had to take, and pass, a module on farm husbandry that teaches students about day-to-day care, selective breeding, and raising the animals for human consumption. As part of the course, students are expected to visit a working farm, which could include witnessing a bull castration or visiting a slaughterhouse. 

“I couldn’t simply break my way of living purely to pass a course,” Willetts told UK animal-rights organization The Vegan Society. “I am vegan because I love animals and so to go against my beliefs and attend a farm where I would be supporting a farmer would be wrong.”

Willetts brought up her concerns with her tutor, before submitting a formal complaint to the college, the Education and Skills Funding Agency, and then the exam board. She was told she would not be given the opportunity to study an alternative module and that skipping the unit would result in her automatically failing the course. The case escalated to the awarding body for non-compliance with equality law, and, five months later, the college has agreed to provide a more suitable module for Willetts.

Share this

We have a new Instagram home! Come join the plant-based party.

Join the Party

Get the Newsletter

Never miss out on breaking stories, recipes, and deals

Get the Magazine

#145 2026 The Wellness Issue
#145 2026 The Wellness Issue
#145 2026 The Wellness Issue

All things plant‑based, in your mailbox and inbox

Subscribe