|
TENNESSEE 4-H IDEAS
VOLUME 04 - Issue 41
October 15, 2004
IN THIS ISSUE
Family Volunteering: Time Together - Time
To Act!
McMinn County Returns From National Dairy Judging
Contest
Pilot Counties For Life Skill Instrument Testing Needed
Targeting Positive Youth Development: Responsible Citizenship
Templates For Activity And Supplement Sheets Now Available
Third Quarter Honor Club Summary
UPCOMING EVENTS
October 31-November 4
| NAE4-HA Annual Meeting - Oklahoma City, OK |
November 15
| State Land Judging Contest - Murfreesboro |
November 26-30
| National 4-H Congress - Atlanta, GA |
December 4-5
| State YF&R Meeting - Nashville |
Tennessee 4-H Home Page: www.utextension.utk.edu/4H/
Online version of Ideas: www.utextension.utk.edu/4H/ideas04/
Ideas index: www.utextension.utk.edu/4H/ideas04/04-index.htm
FAMILY VOLUNTEERING: TIME TOGETHER - TIME TO ACT!
Each year, National Family Volunteer Day is strategically held
on the Saturday before Thanksgiving as a means of “kicking
off” the holiday season of giving and service. National Family
Volunteer Day is November 20, 2004. In addition, National Family
Volunteer Day begins National Family Week (November 21-27, 2004),
sponsored by the Alliance for Children and Families. To learn more
about that week, visit www.nationalfamilyweek.org.
Families can participate in National Family Volunteer Day in numerous
ways. To find a Volunteer Center in your area that may already
be participating in the day, call or log on to 1-800-VOLUNTEER.org.
If you and your family want to organize your own activity to support
the day, visit www.FamilyCares.org for
family volunteer project ideas, educational resources, games, and
much, much more!
An online document featuring helpful information to agencies and
businesses participating in the day, including fact sheets, project
ideas, sample press releases and media materials can be found at
www.pointsoflight.org under
the resources section.
Patrick Hamilton
Extension Specialist, 4-H
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
MCMINN COUNTY RETURNS FROM NATIONAL DAIRY JUDGING CONTEST
McMinn County participated in the National 4-H Dairy Judging Contest
in Madison, Wisconsin, September 27. Team members included Brad
Barham, Cole Carmichael, Betsy Doughtery and Jennifer Jenkins.
The team was 15th overall out of 30 teams and 4th in Jerseys. Brad
Barham was the 9th high individual in the contest.
Highlights of the trip included judges practices at Hoard's Dairyman
Farm, Barless Jersey Farm and Sunshine Genetics. The group also
toured the Hoard's Dairyman Printing, National Dairy Shrine Museum
and NASCO Supply Company. The team visited the World Dairy Expo
where they got to see over 3000 head of cattle along with the world
Jersey champion.
The team was coached by Whitey and Blan Doughtery. Parents attending
included Rick Barham, Rod Carmichael, Blan and Kathey Doughtery
and Bobbie Jenkins. The Tennessee 4-H Dairy Endowment, along with
many local sponsors assisted with the travel expenses for the trip.
Steve Sutton
Extension Specialist, 4-H
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
PILOT COUNTIES FOR LIFE SKILL INSTRUMENT TESTING NEEDED
The Life Skill Evaluation System (LSES) committee is looking for
counties to pilot test the instruments used to measure the life
skills of building relationships, leadership, responsibility, positive
self-esteem and teamwork. For pilot testing purposes, these scales
would probably best be used with a group who has participated in
programming focused on one of these life skills such as a club
leader training program or several meetings with an emphasis on
positive self-esteem or teamwork. Junior high and senior members,
Honor Club or All Star members, and others who have been involved
with in-depth activities for several years would also be appropriate
groups to survey.
As a pilot county, you will be expected to ask 20 or more youth
to complete beginning, intermediate and advanced level surveys
for one or more of the life skills. Completing all three should
take no more than 20 minutes. You will also be asked to participate
in a November or December conference call and review A Roadmap
for Documenting Impacts (distributed at the April 2004 Training)
prior to completion of the surveys. Surveys should be returned
to the state 4-H office by March 1, 2005 for data analysis in preparation
for the April inservice.
