| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Copyright © 2009. National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved. Terms of Use and Privacy Statement |
Below are the first 10 and last 10 pages of uncorrected machine-read text (when available) of this chapter, followed by the top 30 algorithmically extracted key phrases from the chapter as a whole.
Intended to provide our own search engines and external engines with highly rich, chapter-representative searchable text on the opening pages of each chapter.
Because it is UNCORRECTED material, please consider the following text as a useful but insufficient proxy for the authoritative book pages.
Do not use for reproduction, copying, pasting, or reading; exclusively for search engines.
OCR for page 25
Vocational
Agriculture Education
Vocational agriculture has a long
history in American education. By those who were enrolled as stu-
dents, vocational agriculture remains one of the most widely praised
secondary school programs in the country. Most programs consist of
three parts: classroom and laboratory instruction, supervised occupa-
tional experiences (SOEs), and membership in the FFA. Vocational ag-
riculture can be a demanding and rewarding program. Students and
teachers spend considerable time in and outside school following the
curriculum and working on projects.
When federally supported vocational agriculture education was cre-
ated in 1917, about one-third of the U.S. population lived on farms.
Farm businesses dominated rural life and sustained rural communi-
ties. Today, the U.S. farm population is about 2.2 percent of the overall
population. Technological evolution over the last half century has
transformed the nature and vastly broadened the range of agricultural
occupations and professional careers. U.S. industries that serve agri-
culture by producing, processing, marketing, and preparing food and
fiber products for consumers account for about $700 billion in economic
activity each year, which is about 16.5 percent of the gross national
product (U.S. Departments of Agriculture and Commerce, 1986; U.S.
Department of Commerce Bureau of the Census, 19881.
The economic crisis in farming has affected vocational agriculture
education programs, particularly in regions where bad weather and
weak commodity markets have been problems since 1980. Students who
once might have followed their parents into farming, or worked in a
25
OCR for page 26
26
UNDERSTANDING AGRICULTURE
farm-related service industry or business often now have little interest
in agriculture. Some parents with farm backgrounds encourage their
children to pursue other careers. The media have exposed students from
families not associated with farming to the often highly visible prob-
lems in farming. Considering evidence cited in Chapter 2 that most
Americans perceive agriculture and farming as synonymous, it is not
surprising that many students are uninterested or skeptical when
evaluating opportunities that might follow from enrollment in a voca-
tional agriculture program.
FINDINGS, CONCLUSIONS, AND
RECOMMENDATIONS
Change within agriculture is an ongoing process that will affect ag-
ricultural businesses and institutions. They must adapt to continue
serving agriculture. The institution of vocational agriculture educa-
tion is no exception.
PROGRAM ENROLLMENT AND AVAILABILITY
Enrollment
Enrollments in vocational agriculture programs peaked in the late
1970s and are now declining about 1 to 3 percent annually. Figures
3-1 and 3-2 show the decline of agriculture enrollments compared with
other vocational education courses.
Based on the analysis of data and testimony presented by several
experts, the committee finds:
· Less than 5 percent of the high school population enrolls in
a 3- or 4-year vocational agriculture education program.
· The number of viable programs nationwide is declining;
consequently, the number of students served by such programs
is declining.
Little is known about vocational agriculture enrollment trends. The
USDE no longer collects data on students taking vocational agricul
ture courses.
Enrollment data that are available are often difficult to interpret,
aggregate, or compare over time because of different definitions, sam-
pling techniques, and reporting requirements. Nonetheless, the avail-
able evidence is adequate to reach some general judgments about the
OCR for page 27
VOCATIONAL AGRICULTURE EDUCATION
27
availability and enrollments in vocational agriculture programs among
high school students.
The committee believes that the best estimates of enrollment trends
in vocational agriculture programs can be extrapolated from statistics
on FFA membership. This organization has compiled records for nearly
six decades, using a relatively consistent methodology. The National
FFA Center compiles the data that state supervisors of agriculture have
collected (National FFA Organization, 19861. Drawing on state surveys
of vocational agriculture teachers, the FFA estimates that about 75
percent of vocational agriculture students are FFA members. This per-
centage appears to have remained roughly constant over the last few
decades.
Enrollment in vocational agriculture programs for full-time second-
ary school students grew quickly in the 1930s, rising from about
123,685 in 1930 to 329,398 in 1940. In the next decade, enrollment
expanded to approximately 376,897. The 1950s brought much slower
growth; enrollments stood at 463,960 in 1960. In the 1960s, enrollment
continued to increase, although somewhat erratically (Roberts, 19711.
Another steady growth phase began in 1971, which approximately par-
alleled the expansion in agricultural production and profits during the
1970s.
