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What is a SAE?

What is a SAE?. Supervised Agricultural Experience (SAE) Programs consist of planned practical activities conducted outside of class time in which students develop and apply agricultural knowledge and skills. Examples of SAE Projects. Operating a lawn care business Raising show rabbits

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What is a SAE?

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  1. What is a SAE? • Supervised Agricultural Experience (SAE) Programs consist of planned practical activities conducted outside of class time in which students develop and apply agricultural knowledge and skills.

  2. Examples of SAE Projects • Operating a lawn care business • Raising show rabbits • Working at a nursery • Growing a vegetable garden • Landscaping • Working at a dairy farm • Operating a pet sitting service • Working with a veterinarian • Improving wildlife habitat

  3. Why Have a SAE Project? • Develop skills that can be used in getting a job • Earn money • Win FFA awards! • (FFA proficiency awards are based on your SAE)

  4. Develop skills to start your own business Obtain skills and knowledge that will be helpful in college

  5. More Reasons for SAE! • Learn more about possible careers • Develop management skills • Learn how to keep accurate records

  6. Advance in the FFA (FFA degrees are based on your SAE) Improve decision making skills Develop skills that can be used as a hobby or for recreation.

  7. One More Reason for SAE! • It can make a profound impact in YOUR life!

  8. “All genuine education comes about through experience.” John Dewey Experiential Learning

  9. 10% of what we read 20% of what we hear 30% of what we see 50% of what we hear and see 70% of what we say 90% of what we say and do Cone of Learning (Edgar Dale) Nature of Involvement After 2 weeks we tend to remember... Reading Verbal Receiving Hearing Words Looking at Pictures Passive Watching a Movie Looking at an Exhibit Visual Receiving Watching a Demonstration Seeing It Done on Location Receiving/ Participating Participating in a Discussion Giving a Talk Active Doing a Dramatic Presentation Doing Simulating the Real Experience Doing the Real Thing Edgar Dale, Audio-Visual Methods in Teaching (3rd Edn.), Holt, Rinehart, and Winston (1969).

  10. Supervised Agricultural Experience Agricultural Exploratory Literacy Instruction Entrepreneurship in and Employment about and/or Placement Agriculture Additional Education Research • Experimental• Non-Experimental Leading to a Major SAE Components Career in Agriculture Improvement Supplementary Minor SAE Components SAE Model

  11. What is the legal basis for SAE? • The Smith-Hughes Act of 1917 (a federal law) required all students in agriculture classes to have "directed or supervised practice in agriculture.”

  12. Ag Ed Education Model Each side of a triangle provides support for the structure. SAE FFA Instruction

  13. Types of SAE Programs

  14. Entrepreneurship • Planning, implementing, operating and assuming financial risks in an agricultural business or farming activity • raising animals, running a lawn care business, operating a farm stand

  15. In Entrepreneurship programs, the student owns the materials and other required inputs and keeps financial records to determine return to investments.

  16. Entrepreneurship Activities: • Running a pet sitting or dog walking business • Preparing animals for show • Selling hanging baskets • Building and selling chicken coops • Raising fiber animals

  17. Growing & selling plants in the school greenhouse Owning and operating a lawn care service Raising and selling rabbits Growing herbs/vegetables and selling them at the Farmers Market Build bird houses/feeders/bat houses & sell

  18. Raising and showing market sheep/pigs/goats Raising and showing chickens Raising meat birds/eggs Creating a line of dog/cat treats or toys Training horses Improve wildlife sanctuary Train dog – good dog/ Therapy

  19. Placement • Placement programs involve the placement of students in JOBSsuch as on farms and ranches, agricultural businesses, school laboratories or with community organziations to provide a "learning by doing" environment. = WORK

  20. Remember, SAE projects are done outside of normal classroom hours may be paid or non-paid.

  21. Placement Activities: • Placement at a nursery (Wards) • Working after school at a farm supply store or Petstore • Working at a riding stable • Volunteering with a wildlife rehabilator

  22. Working on a farm Working at a Vet’s office Volunteering at a local Animal Shelter Working at the farmers market

  23. Placement activities • Hancock Shaker Village • Local farms!! • Berkshire Grown • Keep Berkshires Farming • Co-Op, Guido’s, Big Y, PriceChopper – meat dept, produce dept, florist • Working at an Agricultural non-profit organization

  24. Farms! • Wolfe Spring Farm • Moon in the Pond • Pine Island Farm • Taft farm • Turner farm • Kinderhook Farm • Twin Rivers farm • Will Conklin’s farm • Equinox farm • The Meat Market • Indian Line farm • Ward’s nursery • Windy Hill • Farm Girl Farm • Howden • Project Native • Fish Hatchery • High Lawn Farm • North Plain Farm

  25. Improvement SAE’s • Improve your home, neighborhood, community, school or place of business. • Can involve: • Landscaping • Container gardens • Picking up trash • Setting up recycling/compost • Signage

  26. A training agreement signed by student, teacher, employer and parent/guardian stating which each will do, record of work, hours and compensation must be completed.

  27. Experimental • An extensive activity where the student plans and conducts a major agricultural experiment using the scientific process or scientific method

  28. The purpose of the experiment is to provide students "hands-on" experience in: • 1. Verifying, learning or demonstrating scientific principles in agriculture. • 2. Discovering new knowledge. • 3. Using the scientific process.

  29. Experimental SAE Examples: • Comparing the effect of various planting media on plant growth • Determining the impact of different levels of protein on fish growth

  30. Comparing three rooting hormones on root development Comparing fertilizers Determining if phases of the moon have an effect on plant growth Animal behavior observations & training methods

  31. Analytical • Identify an agricultural problem that cannot be solved by experiments and design a plan to investigate and analyze the problem such as a marketing display.

  32. The student gathers and evaluates data from a variety of sources and then produce some type of finished product.

  33. Analytical Activities: • A marketing plan for an agricultural commodity • A series of newspaper articles about an agricultural issue • Creating awareness for adoptions/spay and neutering pets

  34. A land use plan for a farm A community recycling plan An advertising campaign for an agribusiness

  35. Exploratory • Exploratory SAE activities are designed primarily to help students become literate in agriculture and/or become aware of possible careers in agriculture.

  36. Exploratory Helps students learn about agriculture and become aware of possible agricultural careersthrough short times spent observing, shadowing or helping such as attending a career day, interviewing a veterinarian or assisting a horse owner.

  37. Exploratory SAE activities are appropriate for beginning agricultural students

  38. Exploratory Activities: • Observing and/or assisting • Job shadowing and interviewing

  39. Assisting on a horse farm for a day Interviewing an agricultural loan officer in a bank Preparing a scrapbook on the work of an animal behaviorist Attending an agricultural career day at the university

  40. Group Activity! • Get into groups of 3-4 and make a list of feasible SAE projects that you could do this semester (specific farms, businesses, home projects, experiments etc…) • Each group will add their ideas to the board, discuss as a class. • After discussing the ideas, eliminating non-feasible and duplicates, you will then create classroom posters listing all your great ideas! • Put up in room

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