Monday, March 31, 2014

Agriculture Education Blooms in Urban, Rural High Schools (A good start)....

Agriculture Education Blooms in Urban, Rural High Schools


No longer just about cows and plows, the modern agriculture industry encompasses subsectors such as urban forestry and agricultural biotechnology, which includes the genetic engineering of crops. As the industry has grown, so has the interest in teaching teens more about it.
About 15 percent of the U.S. workforce is employed in agriculture-related careers, according to the American Farm Bureau Federation, and more than 54,000 jobs for college graduates in the agricultural, food and renewable natural resources sectors are expected to be created annually from 2010-2015, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
In addition to many career opportunities in the field, agriculture classes allow students to practice real applications of math, science and English concepts, and is among the reasons why high schools are embracing agriculture education, says Jay Jackman, executive director of the National Association of Agricultural Educators.
Agriculture classes can help students who may have a difficult time understanding theories and concepts in a traditional math or science class, Jackman says. "You put them in an agriculture class and you teach them photosynthesis, for example, in the context of agricultural crops and the science becomes real to them," he says.
Agriculture education programs are sprouting up in high schools across the U.S., particularly in suburban and urban areas, Jackman says.
[Learn about the variety of scholarships available to agriculture students.]
Vincent High School in Milwaukee reinstated its agriculture education program last year; the program was eliminated in the 1990s because of funding problems, says Gail Kraus, an agriculture outreach specialist who works with the school. Agriculture education will eventually become the focus of the school -- akin to a magnet school, Kraus says.
Career opportunities were one of the reasons why the program was reintroduced. "This region has a high concentration of food science careers," she says.
The first class that students take at the school is about urban agriculture; topics include urban soil, urban gardening and greenhouses. Kraus says that although some students are initially uninterested, once they get to experience the interactive aspects of the class, like working in the greenhouse or bee aviary, they tend to become more receptive.
"A lot of them come down and get into the greenhouse and say, 'Oh my gosh, this is in the school?'" she says.
[Read about how 4-H club has evolved into more than an agricultural organization.]
Despite its rural location, agriculture classes at Morris Area High School, in Morris, Minn., were not very popular when Natasha Mortenson, an agriculture teacher, started teaching at the school 13 years ago.
During her first year teaching at the school, agriculture classes suffered from low enrollment and Mortenson recalls that only a few students in the graduating class planned to pursue agriculture-related careers. Today, agriculture classes are popular at the school; Mortenson teaches 10 different classes each year.
The hands-on aspects of classes keep students interested, Mortenson says. In an agriculture processing class students learned how to cut hog carcasses; they also made sausage and jerky. "Just seeing a carcass come in and being able to identify that food system, it makes them excited about it," she says.
Conventional farming practices are covered in the curriculum, but Mortenson says that it can be a difficult field for students to get into because of the high price of land, among other reasons. So she teaches her students about sustainable farming, such as producing free-range eggs or chickens, popular products that can be farmed on a relatively small piece of land.
In addition to agriculture processing and animal science courses, students can take classes such as woods and welding, horticulture and food chemistry, among others.
Mortenson says about a third of graduating students are now interested in pursuing agriculture-related careers.
"It's not just the food part of it, it's not just the farming part of it, but everything that supports the agriculture industry is a part of agriculture," she says. "It's like a big web of jobs. There are very few jobs that don't relate back to agriculture."
Have something of interest to share? Send your news to us at highschoolnotes@usnews.com.

Alexandra Pannoni is an education intern at U.S. News. You can follow her on Twitter or email her at apannoni@usnews.com.

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Letter to RGJ re: Tesla search



With TX & AZ both saying they won't allow Tesla to sell cars without a dealership.... They are probably out of the running; (I also heard they were thinking about Utah). NV biggest "defect" is its lack of a trained technical workforce. EVERY economic summit since I've been here has pointed that out, and, while the legislature has thrown money at it... The "Community College system here is set up for the academics.... The "dirty fingernail bunch" (as called by the academics) is looked down upon as second class citizens (and thats being kind). A "Technical College system" is needed here in NV (or a Private Technical "for-profit"). The academics will never consider the trades as anything but grunt work, not worthy of their attention. Until a Tech System is set-up NV will always be at a disadvantage when it comes to bringing in new manufacturing, and the tax base that comes with it.

Tesla confirms it is looking at Nevada for giant battery factory

From RGJ 2/26/14

Tesla Motors confirmed today it is looking at Nevada as a site for a $5 billion lithium ion battery factory.
The Reno Gazette-Journal first reported the electric car company’s interest in Nevada last week. Sources confirmed Tesla looked at sites near the Stead airport and the Tahoe Reno Industrial Center east of Reno.
According to Tesla’s blog, Nevada is a finalist for the factory along with New Mexico, Texas and Arizona.
“In cooperation with strategic battery manufacturing partners, we’re planning to build a large scale factory that will allow us to achieve economies of scale and minimize costs through innovative manufacturing, reduction of logistics waste, optimization of co-located processes and reduced overhead,” Tesla wrote on its blog.
Reno is an advantageous site because of its proximity to Fremont, Calif., where the company assembles its cars.
The giant factory is needed as the company ramps up production of its cars. It hopes to be turning out 500,000 cars by 2020.
According to a presentation by the company, the giant factory would need a two-story 10-million square foot facility. It would employ more than 6,500 people. The company is looking for a 500 to 1,000-acre site, which would house the factory as well as wind and solar power generators.
Final site selection is underway.