Peak enrollments probably occurred in 1976 to 1977, when about
697,500 students were enrolled in vocational agriculture programs
(National FFA Organization, 19861. This was about 5 percent of the
14.5 million students in high school. In 1986, vocational agriculture
enrollment had declined to about 525,071. FFA membership followed a
similar pattern, declining from 507,735 members in 1976-1977 to
430,184 members in 1985-1986. Of these 430,184 students, 113,317
were from the FFA's Central Region (Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas,
Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota,
South Dakota, and Wisconsin); 77,836 were from the Eastern Region
(Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New
Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsyl-
vania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, and West Virginia); 106,338
were from the Southern Region (Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia,
Louisiana, Mississippi, Puerto Rico, South Carolina, and Tennessee);
and 132,693 were from the Western Region (Alaska, Arizona, Califor-
nia, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Ore-
gon, Texas, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming). The high school popu-
lation also declined over this period, falling to about 12.4 million
students in 1986 (USDE, 19871. Vocational agriculture program enroll-
ment currently is about 4.5 percent of the high school population (Na-
tional FFA Organization, 19861.
OCR for page 28
28
UNDERSTANDING AGRICULTURE
Availability
Vocational agriculture is most commonly found in general or compre-
hensive high schools; in 1985, 77.7 percent of vocational agriculture
high school teaching positions were in such schools (Camp, 19871. Other
programs are based in vocational schools, including 2-year postsecond-
ary technical centers. In more than half the schools, one teacher is
responsible for vocational agriculture programs (Camp, 19871. About
35 percent of the programs are in schools located in 13 southern states:
Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missis-
sippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas,
and Virginia. Some people believe the South has a disproportionately
high number of vocational agriculture programs. The reasons for this
are agriculture is economically important in the South, social and cul-
tural conditions create expectations for the schools to teach vocations,
and many Southerners practice small-farm agriculture as a way of life
(Lee, 19861.
The committee found few convincing studies and data on why some
school districts offer vocational agriculture, while others do not, or why
vocational programs do well in some schools, but are weak in others
nearby. One study of Kansas school districts without vocational agri
Total
Office occupations
Consumer and homemaking
Trade and industrial
Other
Distribution
Health
Agriculture
Occupational home economics
Technical
-20
\~\\\\Y
0 20 40 60
Percent change 1975 to 1981
FIGURE 3-1 Change in vocational education enrollments (in percent).
SOURCE: USDE, 1983.
OCR for page 29
VOCATIONAL AGRICULTURE EDUCATION
Technical ~
Occupational home economics I;
Dist
_ .
29
2a'~ i'""' C:\ occupations
j3~~ Consumer and
~ homemaking
Trade and industrial
FIGURE 3-2 Distribution in vocational education enrollments.
SOURCE: USDE, 1983.
culture found that rural residents and agribusiness representatives
wanted such programs, but school administrators did not. The admin-
istrators cited a lack of student interest, facilities, money, and need for
vocational agriculture (Parmley, 19821.
Minority Enrollments
.
Historically, vocational agriculture has been most attractive to white
male students in rural areas. Enrollment trends show that more girls
are now enrolling in vocational agriculture, but minority enrollment
remains disproportionately low. The committee identified several pos-
sible reasons for relatively low minority and female enrollment in vo-
cational agriculture programs.
Many farming communities where vocational agriculture is most
common are still predominantly white. Black and other minority stu-
dents, such as those of Hispanic or Asian origins, in many states and
most urban areas have little exposure to agriculture or agriculture ed-
ucation. In a survey conducted by the University of California at Davis,
black students questioned for a survey gave two main reasons for their
lack of interest in agriculture: they didn't know much about the agri-
cultural system, and what they did know led them to view agriculture
as a financially risky line of work (Mallory and Sommer, 1986a,b). Some
OCR for page 30
30
UNDERSTANDING AGRICULTURE
black students may avoid vocational agriculture because of its associ-
ation with slavery. Vocational agriculture may not attract blacks and
Hispanics because they have traditionally held low-paying menial jobs
in agriculture.
Vocational agriculture educators know they need to improve their
efforts to reach minority students. As one California educator ex-
plained to the committee:
We're headed for a change in California's minority population and what we are
doing is not working. Agriculture has a big negative image problem with most
minority groups and we have to change it. It needs to start in grammar school
and be nurtured through high school. (Bower, 1986)
Vocational agriculture educators also need to reach disadvantaged
and disabled students.
Female enrollment in vocational agriculture varies from school dis-
trict to school district and program to program. It is common to find
relatively high percentages of girls enrolled in horticulture courses
within vocational agriculture programs; in some states and school dis-
tricts, a higher percentage of girls are enrolling in these courses than
in recent years. In California, not only were far more females enrolling
in vocational agriculture (girls accounted for 39.2 percent of FFA mem-
bership in a recent survey), but they also held 45.2 percent of the chap-
ter offices (Leising and Emo, 19841. Nationally, girls account for about
15 percent of FFA membership; about half the number of high school
students are girls. Progress is being made in some states, especially in
the Northeast, to open up both the FFA and vocational agriculture
programs to nontraditional enrollees.
Neither the testimony heard by the committee nor available studies
explain why female enrollment has grown so much in some states and
chapters. One plausible explanation is that ornamental horticulture is
a very attractive career in urban and suburban areas. Research on the
question is neither clear nor consistent. Some studies show that girls
were encouraged to enter vocational agriculture programs, while oth-
ers found they were discouraged (Parmley et al., 1981; Higgins, 19841.
Most states should make stronger recruitment efforts to bring more
minority and female students into vocational agriculture programs.
