By Jeff Murphy, April 5, 2023
Surrounding table in the University of Central Missouri Multipurpose Building, high
school students from throughout the Missouri FFA Central District tested their knowledge
and skill at evaluating different types of meat as one of many events at the district's
annual competition.
WARRENSBURG, MO – Weeks of preparation to develop knowledge and skills in several
agriculture areas culminated with approximately 1,800 high school students competing
in the Missouri FFA Central District competition March 28 at the University of Central
Missouri.
The annual event was hosted by UCM with leadership provided by the university’s Department
of Agriculture as well as assistance from department alumni who are former FFA members,
and agriculture faculty, staff and students. They were instrumental in making the
competition events possible utilizing facilities such as the Multipurpose Building,
University Farms, agricultural mechanics area and a number of other campus locations.
High school students who traveled to UCM took part in team events, where they were
asked to individually demonstrate their aptitude for evaluating several different
agriculture or food elements. A number of students who scored high in these contests
will go on to compete in state FFA contests at the University of Missouri-Columbia
in April. State winners move on to national competitions, which take place during
the National FFA Convention in the fall.
Adam Brock, a former FFA member from Lexington who serves as president of the Central
District Agriculture Teachers Association, was among individuals who welcomed students
and their agriculture teachers to campus during the open session at the Multipurpose
Building. He was joined by UCM President Roger Best and Michelle Santiago, chair of
the university’s Department of Agriculture.
With so many different contests and locations, he jokingly described his job as a
“director of chaos, making sure everything is off and running the way they are supposed
to be.” He added that the FFA had received great support from members of the campus
community as well as UCM alumni who were helping to make this program a great learning
experience for students.
“These events are super competitive, and there are multilayers to every contest so
they are learning a lot of information about a subject, whether it’s livestock judging
or farm business management or dairy cattle judging…Then there are things like public
speaking they must learn, so there’s a lot of layers to all of this,” Brock said.
One element of the many competitions has to do with team representatives making a
persuasive speech to explain reasons why they made certain choices related to an item
they have scored. Official placement and answers are set by an expert in an agriculture
discipline. This is often someone who works in agriculture agency or university.
Brock noted that host sites such as UCM are selected based on their ability to accommodate
the number of student participants and facilities where various competitions are to
be held. A stroll through the Multipurpose Building demonstrated just how diverse
those accommodations must be.
While stationary seats in the Multipurpose Building served as the main gathering spot
for opening ceremonies, the facility’s arena floor was abuzz with activity throughout
the morning of the district contest. In the southwest corner of the building, for
example, young men and women wearing their iconic FFA blue and gold corduroy jackets
formed a couple of long lines that slowly edged their way to a table to sample potato
chips and soda as part of a food science activity to evaluate processed foods. Elsewhere
in the building, there were stations featuring dairy products and equipment, and long
tables with different cuts of meat, floriculture items, as well as an entomology station.
These were all surrounded by rows of students who were sitting in desks completing
their written requirements. Outside this facility, students were found scoring and
using agricultural machinery at a location on Broad Street while busloads of student
competitors converged on the Prussing Farm, east of Warrensburg, to evaluate cattle,
sheep, goats and soils.
While being part of the event, some high school agriculture instructors and former
FFA members, also enjoyed an opportunity to return to their alma mater. Among them
was Jake Montemayor, a 2013 graduate of UCM’s baccalaureate program in Agriculture
Education. He accompanied a group of his students from Cole Camp to campus after working
with them this academic year in areas such as dairy products, livestock, nursery and
landscape.
Montemayor grew up on a farm near Lincoln, Missouri, and became an FFA member through
State Fair Community College in Sedalia before coming to UCM. He recalled some of
his favorite university faculty members who continue to inspire him long after his
graduation. He added that, “UCM gave me real-world life skills that I could put in
my classroom.”
Another UCM alumnus who had a strong role in the FFA Central District competition
was Avery Deevers, an agriculture instructor at Crest Ridge High School, near Centerview,
Missouri. He graduated from the university’s Agriculture Education program in 2013,
and is the Central District FFA liaison and district contest coordinator. He brought
with him two Crest Ridge students, one of whom is considering following in his footsteps
by pursuing a career as an agriculture teacher.
“I think it’s cool to be able to have this at the same place I competed when I was
in high school and to be back here again helping out,” Deevers said. “It is a great
way to give back to my ag education kids and also a cool way to be connected with
the university where I graduated.”
He spoke briefly about what he gained as a former FFA member, noting, “I think one
of the biggest things I got from it, that I instill in my students now, is just learning
to be yourself…learning how to challenge yourself and not being comfortable all of
the time. That’s a big thing for our kids now, they want to stay in their comfort
zone, and they can’t.”
Deevers stressed some of hallmarks of FFA include the development of leadership skills,
and opportunities explore different career paths. FFA competitions contribute to these
efforts.
Michelle Santiago, Ph.D., chair of UCM’s Department of Agriculture, was excited to
be part of the event. She particularly appreciated all of the opportunities it provided
for her university students to get involved.
“More than 50 of our current UCM agriculture and agriculture education students assisted
with this year's contests by helping to raise or prepare contest materials, facilitating
on site, and even helping to judge,” Santiago said. “About half of our UCM student
volunteers participated in FFA in high school and were happy to give back to such
a meaningful organization. For our UCM students new to this event, they were amazed
to learn about the diverse opportunities for youth participating in the FFA. They
were also glad to see these high schoolers on campus, having a great learning experience.
It is always meaningful when our students ask if we will host next year, as they
would like to help again.”
Having grown up in Marshall, Missouri, Santiago fondly recalls what it was like to
be in FFA and to participate in competitive events. She can relate well to the students'
experience in Warrensburg.
“I competed in FFA contests on this campus. For me, working hard all year to compete
in CDE's and being on the college campuses that hosted were some of the most memorable
FFA events,” she said. “Wanting current FFA members and their teachers to have a wonderful
UCM campus experience, and to really see some great university facilities, helped
shaped the facilitation and interaction the Department of Agriculture wanted UCM to
have with students and teachers at this year's event.”
According to the Missouri FFA website, it is estimated that nearly 26,000 high school
and college-level students in the state are engaged in the organization and its six
districts. This includes students from about 70 different schools that are part of
the district competition at UCM. Such events are part of many activities designed
to help fulfill FFA’s vision for students to “achieve academic and personal growth,
strengthen American agriculture and provide leadership to build healthy local communities,
a strong nation and a sustainable world.”
Framed by trees lining a driveway at Prussing Farm, high school students could be
seen testing their knowledge of soils during the FFA Central District Competition
at UCM.