This is a great way to be on the cutting edge of the development
of the LSES system, collect impact data and provide valuable feedback
to the LSES committee. Please consider your involvement in this
project. Please contact Jill Martz by email (jmartz@utk.edu) or
phone (865-974-7436) if you are interested.
Jill Martz
Extension Specialist, 4-H
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
TARGETING POSITIVE YOUTH DEVELOPMENT: RESPONSIBLE CITIZENSHIP
Exploring the Life Skill of Responsible Citizenship
As with healthy lifestyle choices, responsible citizenship is a
life skill with multiple indicators focusing on diverse but related
topics. Patriotism, civic responsibility and valuing diversity
are the main areas of emphasis. These areas lend themselves nicely
to a series of workshops or programs with a common goal of increasing
the knowledge, skills and aspirations of responsible citizenship.
It is possible that you may decide not to cover all areas of
emphasis and focus on one or two of them. Although the composite
evaluation includes all three areas of the life skill at the
beginning, intermediate or advanced level, you would choose to
focus only on reporting the evaluation survey results related
to the program(s) you are conducting.
Exploring Citizenship and County 4-H Programs
Responsible citizenship is an obvious enhancement to the social
studies curriculum objectives of your local school system. Attending
Tennessee State 4-H Congress, Citizenship Washington Focus and
participating in exchange trips should be the culmination of
a 4-H’ers commitment to gaining life skills in this area.
Promoting responsible citizenship as a civic investment in future
citizens and leaders may help to secure sponsorship and support.
Jill Martz
Extension Specialist, 4-H
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
TEMPLATES FOR ACTIVITY AND SUPPLEMENTAL SHEETS NOW AVAILABLE
Many agents, volunteers and specialists have expressed interest
in developing activity and supplemental project sheets. Fifteen
activity sheets and two supplemental sheets are currently available
on-line, with several more in process. All available sheets are
at the beginning level.
The goal is to have at least one beginning, intermediate and advanced
activity sheet for every project, as well as sheets to supplement
the project at each level.
The templates for developing activity and supplemental sheets
are now available at www.utextension.utk.edu/4h/projects/template.htm.
The templates are in both PDF and Microsoft Publisher. The process
for developing and submitting the sheets is as follows:
| 1. |
Developers will utilize the template to create a 2-3 page,
age-appropriate activity or supplemental sheet. |
| 2. |
Developers will submit sheets to Alice Ann Moore in the state
4-H office. |
| 3. |
As with all Extension publications, sheets will go through
a review process with subject matter specialists, Marketing
and Communications Services and the state 4-H staff. |
| 4. |
Sheets will be assigned “W” numbers (for Web-based
publications) and be posted on the 4-H Web site (www.utextension.utk.edu/4h/projects/actsheets.htm). |
Please contact Alice Ann Moore or Lori Jean Mantooth at 865-974-2128
for further information.
Lori Jean Mantooth
Extension Assistant, 4-H
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
THIRD QUARTER HONOR CLUB SUMMARY
The following link (www.utextension.utk.edu/4H/honorclub/howmany.htm)
will provide you with a summary of the 2004 Honor Club initiates
through September. The Central Region continues to lead the state
with 102 initiates. Trousdale is the top county in the state with
15 initiates, followed by Henry and Knox with 14 and Grainger with
13.
Amy Willis is our student assistant working with Honor Club this
year. If you have Honor Club applications to be approved, be sure
to use a summary form to list the applicants and allow enough time
for Amy to review and approve the applications in time for your
initiation ceremony.
Steve Sutton
Extension Specialist, 4-H
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
THOUGHT FOR THE WEEK
Some of the secret joys of living are not found by rushing from
point A to point B, but by inventing some imaginary letters along
the way.
~ Douglas Pagels, "These Are the Gifts I'd Like to Give
to You"
|