These students need to be alerted to educational choices within the
school and career opportunities in food, agriculture, and related indus-
tries and occupations.
Demographics affect challenges faced by vocational agriculture edu-
cators in different parts of the country. In the South, for example, where
about 85 percent of the nation's black farmers live, the continued de-
cline of land ownership and control of farm operations by blacks is a
OCR for page 31
VOCATIONAL AGRICULTURE EDUCATION
31
serious concern (U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, 19821. There and
elsewhere, agricultural educators must be especially sensitive to the
needs of all students and the community.
Some minority students also have special educational needs in aca-
demic subjects and vocational courses. Vocational agriculture teachers
need to accommodate diverse educational needs.
The creation of vocational agriculture programs in schools where
none exist calls for policy incentives. These incentives are especially
important in urban communities where most of the minority popula-
tion lives.
· Vocational agriculture educators in communities with mi-
nority students should establish new links with underrepre-
sented groups of students through community leaders; churches;
and local organizations, such as the Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, and
4-H. Minority business people and employers should be encour-
aged to help create new supervised occupational experience
programs.
· The local news media and FFA publications and chapter and
state meetings should continue to feature female and minority
students who have won achievements and honors.
· In setting the future course for vocational agriculture edu-
cation, education leaders should consider demographic trends
in a region's total population, farm population, food and fiber
industries, and other employment opportunities in the service
or business sectors related to agriculture.
PROGRAM CONTENT
The Current Curriculum
In content, the vocational agriculture curriculum has failed to keep
up with modern agriculture. More flexibility in curriculum and pro-
gram design and the requirements and activities of the FFA is essen-
tial. One educator's analysis is typical of statements heard repeatedly
by the committee:
In spite of the rhetoric of the profession that we are not training primarily for
farming occupations and that agriculture education has changed dramatically,
the typical agriculture program remains much as it was when the Vocational
Education Act of 1963 was passed. Production agriculture, taught by a single
teacher, in a general high school, remains the norm. (Camp, 1986)
The production focus of most vocational agriculture programs can be
OCR for page 32
32
UNDERSTANDING AGRICULTURE
traced, in part, to two studies that widely influenced vocational curric-
ula across the nation. In 1977, Iowa State University, under the spon-
sorship of the U.S. Office of Education, conducted a study to specify
standards for quality programs of vocational agriculture (Standards
for Quality Vocational Programs in Agriculture/Agribusiness Educa-
tion, 1977~. Many states subsequently adopted the recommendations
in the Iowa study, which emphasized production agriculture subjects.
A nationwide competency study in 1978 also played a key role (McClay,
19784. It was conducted to identify and validate competencies needed
for entry and advancement in 196 agriculture and agribusiness occu-
pations. Traditional agricultural programs and occupations dominated
the findings and recommendations, which in turn affected curriculum
design in vocational agriculture programs across the country.
Available statistics on program subject matter also point to the dom-
inance of production agriculture. In 1986, 40.7 percent of vocational
agriculture teachers in secondary schools taught full-time in produc-
tion agriculture programs; 30.0 percent were ir1 part-time production
agriculture programs with one or more classes in specialized programs,
such as agricultural mechanics; and the remainder taught classes in
ornamental horticulture, natural resources, agricultural products, ag-
ricultural sales and services, and agricultural mechanics (Camp, 19874.
Current vocational agriculture programs that have changed little
over the past decade prepare students for a rather limited and gener-
ally shrinking component of the job market. These programs are also
geared to a shrinking segment of the student population. They proba-
bly give some students an unrealistic view of agricultural job pros-
pects, while failing to alert them to other career opportunities in
agriculture.
New efforts are needed to reform secondary school agriculture pro-
grams to better prepare students for agricultural-sector growth indus-
tries. An essential step toward achieving this goal is to fully accept the
broadened definition of agriculture education recommended by the
committee. In some cases, this will require change in or abandonment
of vocational guidelines. Under vocational agriculture, this definition
would include greater diversity of career paths, such as scientific re-
search, technology development, medical and social services, finance,
law, business, management, and marketing.
· The organization name, symbols, contests, awards, and re-
quirements for advancement in the FFA are still largely geared
toward production agriculture. Because the FFA influences vo-
cational agriculture so greatly, some change within the I?FA is
needed along with program and curriculum reform. The curric-
ulum should drive the youth organization, not the reverse.
OCR for page 33
VOCATIONAL AGRICULTURE EDUCATION
33
Uneven Quality
Although many more students have access to vocational agriculture
programs than enroll in them, only a small percentage of schools offers
students an opportunity to enroll in a high-quality vocational pro-
gram. The characteristics of high-quality programs include extensive
contact between students and teachers and a diversity of rewarding
SOE opportunities.
The committee is aware of only a few states that have a routine pro-
cess to evaluate the vocational curriculum or have quality control stan-
dards to identify and assess weaknesses within programs. California
has developed such standards and a process for self-renewal that could
serve as a model for consideration by other states.
In developing such standards, the accomplishments of high-quality
programs should be studied and used as models, particularly those that
give students educational experiences in many areas of agricultural
business and science. Special agricultural science schools in Philadel-
phia and Chicago are valuable models for other cities and rural areas
studying the feasibility of setting up science- and business-oriented
programs.
