Tuesday, September 24, 2019

September 2019 Student of the Month: Jessica Barnhart (@jessiebarny7)

It is a custom every month to recognize one of our outstanding students within the Agricultural and Extension Education program, who has made a positive impact on their mentors, peers, and program as Student of the Month. This September, Ms. Jessica Barnhart's passion and drive has played a role in her selection as September Student of the Month.

Jess resides in Blairsville, Pennsylvania and began her journey in Agricultural Education at Derry Area High School where her Ag Teachers "planted the seed" for her to pursue Agricultural Education as a career. She spent the first two years of her college career at Penn State Altoona studying Plant Science before a position as an Education Intern at the Department of Conservation and Natural Resources spurred her excitement for educating youth, leading her to find a home in the AEE program. At Penn State Altoona, Jess was involved in CFFA and was President of Ag Club. Currently at the University Park campus, she is involved in LEAD Society is a TeachAg! Avenger.

As a senior in the program, Jess will graduate with a Bachelors Degree in May of 2020 after completing her student teaching semester at Brockway Area. Her motivation to become an Agricultural Educator is student excitement. Jess says, "I feed off of their energy". When working with students, she helps them to express energy by sparking an interest and excitement for learning inside of them. In the future, Jess plans to put this motivation to use by becoming either an Agricultural Educator or an Environmental Education Specialist. She reasons, "I would be happy in each of these career fields as long as I get to teach about my passions".

Some more about Jess includes:

Birthday: August 31st
Favorite PSU Class: Biology 220W where she particularly enjoyed a stream study on macroinvertebrates.
Favorite Insect: The dobsonfly. 
Favorite Hangout on Campus: The Entomology (5th) Floor of the ASI Building.
Favorite Place to Eat in State College: McDonalds. "McNuggets are always my #1!"
Favorite Quote: "What's meant to be will always find a way".
4H/FFA Background: Jess was actively involved in the Derry FFA Chapter, serving as President and Reporter, and received her American Degree last October.

Congratulations to Jessica Barnhart for being selected as September Student of the Month! Her joyful and passionate personality are an incredible addition to the Agricultural and Extension Education program at Penn State University.







Taylor Halbleib
Student Blogger
Agricultural and Extension Education
Class of 2022

Monday, September 23, 2019

The Big E

Over September 13th -15th I traveled with Penn State Teach Ag! to cross more states off my list, Connecticut and Massachusetts. Penn State doesn't take you to states just to cross them off your list though (or I would totally have all 50 covered by now!), we were there to help with FFA Career and Leadership development events (CDEs and LDEs).

This was super beneficial for me because it was the first time that I got to be a part of a CDE or LDE competition the day of the event. Over the summer, I got to help with the background work of the Food Science CDE, but unfortunately I was unable to attend the actual competition. In PA, the ag teachers run the events at the State Level, so having an understanding of what goes into the event is important because I might someday be in charge of one. Regardless if I am in charge of one, I will have students competing, and to be able to coach them well, I first need to understand the event.

Let's take a step back though, What is the Big E and What are CDE/LDEs?


The Big E

The Big E is the Eastern States Exposition and is essentially a large fair that lasts for three weeks, with exhibitors and events rotating which weeks they are held. One cool part of the Big E is that each New England State has their own building to showcase special things from that state. I think one of my favorite parts was the iconic Big E Cream Puff though! It was huge and delicious!


CDE/LDE Competition

Career and Leadership Development Events are focused on specific content areas and are designed to develop "college and career readiness skills". (Find out more about them on the National FFA Website) At the Big E, teams from states in the NorthEastern Region of FFA competed.


So what did I learn?

I learned so much while I was at the Big E! The first event that I helped with was the Vet Science CDE. My specific role was to be a judge for a practicum. Students had to tell me verbally and show me how to properly restrain a rabbit. From this I learned how hard it can sometimes be to really be consistent in my grading for all the members, especially once it was getting to the end of the event and I had heard what should have been the same thing multiple times. I also learned from a coaching stand point how important it is to know the events because I had some teams that all told me very well, and the same way how to restrain the rabbit, unfortunately it did not match the rubric, so I could not give them a good score. Coach knowledge of the event can help avoid these little things that keep students from doing as well in the events as they may have hoped. I also got to grade essays for the Current Issue topic based off of a rubric for this event. I felt more qualified to be able to do this compared to being a practicum judge.


The second event I got to help with was the Food Science CDE. I was really excited to help with this one since I had missed being a part of it in June. My background knowledge of what goes into the event before the day of was helpful for me to understand how all the pieces went together, but I was unaware of how much really went into the set up of this event! My main job at this event was to judge the students group work abilities as they figured out safety hazards in food processing plants. Here I also saw the value in previous coaching of how the different segments of the events worked. Some teams were confused on what they were supposed to do in the event and those teams were the ones that also seemed to struggle the most with completing the task.



From both days I really learned how rubrics are beneficial for keeping everything fair across all students because it gives you a guideline that you cannot be as subjective about. It also allows for multiple people to fairly grade the same thing so that work can be done faster. I also learned the importance of well thought through setup, especially thinking through how things are set up so that students don't even have the opportunity to be tempted to cheat or "cheat on accident" because the opportunity was there. I think that both of these lesson translate back into the classroom well too, thinking about assessment design and creation.


There were many learning moments, some time for fun, and not a whole lot of sleep on this trip, but at the end of the day it was a very beneficial trip.

We even got the bonus lesson of handling when your students leave possessions at places while you are traveling. I don't think that the #PSUAgEd20 cohort will let me soon forget leaving my phone at the Dunkin Donuts on the way home.







Kaitlin Liszka
#PSUAgEd20
@KaitlinLiszka

Wednesday, September 18, 2019

NJAAE Vice President Reflects Upon Her @TeachAgPSU Experience!

Deanna Miller (#psuaged15) has been using her @TeachAgPSU education to make a positive impact in the lives of students and her fellow teachers in New Jersey! Though now in the Garden State, she is a Pennsylvania native. Deanna went to Red Lion Area High School in York County and was an active FFA member. To continue her education, she found herself here at Penn State to major in Agricultural and Extension Education and graduated in 2015.


Deanna (far right) pictured with her ACTE award

Currently serving as Vice President and Southern Representative of the New Jersey Association of Agricultural Educators (NJAAE), Deanna is showing off her drive to serve others. In addition to her current positions, Deanna has won prestigious awards that serve as a testament to her skill and passion in this line of work. These awards include but surely are not limited to: 

NAAE Teacher Turn the Key Award Recipient - 2017 
ACTE Region 1 New and Beginning Teacher - 2019  
NJ FFA Advisor of the Year - 2019


Additionally, she can proudly say that she has become CASE certified in 6 courses, secured over $15,000 in grants and has increased total program enrollment by more than 120%. This is REMARKABLE considering the short time Deanna has spent teaching in the classroom.

Looking at these accomplishments, it would be great to credit all of this solely to her @TeachAgPSU experience, but we know that it takes a special individual, such as Deanna, to implement this knowledge so effectively. She says that the two things that still stands out about her education are:


"The purposeful and intentional instructional programming which included materials that I used and implemented my first year teaching, and continue to use" and "My student teaching experience at Penn Manor High School with Neil Fellenbaum- I learned more than I could have ever imagined and have made lasting professional connections."

We are proud to see past @TeachAgPSU students engaging in ways to serve others through Agricultural Education. Deanna is an example for her peers and future teachers to do that very thing.








Justin Kurtz

#PSUAgEd22

Twitter Handle: @JustinDKurtz