Thursday, August 23, 2018

Contratulations Allyson Balmer, #psuaged18 member Hired!

Ms. Allyson Balmer, recently hired by Kutztown Area High School.
Another one of our recent graduates of the Agricultural and Extension Education major at Penn State, Ms. Allyson Balmer, was recently hired by Kutztown Area High School to begin on August 27th as a long-term agricultural science substitute teacher.

During Ms. Balmer's time at Penn State, she kept herself busy in many areas of the College of Agricultural Sciences and developed a diverse skill set along the way. She took on membership in Teach Ag Society!, Collegiate FFA, and Dairy Science Club, and was even a Camp Counselor for Shaver's Creek Outdoor School, a four-day outdoor education program for elementary school students held at Shaver's Creek, Penn State's nature center. Her list of accomplishments and accolades at Penn State goes on and on, meaning Allyson is well-prepared for her new role in Kutztown.

In Allyson's new position, she will be responsible for teaching horticulture, a horticulture class for life skills students, floriculture, large animal science, wildlife and natural resources, and an SAE class. Allyson says she's excited to work with students of all backgrounds and levels of knowledge, and hopes to make them informed consumers and leaders in their communities. She's especially looking forward to the Life Skills class she has an opportunity to teach. "...they work incredibly well and partner with the life skills students in the high school to provide them a Horticulture class. It is a really unique opportunity and I am very excited to work with the life skills students and teachers for this class."

We asked Allyson if she has any advice for those preparing to student teach or those thinking about becoming a teacher. She says, "My advice is simple. Risk boldly and never be afraid to ask for help, whether from your cohort or administrator. While student-teaching try new ideas, activities, and techniques. You will never know if something is awesome if you never try." Ms. Balmer's student teaching took place at Tri-Valley High School alongside veteran teacher Ms. Gretchen Dingman. She says that the best time to experiment with new ideas and explore the unknown is while you're under the wing of a teacher with experience.

She leaves us with one last piece of encouragement about Penn State's Agricultural and Extension Education program:

"Penn State has an incredible Agricultural Education Program in the rigorous coursework and rewarding experiences you are able to have as a pre-service teacher. I am thankful to have a very strong foundation in planning and preparation, meaning developing curriculum and creating intellectually engaging lessons. We are all educators first, so I believe this to be something Penn State really prepares its agriculture teachers for."

We wish Ms. Allyson Balmer the best of luck as she steps into her new role at Kutztown Area High School!

Thursday, August 16, 2018

Congratulations George Dietrich, #psuaged18 member Hired!

George Dietrich, another member of the #psuaged18 cohort, has recently been hired by Oley Valley School District in Oley, PA as a long-term substitute for their current agricultural teacher.

George excelled in Penn State's Agricultural and Extension Education program, where during his time in school he was involved in many aspects of the College of Agricultural Sciences. He was a member of Delta Theta Sigma and of the Alpha Tau Alpha honorary fraternity, as well as involved in the Teach Ag! Society, Collegiate 4-H, and the Dairy Science Club.

During his final year of college, George completed his student teaching at Cumberland Valley High School under the mentorship of Ms. Darla Romberger. After his student teaching, George became well-versed in Intro to Ag, Food Science, Biotechnology, and Ag Construction, all of which were classes that he taught. The experience he brings to Oley Valley reaches beyond just content, and into the community. During student teaching George was able to lead students in designing chicken coops to donate money to Pens for Hens, a Wisconsin-based nonprofit that provides pens, training, education, and laying hens for residents in Haiti.

In his new role as long-term substitute for Oley Valley's agricultural program, Mr. Dietrich will get to use his experience to teach Intro to Ag, Advanced Animal Science, Plant Science, Ag Leadership, and International Agriculture. During his time with the school, he even gets to lead two teams of FFA members that are going to National Convention to compete in October!

We asked Mr. Dietrich if he has any advice for those looking to go Ag Ed, and he said, "It's a lot of worthwhile fun. It is a fun major with great professors and great cohort members to work with you along the way. Get involved with clubs and don't be afraid to be involved on Ag Hill. Lastly, going to sports events is a great thing to do during the summer."

If you would like to see more about George and his #psuaged journey, check out his blog here:
https://fromgreenblazers2bluecorduroysaged.blogspot.com/

Congratulations George! We're excited to see where this job takes you, and to hear more success stories from our #psuaged members!