Good programs attract a cross-section of the high school population,
including student leaders and individuals bound for college. Poor pro-
grams suffer declining enrollments and rarely can hold the interest of
students who are high achievers.
While good programs are generally expensive, poor programs tend to
cost nearly as much or more on a per student basis. It is important to
keep in mind that vocational agriculture is not the most expensive vo-
cational education or basic education program in our schools. Despite
growing pressures on school budgets, some communities continue to
support weak programs because of their long-standing commitments
to vocational agriculture and the FFA. These communities are often
eager for new ideas and options that could strengthen agricultural ed-
ucation. Programs that are not meeting students' needs and lack com-
munity and school support are a poor use of resources. Steps should be
taken to upgrade, consolidate, or, as a last resort, phase out such
programs.
Care should be exercised in devising and implementing remedial
strategies within a school district to assure that support and resources
are not diverted from programs with capable teachers, sufficient en-
rollments, and community support. In fact, strong programs may de-
serve additional resources.
The committee emphasizes that strong programs are the result of
strong teachers and support from principals and school district admin-
istrators. Innovation in program design and content typically occurs
OCR for page 34
34
UNDERSTANDING AGRICULTURE
because a teacher chooses to go beyond the standard curriculum and
program model and has the opportunity to do so. The current voca-
tional structure and funding criteria do not sufficiently encourage in-
novation within the classroom, however, and can even penalize those
trying to broaden the scope of the agricultural curriculum. Some of the
most successful and innovative schools have even dropped the term
"vocational" from their names and course titles because of their un-
willingness or inability to function within the prescribed, traditional
boundaries of vocational agriculture education. Federal and state laws
and program criteria governing the allocation of vocational funds are
responsible for these constraints.
· State leaders must assist school boards, administrators, and
local leaders to address the uneven quality of vocational agri-
culture programs and make available adequate resources to
support recommended program improvements.
Improving Quality
The committee found it easy to identify the reasons some vocational
agriculture programs are weak. The absence of leadership among those
responsible for vocational agriculture education programs is the pri-
mary cause of weak programs. The following steps must be taken to
improve weak programs:
· identify and define the problems and causes;
· develop a strategic plan to improve program quality;
· provide the resources to carry out the plan for improvement;
and
· evaluate the results of the plan for improvement, and make
necessary adjustments on a timely basis.
Each school will experience different challenges and must develop
its own strategy. These strategies include upgrading the vocational ag-
riculture education program to attract higher levels of school, student,
and community support; securing more competent teachers; upgrading
the relevance of the curriculum; consolidation with a closely associated
program or technical school in the same school district; and integrat-
ing agricultural subject matter into other components of the curricu-
lum. In light of the emphasis and evidence that quality teachers are
the critical ingredient for quality programs, adequate attention must
be focused on teacher evaluation, in-service education, new curriculum
directions, recruitment, and training.
OCR for page 35
VOCATIONAL AGRICULTURE EDUCATION
35
· Successful reform efforts within vocational agriculture pro-
grams will rely on strong programmatic leadership at the state
and national levels. The major leadership challenges include
program evaluation, teacher education, curriculum develop-
ment, assuring adequate resources at the local level, and creat-
ing a more flexible legislative and budgetary framework.
· Each school with a program in agriculture education should
have an active advisory council comprised of school administra-
tors; curriculum specialists; and local leaders in agricultural or-
ganizations, agribusiness, and public service.
· Ongoing efforts should be expanded and accelerated to up-
grade the scientific and technical content of vocational agricul-
ture courses. The "vocational" label should be avoided to help
attract students with diverse interests, including the college
bound and those aspiring to professional and scientific careers
in agriculture. Agricultural courses sufficiently upgraded in sci-
ence content should be credited toward satisfying college en-
trance and high school graduation requirements for science
courses in addition to the core curriculum.
· New curriculum components must be developed and made
available to teachers addressing the sciences basic to agricul-
ture, food, and natural resources; agribusiness; marketing; man-
agement; international economics; financial accounting; and
tools to improve the efficiency of agricultural productivity.
· A center for curriculum design and staff development in-
volving faculty from colleges of agriculture and education
should be established, preferably at the land-grant university in
each state. Center staff should be available to provide direct help
to local agriculture programs. Federal challenge grants should
be provided to states ready and willing to take on this task.
· School district officials should find new methods of cooper-
ation among those involved in teaching agriculture education,
including secondary and postsecondary teachers, active parent
volunteers, the CES and university experts, and organizations
like 4-H and the FFA.
Model Programs
The committee identified several successful, high-quality, agricul-
ture education programs that have combined strengths of the tradi-
tional vocational program model with new approaches and broadened
curricula. Two are in specialized high schools of agriculture that also
provide students with comprehensive instruction in other subjects.
OCR for page 37
VOCATIONAL AGRICULTURE EDUCATION
Two students at the Chicago High School for Agricultural
Sciences look over their flowers before the annual bedding
plant sale, which is held in the community. The school pre-
pares students to pursue career opportunities in horticul-
ture, biotechnology, food science, agribusiness, commodi-
ties trading, golf course and greenhouse management,
landscape design, and animal science.
