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Supervised Agricultural Experience

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Supervised Agricultural Experience By: Johnny M. Jessup Agriculture Teacher/FFA Advisor Read This Carefully! Read This Carefully! Read This Carefully! – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Supervised Agricultural Experience


1
Supervised Agricultural Experience
  • By Johnny M. JessupAgriculture Teacher/FFA
    Advisor

2
Read This Carefully!
3
Read This Carefully!
4
Read This Carefully!
5
What was the same in all 3 Ads?
  • Each advertisement wanted the person to be
    experienced. People who have experience have the
    edge in landing a job. But
  • How do you get experience without first having a
    job?
  • How do you get a job without first having
    experience?

Job
Experience
6
Gaining Experience!!
SAE
  • Question
  • How can you gain experience to get a job (or
    prepare for college)?
  • Answer
  • Supervised Agricultural Experience (SAE)

7
What is SAE?
  • All supervised Agriscience experiences conducted
    outside of the regularly scheduled classroom or
    laboratory.

8
Total Agricultural Program
  • SAE makes up the third part in the total
    agricultural program.
  • Classroom/Laboratory
  • Class instruction makes up one part.
  • FFA
  • Student leadership organization used in
    conjunction with SAE and class instruction.
  • SAE
  • Is for every student.

9
Agricultural Education Model
10
Purposes of SAE
  • Provides opportunities to explore a variety of
    subjects about Agriscience.
  • Provides educational and practical experience in
    a specialized area of agriscience.
  • Provides opportunities for earning while learning.

11
Purposes of SAE
  • Teaches students to keep good records in a record
    system.
  • (computer where applicable)
  • Win FFA awards
  • (FFA proficiency awards are based on SAE)

12
Types of SAE
  • Exploratory
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Placement
  • Analytical
  • Experimental
  • Improvement
  • Supplementary

13
NC SAE Model
14
Exploratory
  • Short duration usually, fits beginning students
    well.
  • Helps students become literate in agriculture.
  • Learn of possible careers.

15
Exploratory Examples
  • Observing and/or assisting a florist.
  • Growing plants in a milk jug greenhouse.
  • Assisting on a horse farm for a day.
  • Interviewing a bank loan officer.
  • Preparing a scrapbook on the work of a
    veterinarian.
  • Attending an agricultural career day.

16
Entrepreneurship
  • Ownership pr part-ownership and assume financial
    risk.
  • Develop skills necessary to become established on
    ones business.
  • May be production or agribusiness related and
    involved enterprises.
  • Specific crops, livestock, activities

17
Entrepreneurship
  • Production Entrepreneurship
  • Raise an agricultural commodity for profit.
  • Examples
  • Produce vegetables.
  • Grow Christmas trees.
  • Raise horses or livestock.
  • Grow field crops or nursery crops.

18
Entrepreneurship
  • Agribusiness Entrepreneurship
  • Students buy sell an agricultural commodity or
    service for profit.
  • Examples
  • Pet business.
  • Crop scouting service.
  • Feed sales.
  • Running a pay to fish operation.

19
Placement
  • Students are placed with an employer
  • Full or part-time
  • Usually paid an hourly wage.

20
Placement
  • Placement in Production
  • On a farm, ranch, greenhouse or nursery etc.
  • Placement in Agribusiness
  • At a veterinary center, florist, garden center,
    etc.

21
Analytical
  • Students choose an agricultural problem not
    easily tested by experimentation.
  • Gather evaluate data.
  • Example
  • Marketing plan for a poinsettia crop.

22
Experimental
  • Students conduct an agricultural experiment using
    the scientific method.
  • Examples
  • Comparing the effects of various fertilizers on
    plant growth.

23
Improvement
  • Activities that are done to improve the
    appearance, convenience, efficiency, safety or
    value of a home, farm, or other agribusiness
    facility.
  • No wages
  • No ownership
  • Benefit by learning skills

24
Improvement
  • Examples
  • Landscaping the home
  • Building a fence
  • Painting a room

25
Supplementary
  • Short-term activities conducted outside of
    classroom time.
  • Skill specific, non-wage.
  • Examples
  • Changing oil in a mower.
  • Pruning a fruit tree.

26
Designed By
  • Johnny M. Jessup, FFA Advisor
  • Hobbton High School
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