 
Hunter Kauffman
Team Leader, @TeachAgPSU Communications
Wildlife and Fisheries Science
College of Agricultural Sciences


Wednesday, August 15, 2018

Congratulations Heather Wasson #psuaged18 member Hired!

Congratulations Heather Wasson! Ms. Wassson a #psuaged18 cohort member was recently hired at Huntingdon Area High School in Huntingdon, PA!

While Heather was attending Penn State she was a part of Dairy Science Club, Ag Student Council, Delta Sigma Fraternity, Collegiate FFA, and Teach Ag! Society. Ms. Wasson student taught at Cowanesque Valley High School. During her student teaching she taught Metal I, Ag Science, Horticulture, and Family Consumer Science. While she was there she had a community-based unit, and she worked with the Tioga County Extension to hold a Pesticide Meeting for farms to get points for their spray license.

Ms. Wasson will be the sole teacher at Huntingdon Area High School which has had an agriculture program since 1958. She took over Mr. Armstrong's position because he was hired at Mifflinburg High School. Heather grew up 10 minutes from the Huntingdon County line. She states, "I am lucky enough to know a lot of the agriculture community through my father doing custom farming and participating at the Huntingdon County fair to exhibit my Holstein cattle." Huntingdon Area School District is unique to her because it is the opposite of where she grew up, but still close to home. It is a rural are and the high school is quarter the size of State College. She exclaims, "However, that is what I like about it! I like that it is different than home. It reminds me of where I student taught." The community supports the agricultural program well. She will be teaching SAE/Independent Study, Ag Industry Project, Ag Metalworking, Small Animal Science, Large Animal Science, and Ag Leadership.

Heather expressed, Wow. I feel blessed to have been offered this opportunity. To say I am not a little scared for the future would be wrong. Of course, I am scared, but I am only scared that I may not meet my own expectations. However, I feel very positive about the future! Huntingdon High School has a very supportive community, staff, and students that stand behind each other. With all this I feel I can succeed in this program.” She also provided advice to those looking to go into Ag Ed. "My advice for anyone looking to go into agriculture education is DRIVE. Once you become an educator about something you are passionate about you will not look back and will be driven to keeping moving forward in this occupation."

Congratulations Heather! We cannot wait to see how you inspire, motivate, and change lives through your agriculture program in the coming years!





Luke Kerstetter
Communications Team Member
Twitter Handle: @Luke_Kerstetter
2020 Agriculture Education Student Teacher



Monday, August 6, 2018

Congratulations Karlie Wright #psuaged18 member Hired!

Congratulations Karlie Wright! Ms. Wright a #psuaged18 cohort member has recently been hired at West Greene Middle/Senior High School in Waynesburg, PA. 

While Karlie was attending Penn State University she was involved with Collegiate FFA as an undergraduate student and TeachAg! as a graduate student. She had student taught at Fort Cherry High School. At Fort Cherry she taught Introduction to Agriculture, Advanced Leadership and Communications, Animal Science, Floral Design, Vet Science, and Horticulture. One interesting lesson that she taught was a community based unit in which students built raised garden beds that would be installed between the high school and elementary school. The lesson also included the high school students teaching the elementary students a lesson on raised garden beds.

In her new position at West Greene High School she will be teaching Intro to Agriculture, Animal Science, Biotechnology, Horticulture, Vet Science, Agricultural Leadership, Agribusiness, as well as an 8th grade agriscience course. West Greene is a small school so it is supported by the community heavily. The graduation class size is 40-50 students and the district covers about half of Greene County! The West Greene agriculture program has been around for at least 70 years. It has also been ran by Bryon Hughes and then his son Curt Hughes took over 31 years ago. Karlie states, "This program has produced many successful tradesman and college students over the years. People still talk about their time spent in these classrooms and what it meant to them while they were in school and what it still means to them now – and what they hope it will mean to their children...Let’s just say, for as small of a program as it may be, I have some high expectations to meet and big shoes to fill." 

She also provides words of advice for those looking into becoming an agricultural educator, "Go with your heart. Stay you. Make every situation positive. Always keep searching for your WHY." As Dr. Seuss once said, “You have brains in your head. You have feet in your shoes. You can steer yourself any direction you choose.” 

Congratulations Karlie! We are excited to see how you prepare the next several generations with the skills they will need to become that next experience professional.





 Luke Kerstetter
Communications Team Member
Twitter Handle: @lmkerstetter96
2020 Agriculture Education Student Teacher