37
Chase Farm located in a Philadelphia suburb and the city park system
(Walter Biddle Saul High School of Agricultural Sciences, n.d.~.
The Chicago High School for Agricultural Sciences is meeting a sim-
ilar need. This magnet school began instruction in September 1985
(Russell, 19871. The curriculum is college preparatory and vocational
at the same time. Agricultural science courses that mix science and
more traditional vocational education include biotechnology; food,
computer, plant, and animal sciences; agricultural finance; agribusi-
ness; horticulture; landscape design; and golf course management. The
curriculum places strong emphasis on basic intellectual and academic
skills. In its first 2 years of operation, the school gained strong support
from agribusiness leaders, parents, community members, and stu-
dents. Student support was shown by the school's remarkable 93 per-
cent attendance rate and zero dropout rate.
Job placement remains an important, although narrow criterion for
judging vocational program effectiveness. The Chicago school is too
OCR for page 38
38
UNDERSTANDING AGRICULTURE
new to evaluate in terms of job placements for graduates, but the Wal-
ter Biddle Saul High School has a good record (Hart, 19851. Employers
from the Philadelphia area recruit graduates of this school. Job oppor-
tunities in horticulture; landscaping; and planning and maintaining
parks, golf courses, and gardens are common (R. J. Hunter, Walter Bid-
dle Saul High School of Agricultural Sciences, personal communica-
tion, 19881. Many graduates of the Walter Biddle Saul High School go
on to college and careers in the agricultural sciences or other fields
related to the food and fiber system. The committee views these spe-
cialized high schools as models for change and innovation, testing
grounds for new ideas, and demonstrations of new programs in agri-
culture education.
Alvirne High School in Hudson, New Hampshire, offers another ex-
ample of a vocational agriculture program that has adapted to meet
the new needs of students. In the late 1960s, with the completion of the
state's first interstate highway, the community was transformed from
a farming area to a fast-growing suburb of Boston (Palmer, 1985~. The
vocational agriculture program was a one-teacher, traditional, produc-
tion agriculture program.
Instead of abolishing vocational agriculture, the school district inves-
tigated alternative ways in which the program could serve the com-
munity (Palmer, 19851. The investigation included a study of labor
trends and requirements of agriculture-related occupations in the com-
munity. It found a demand for welders, small-engine mechanics, sur-
veyors, grounds keepers, greenskeepers, florists, and agricultural sales
and service employees. As a result, the district updated the program
by adding courses in renewable natural resources, horticulture, and
agricultural mechanics. It also hired an instructor to work with disad-
vantaged and handicapped students. Students now have opportunities
for supervised occupational experiences in the school-run greenhouse,
agricultural shop, orchard, landscape nursery, grounds, and livestock
barns. They also participate in a cooperative work experience off cam-
pus during their junior and senior years (Palmer, 19851.
In Illinois, the Sycamore High School vocational agriculture pro-
gram has likewise adapted to change. The traditional production agri-
culture program has been expanded, and new programs have been
added in areas such as horticulture, landscaping, and greenhouse and
nursery management (Guilinger and Dietz, 19851. Students may also
enroll in courses in agriculture-related occupations, which combine on-
thejob experience with course work.
The Anderson Valley Agricultural Institute (AVAI) of the Anderson
Valley High School in Boonville, California, serves the needs of the
entire student body, including high-risk and special-needs youth. Many
OCR for page 39
VOCATIONAL AGRICULTURE EDUCATION
39
of the high-risk and special-needs students live in local group homes
and are enrolled in the vocational agriculture program for only a year
or two. Program goals include reorienting these students, building
their self-esteem, and creating an interest in agriculture and a desire
to be in school. It is estimated that this program keeps as many as 10
of the 75 students enrolled in AVAI from dropping out of high school.
In fact, many are motivated to go to college.
Student participation in the program is a better indicator of the pro-
gram's success than job placement. The student population is transient
because of the students in group homes. Students are sometimes al-
lowed to return to their home schools before graduating from Anderson
Valley. These factors lower the rate of program completion and job
placement upon leaving the program (S. A. McKay, Anderson Valley
High School, personal communication, 19884.
· Federal and state education leaders should support the es-
tablishment of specialized secondary schools in each of three
areas urban, suburban, and rural. These schools should offer
traditional academic courses that incorporate relevant agricul-
tural topics to nurture agricultural literacy. They should also of-
fer special courses in the agricultural sciences, nutrition, horti-
culture, agribusiness marketing and management, and other
related agricultural subjects. Special federal and state financial
incentives may be needed to help school districts establish such
schools.
Educational Technology
The science, technology, and business of agriculture are growing rap-
idly in complexity. Management and marketing decisions depend on
access to a range of information and the capacity to apply it to appro-
priate circumstances.
As a first step, vocational agriculture classes, like others, should help
prepare students to use computers as analytical and reference tools.
