Small campus, Big momentum The University of Nebraska is the smallest campus but is seeing a great amount of growth. The College of technical agriculture seen a jump to 384 students. It provides the kids with hands on experience and a great learning experience. The college has been steadily strengthening the programs other the years.
Membership explodes to record level Membership in FFA today stands at an all-time high of 610,240 students, up from 579,678 in 2013. Membership increased by more than 30,500 during the 2013-14 school year. The new, local FFA chapters throughout the country grew to 7,665. The Texas FFA association has the most, go figure. Then california, then some others, and then oklahoma. No Nebraksa......yet.
Small Campus, Big Momentum The University of Nebraska’s smallest campus is seeing impressive growth, spurred by a vibrant AG economy, a well-planned strengthening of programs and facilities, and energetic support from the college’s home community of Curtis. Curtis saw a 28 percent increase to 384 students. They needed to raise money to get a better campus. Curtis stepped forward and raised the $1 million in less than six months from about 300 donors.
Wet Fall Could Mean Late Harvest A morning drizzle kept farmer Randy Huls and his son Blake out of the fields near Cortland on Tuesday. Instead they stayed in and worked on equipment making sure the combine,fans, and augers were ready for when they can get back into the field. They brought in some early-maturing corn last week but hope that a few days of sun will help dry the crops still in the fields.
Small Campus, Big Momentum I read about UNL's branch in curtis's AG department growth. It was interesting to me. Basically they had a huge enrollment increase. The huge increase, in turn, created a need for a bigger campus. So, the community in Curtis acted the way Hampton would, and worked together. They raised one million dollars in less than half of a year! Amazing. So, if you wanted to sum things up, Curtis helped fund our future ag industry!
Small campus, Big momentum
ReplyDeleteThe University of Nebraska is the smallest campus but is seeing a great amount of growth. The College of technical agriculture seen a jump to 384 students. It provides the kids with hands on experience and a great learning experience. The college has been steadily strengthening the programs other the years.
Membership explodes to record level
ReplyDeleteMembership in FFA today stands at an all-time high of 610,240 students, up from 579,678 in 2013. Membership increased by more than 30,500 during the 2013-14 school year. The new, local FFA chapters throughout the country grew to 7,665. The Texas FFA association has the most, go figure. Then california, then some others, and then oklahoma. No Nebraksa......yet.
Small Campus, Big Momentum
ReplyDeleteThe University of Nebraska’s smallest campus is seeing impressive growth, spurred by a vibrant AG economy, a well-planned strengthening of programs and facilities, and energetic support from the college’s home community of Curtis. Curtis saw a 28 percent increase to 384 students. They needed to raise money to get a better campus. Curtis stepped forward and raised the $1 million in less than six months from about 300 donors.
Wet Fall Could Mean Late Harvest
ReplyDeleteA morning drizzle kept farmer Randy Huls and his son Blake out of the fields near Cortland on Tuesday. Instead they stayed in and worked on equipment making sure the combine,fans, and augers were ready for when they can get back into the field. They brought in some early-maturing corn last week but hope that a few days of sun will help dry the crops still in the fields.
Small Campus, Big Momentum
ReplyDeleteI read about UNL's branch in curtis's AG department growth. It was interesting to me. Basically they had a huge enrollment increase. The huge increase, in turn, created a need for a bigger campus. So, the community in Curtis acted the way Hampton would, and worked together. They raised one million dollars in less than half of a year! Amazing. So, if you wanted to sum things up, Curtis helped fund our future ag industry!