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Albuquerque Journal Article: Growth Spurt
Post Date: Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009ABQJOURNAL EDUCATION: Growth spurt
Tuesday, February 03, 2009
Growth spurt
<!–COPYRIGHT:Copyright 2009 Albuquerque Journal–>
For the Journal
Blake Matheson loves pigs.
He also likes to sing and perform in school plays when he’s not helping out with the family’s cattle.
But his real passion is the National FFA — formerly the Future Farmers of America — and Matheson says you don’t have to be from a farming family to join.
“You don’t even have to work with animals if you’re a member of the association,” the 16-year-old Belen High junior said. Matheson is president of the Belen FFA chapter and vice president of the district that includes Los Lunas, Belen, Socorro and Truth or Consequences.
“It’s a real passion,” he said. “I really enjoy going to a place where there’s a wide range of members,” … from city dwellers “who have never had livestock in their lives” to students whose families have hundreds of cattle.
Matheson is one of 3,726 students in New Mexico who are members of the national organization, which offers agricultural education classes, career development and leadership skills.
New Mexico is predominantly a rural state, but most of the group’s membership comes from Belen, Los Lunas, Roswell, T or C, Tucumcari and Las Cruces, said Jerrod Smith, New Mexico’s FFA executive secretary.
“These are larger towns that have grown around agricultural centers and still have agriculture as a huge part of their local economy,” he said. “We currently don’t have any chapter in the Albuquerque Public Schools system — most of these chapters were dissolved in the ’80s because of budget cuts. We are trying to get programs in urban areas started up again.”
Smith said Rio Rancho’s Cleveland High School, slated to open next school year, is in the process of starting an agricultural education/FFA program, which he hopes will begin an “urban agricultural education trend.”
“As an agricultural education teacher, I had seen firsthand how the program can change the lives of students,” Smith said. “I had several students who didn’t have a place to belong, and the FFA became that place.”
It also helps students plan careers or “guides them to a college education with special scholarships for FFA members,” he said.
Opening an APS chapter also is the goal of Paul Moya, a 2006 Los Lunas High graduate who recently became national president — the first New Mexican to hold that position, according to FFA officials.
For Matheson, the biggest benefit was learning how to speak in front of an audience through FFA speech competitions and talks at 4-H events.
“I remember I used to tremble when I talked in front of people, but now I can talk in front of my class all day with no issue at all,” he said.
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