Computers, video, and telecommunications can add new dimensions to
vocational agriculture programs. These technologies can help teachers
respond to student needs and interests as enrollment patterns and sub-
ject contents diversify. Moreover, initial investments made in hardware
and software could reduce the costs of bringing new instructional mod-
ules and sources of information into vocational programs.
During its field visits, the committee learned about the use of com-
puters and other forms of educational technology in some vocational
agriculture programs. Although the use of electronic educational tech
OCR for page 40
40
UNDERSTANDING AGRICULTURE
nology in these programs is limited, promising results have occurred
in some applications.
The Ag Ed Network is one example of what can be accomplished with
available technology. Part of the AgriData Network, the Ag Ed Net-
work is used as a "live textbook" in many vocational agriculture class-
rooms. It provides news reports about agriculture; other forms of on-
line information, particularly information dealing with agribusiness
and marketing; and guidance on where more in-depth information can
be obtained (B. Herz, AgriData Resources, Inc., personal communica-
tion, 19884. The committee found that vocational agriculture teachers
who used or were familiar with the Ag Ed Network responded posi-
tively to it.
There has been insufficient time and experience with applications of
new educational technologies in the vocational agriculture classroom
to judge their full potential or the needs of teachers in adapting them
to ongoing programs. It is not surprising that most of the vocational
computer programs developed so far are oriented toward production
agriculture. Some of these programs are useful in helping students to
manage flocks and plan and track budgets. Software and other mate-
rial on most nontraditional subjects are very limited. This scarcity is
regrettable because the committee views such applications as amend
the most valuable and needed educational technologies.
.~ ~1:~: _~ ~ ~r ~ · _1 _ _~_ 1 · ~ ~ . . .
~JV`Jll "}J~llU=LlUi1~ ~1 olorecnnolo~, 1ncludlng disease monitoring kid
and other assay methods based on monoclonal antibodies, will be more
accessible. Students will need to understand how these assay systems
work and the conditions under which they are accurate. Interactive
video discs can be used in conjunction with standard computers and
software to guide students through specialized classroom projects and
exercises. Advancing telecommunications or satellite technology will
provide opportunities not widely available today in future classrooms.
This technology could be very important to improving food and fiber
literacy in the United States and other countries, as well as showing
how agricultural and environmental concerns are closely linked.
· Agriculture education teachers should seek out and share
high-quality software and curricular materials for agriculture
management and planning and instructional applications. Pri-
vate-sector assistance should be sought in developing new in-
structional modules, exercises, and software.
· Political and business leaders at all levels should help teach-
ers obtain access to promising instructional technologies. This
help should include adequate funds to support use by teachers
and students and troubleshooting assistance.
· Science curriculum development programs funded by fed
OCR for page 41
VOCATIONAL AGRICULTURE EDUCATION
41
eral or state governments or private foundations and led by pro-
fessional associations should pursue opportunities to use com-
puters, video discs, and other educational technologies.
SUPERVISED OCCUPATIONAL EXPERIENCES
The supervised occupational experience (SOE) has long been a part
of Vocational agriculture and still is today. The committee identified
several findings about the SOE component of vocational agricultural
programs, including why it must adapt to future needs.
Testimony presented to the committee reinforced several common
characteristics of high-quality SOEs. First, these SOEs were charac-
terized by involved teachers, planned experiences, adequate resources,
and student placement in agribusinesses or on commercial farms. A
positive relationship typically exists between high-quality SOE pro-
grams and student achievement in vocational agriculture and employ-
ment in agriculture after graduation (Mick, 19831.
Second, in the committee's judgment, not all vocational agriculture
students need SOEs throughout their 4-year vocational programs. Four
years of SOE should remain the goal, however. In reality, some stu-
dents may not have a meaningful SOE opportunity in all 4 years of
program enrollment. Structural changes in agriculture have reduced
the number and diversity of SOE opportunities in many areas. If teach-
ers spend less time trying to develop SOEs where no great opportuni-
ties exist, they will have more time for other activities, including man-
agement of those students with SOEs. A student who wants to carry
out a continuous 4-year SOE, such as an animal husbandry project,
should not be discouraged or penalized for doing so. It is preferable to
seek out and plan for 2 or 3 years of a rewarding SOE than to insist on
a 4-year program of uneven quality or minimal relevance.
The growing importance of the food processing and marketing indus-
tries and the emergence of new jobs involving applications of biotech-
nology to agriculture may open up many new SOE opportunities in
urban and rural communities. There are also many public service
professionals who could become SOE sponsors. For example, a valuable
SOE for a student could mean working as an elementary school teach-
er's aide and helping with a lesson plan in plant genetics, or with a
nutritionist advising new mothers on how to care for infants in the
areas of diet, nutrition, and health.
· As a goal, all students should participate in worthwhile
SOEs while enrolled in vocational agriculture programs. Stu-
dents should not be penalized in their program standing or
OCR for page 42
42
UNDERSTANDING AGRICULTURE
FFA activities if a suitable high-quality SOE is sometimes
unavailable.
· A broader range of SOEs should be encouraged. SOEs
should include time in research laboratories, banks, and food
retailing and marketing and work with commodity markets, el-
ementary schools, and many other new areas. Cooperation and
commitment should be sought from the agribusiness commu-
ruty. Emphasis should be placed on the experience and entrepre-
neurship, not only on the occupation.
