Webutuck's ag program moo-ving forward

WEBUTUCK — “Onward and upward� seems to be the battle cry for local agricultural education, as Webutuck High School Principal Drew Hopkins and teacher Anna Duffy presented to the Board of Education a scope of the district’s ag program at its Oct. 5 meeting.

Webutuck’s ag program and FFA chapter were in poor condition last year, according to the presenters. Duffy, who is new to the district, has been putting considerable effort into reviving the program and building it into a developing course of study for high school students, according to testimony from administration and board members.

Hopkins stressed hands-on alternative learning at the beginning of the presentation.

“Rarely have I been in class and seen [ag] students doing ordinary classroom work,� he said. “There’s lots of hands-on [work] and questioning happening.�

Five classes are being offered this year, one for the entire year and four as half-year courses. Since it’s the beginning of the school year and the start of a reconstructed agriculture program at Webutuck, Hopkins explained that currently the basics are being covered.

The principal explained to the board the progress that has already been made and the goals the school needs to work toward to be successful in the long run.

“I want to emphasize the organizational aspect of what [Duffy] has done so far,� Hopkins said. “She’s been picking out the best of what we have to offer.�

But since the program is in its initial stages, a semester-long lesson plan is still in development, and once curriculum is in place the necessary materials will need to be acquired. Another challenge for the ag program  is developing more courses at a variety of different levels to give those students who have already taken advanced science courses the same educational opportunities as those who have less background.

“We’ve come a tremendous way in a short period of time, but we need to go farther as well,� Hopkins explained.

The district’s FFA chapter is considered a separate program from any classes offered in the high school, but headway is being made there as well. The program is looking into the possibility of sending its members to this year’s national convention in Indianapolis, and Duffy is working with the Cornell Cooperative Extension to get the program up and running.

Board of Education President Dale Culver asked how participation levels were so far for the different classes. While attendance is relatively small in most courses, Duffy said all classes have seen an increase since the beginning of the year. Hopkins added that the ag program will likely see even more success as it develops and word-of-mouth encourages students to enroll in future semesters.

“There are a number of individuals in the county whose businesses today resulted from their involvement in an FFA program,� said school board member John Perotti, who owns Lone Pine Farm in North East. “I think you’re doing a great job putting this thing together in its infancy.�

Stissing Mountain Middle/High School and Housatonic Valley Regional High School, in Conn., have been brought up numerous times by the board as examples of successful FFA programs and Culver pointed out that every program has to start somewhere.

“It is possible to move forward,� he said. “Stissing Mountain had no program in the early ’70s.�

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