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Toni Rasmussen

Homegrown Agricultural Educators

Training the Next Crop of Agricultural Professionals

November 2018

Toni Rasmussen is a former farm kid who knows the pride of donning an FFA jacket. And thanks to support from the University of Nebraska—Lincoln, she’s using her life experience and education to share that pride with high school students, too.

UNL Inset

As a high schooler in Albion, Rasmussen was inspired by her ag education class, which propelled her to organize a goat enterprise for her family farm. So naturally, a career in ag education was a perfect next step for her. Today, she’s one of 200 instructors across the state working in a full-time position teaching agriculture to high school students.

There’s been a 40 percent increase in agricultural education programs offered at Nebraska high schools since 2010—all with the goal of churning out professionals to fill a growing number of agricultural careers across the U.S. Between 2015 and 2020, the U.S. Department of Agriculture expects an annual average of 57,900 job openings for graduates with degrees in agricultural-type fields. That’s a sweet opportunity for students who can get an early jump on their ag education.

And who’s better qualified to educate those future professionals than homegrown experts like Rasmussen?

In Fall 2018, 189 Nebraska schools will offer ag education classes—the majority of which will be led by Husker grads.

“We just graduated 25 students who are prepared to teach this August—and nearly all have accepted teaching positions in Nebraska,” said Matt Kreifels, UNL’s Agricultural Leadership, Education & Communication (ALEC) program director.

"We just graduated 25 students who are prepared to teach this August—and nearly all have accepted teaching positions in Nebraska."

And because of her connection to UNL, Rasmussen gets to take advantage of UNL’s support long after graduation. UNL’s ALEC department keeps graduates like her sharp with professional development workshops year-round, so she can offer the latest curriculum to students. Thanks to these workshops, school lessons include a wide variety of subjects, like greenhouses, aquaponics, and animal laboratories, even welding and construction.

"When the students started to understand the culture of an ag ed classroom and started treasuring their FFA jackets, that is when I started to realize the good that was being done for the students,” said Rasmussen.

Doing good for the future of ag in the Good Life state—it’s just one of the many ways the University is making a real impact on education.

 

Pictured in the header photo, second from right: Toni Rasmussen. All others are agriculture education students from Wayne High School.

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