· Special summer SOE programs should be explored as an al-
ternative in school districts where students cannot locate high-
quality SOE opportunities. Summer programs might even in-
volve travel to locations where desirable SOEs are available.
Some locations might include an agricultural experiment sta-
tion, a food processing factory, or an industrial laboratory.
· Although management and financial skills should be a part
of most production-oriented SOEs, profit should only occasion-
ally be a principal factor in evaluating SOE achievements. Pub-
lic service and academic endeavors, such as work in an elemen-
tary classroom or a research laboratory, respectively, should be
encouraged. The emphasis of SOEs should be on learning, with
an appreciation for earning.
· Schools should consider providing on-site laboratory facili-
ties for SOEs that involve activities that can be undertaken after
school without interfering with other instructional programs.
School land laboratories, greenhouses, nurseries, grounds, and
agricultural mechanics laboratories can provide opportunities.
FUTURE FARMERS OF AMERICA
As a national organization, the FFA has been part of vocational ag-
riculture since 1928. The FFA is dedicated to fostering leadership, self-
confidence, and citizenship skills. It also strives to teach students to
appreciate agriculture and about the career opportunities open to them
in the agriculture and food and fiber industries. About 95 percent of
all secondary schools that offer vocational agriculture have an FFA
chapter, and about 75 percent of vocational agriculture students are
members (National FFA Organization, 19864.
Under the direction of the vocational agriculture teacher, FFA mem-
bers hold meetings, practice public speaking, demonstrate proficiency
in various occupational skills, participate in community improvement
efforts, and earn awards through local, state, and national contests. It
OCR for page 43
VOCATIONAL AGRICULTURE EDUCATION
43
is clear that students in high-quality FFA chapters gain far more from
the program than those in lower-quality FFA chapters.
The quality of FFA chapters varies as much as the quality of voca-
tional agriculture programs varies. As an organization for high school
students enrolled in vocational agriculture, the FFA has a record of
accomplishment and the capacity to foster individual improvement. For
many students, the FFA achieves its goal of developing entrepreneur-
ial skills, leadership, and citizenship. Still, the FFA's image, name,
symbols, ceremonies, and production-agriculture focus lessen for many
students the attractiveness of enrollment in vocational agriculture
programs and interfere with needed changes in the curriculum content
of these programs.
The committee believes the FFA needs to change its image. The or-
ganization must broaden its nearly exclusive focus on traditional pro-
duction agriculture. Even its name, the Future Farmers of America,
continues to reinforce a narrow view of the organization, vocational
agriculture education, and agriculture in general. Although some peo-
ple have suggested that dropping the "Future Farmers of America"
name and only using the FFA initials would change the FFA's image,
it is doubtful. To the public, the full name and the initials are well
known and interchangeable.
Based on evidence and testimony, the committee finds that some vo-
cational agriculture teachers are unduly driven by a desire to help stu-
dents excel in traditional production-oriented FFA contests and award
programs. These teachers tend to place less emphasis on delivering
agricultural instruction in the classroom, updating curricula, or in-
volving the business community in the vocational agriculture pro-
gram. In many communities, the high school vocational agriculture
program is known as the "FFA program"; the vocational agriculture
teacher is known as the "FFA teacher." In such schools, it is hard to
direct public attention toward the need for curriculum reform or agri-
culture's role in college preparation or more career opportunities. In
many vocational programs a principal focus of class time and extracur-
ricular activity is preparing students to compete in traditional, produc-
tion-oriented FFA contests and award programs.
The committee recognizes that the FFA may be slow to change or
disagree about the need or direction for change. The committee is hope-
ful, though, that the FFA's ongoing reviews of its name, traditions,
procedures, contests, awards, and degree requirements for advance-
ment will lead to constructive changes. The FFA is also supporting
efforts to develop new science-based instructional materials and spe-
cial activities to foster understanding of scientific and technological
developments important to the agricultural, food, and fiber industries.
OCR for page 44
44
UNDERSTANDING AGRICULTURE
For example, the FFA has a program that recognizes vocational agri-
culture teachers who have shown that they use applied agricultural
science effectively in their instruction and students who have demon-
strated the use of agricultural science principles in their research proj-
ects. Similar FFA activities are needed that accompany curriculum de-
velopment projects in the marketing, management, policy, financial,
and international aspects of agriculture.
· In high schools that have vocational agriculture programs
but do not have FFA chapters, the FFA should explore ways to
make the organization accessible.
· The FFA should adopt a new name, symbols, and rituals (ac-
cording to all applicable federal and state laws) consistent with
a contemporary, forward-looking image of agriculture.
· The FFA should revise the nature, focus, and award struc
........... ...... ................. ..... _
Many students become interested in chemistry and biol-
ogy through exposure to examples from the agricultural
sciences. Here, a student at Canby Union High School,
Canby, Oregon, completes a soil test to determine soil
fertility.
OCR for page 45
VOCATIONAL AGRICULTURE EDUCATION
.:::::::::::~Q .
.................................................
....................................................................
Steven A. McKay of Anderson Valley High School, Boon-
ville, California, assists two of his students to clone a plant
using tissue culture technology. McKay interests his stu-
dents in science by involving them in cloning plants, test-
ing new horticultural products, and engineering better
ways to grow food.
45
lure of its contests and activities to open more new categories of
competition in areas outside production agriculture; reduce the
number of production-oriented activities and programs; attract
minorities and girls into vocational agriculture programs; and
minimize absences and conflicts with regular school programs.
· The FFA should encourage enrollment by students unable or
unwilling to participate in a 4-year program of vocational agri-
culture or SOEs.
TEACHER EDUCATION
Vocational agriculture relies on dedicated teachers. The committee
is concerned that vocational agriculture teachers are still being pre-
pared to teach mainly traditional production agriculture. To offer more
OCR for page 46
46
UNDERSTANDING AGRICULTURE
current programs to a broader range of students, teachers will need to
acquire knowledge and teaching skills related to agribusiness market-
ing, public policy, economics, finance, science and technology, and in-
ternational agriculture.
In the United States, vocational agriculture teachers are educated in
89 programs in colleges and universities. For the Peters and Moore
(1984) study, survey recipients in only 64 programs responded. Of that
number, 69 percent are based in schools of agriculture, and 31 percent
in colleges of education. In some states, teachers may enter the field
without degrees on the basis of occupational experience alone. Other
states require competency tests (W. G. Camp, Virginia Polytechnic In-
stitute and State University, personal communication, 1988~.
Vocational agriculture teacher education combines instruction about
agriculture with instruction in teaching. Recently, greater emphasis
has been placed on communication skills, basic science, computers,
mathematics, humanities and social sciences, international agricul-
tural systems, problem-based instruction, and high-technology agricul-
ture. The emphasis on traditional production agriculture is beginning
to shift, albeit slowly (Reisch, 1986~.
Graduates who accepted positions as vocational agriculture teachers
reported that the practical and technical parts of their schooling were
the most useful, while courses in education, pedagogy, and the human-
ities were the least useful. Other studies found that vocational agricul-
ture teachers identified student teaching as the most helpful part of
their education (Lee, 1985~.
The number of agriculture education graduates qualified to teach
dropped from 1,207 in 1985 to 964 in 1986. This decline resulted in the
smallest number of graduates since 1965. The decline is also acceler-
ating. Between 1975 and 1980, the number dropped 5 percent; between
1980 and 1985, 24 percent (Camp, 19871.
Only a portion of graduates enters teaching (Camp, 19871. In 1965,
64.6 percent of newly qualified teachers of agriculture education en-
tered teaching. In 1986, the percentage had fallen to 41.2 percent
(Camp, 19871. The same study found that the proportion of agriculture
education graduates who entered agribusiness rose from 7.5 percent in
1975 to 16.3 percent in 1986.
At the same time, fewer vocational agriculture teaching jobs exist.
In 1986, there were 11,042 positions in the United States. This figure
continues the general downward trend that began in 1979, following a
1978 peak of 12,844 (Camp, 19871. The decline from 1985 to 1986 has
been the largest of the 1980s, resulting in 5 percent, or 645, fewer po-
sitions (Camp, 19871.
Declining enrollments continue to reduce the number of vocational
agriculture teaching jobs. The number of vocational agriculture de
OCR for page 47
VOCATIONAL AGRICULTURE EDUCATION
47
partments that could not operate in the fall of 1986 because of the lack
of a qualified teacher fell for the first time to zero (Camp, 19874. The
committee is skeptical, however, that there is an adequate supply of
teachers with the broader range of interests and teaching skills that
may be needed in future agriculture courses of the type recommended
in this report.
· Teacher education programs in agriculture should continue
to stress applied learning, but should strengthen instruction in
science, technology, economics, agribusiness marketing and
management, international agriculture, and public policy.
· The federal government and elementary and secondary
school teachers involved in teaching agriculture should work to
develop, refine, and adopt methods for the transfer of informa-
tion and knowledge from research laboratories and agricultural
experiment stations to high school classrooms. An emphasis is
needed on new methods to teach agribusiness marketing and
management, principles of science, public policy, and interna-
tional agriculture.
· Teacher education programs in agriculture should establish
formal links with colleges of agriculture and education, cooper-
ative extension, and private-sector organizations to develop new
in-service programs and opportunities for teachers and
administrators.
· Colleges of agriculture should become more involved in cur-
riculum reform, creation of new material and courses, and in-
service education programs. The USDA should encourage these
goals. One way to do this might be to provide challenge grants
to states seeking to create new linkages between agricultural
education administrators and faculty within colleges of agricul-
ture and education. Each state should examine the feasibility of
developing a center for curriculum design and teacher and ad-
ministrators counselor training based at its land-grant
university.
· Teacher educators in agriculture should establish better
links with colleagues in other colleges, such as experts in science
education, business management, and educational technology.
· Colleges of agriculture should encourage and help recruit
talented students to enter the teaching profession. Departments
of agriculture education should develop programs to inform
school district counselors about career opportunities in the ag-
ricultural education professions.
Representative terms from entire chapter:
agriculture education