Author: Alexandria Brasher
Planning Unit: Henderson County CES
Major Program: Leadership
Plan of Work: Leadership Development
Outcome: Initial Outcome
The 99th Annual Kentucky 4-H Teen Conference was held at the University of Kentucky June 13-16, 2023. The objectives of Kentucky 4-H Teen Conference are: develop leadership and teamwork skills, improve communication skills, foster civic engagement, expand knowledge and skills related to 4-H core content areas, gain club, county and state 4-H program skills, have fun, create a sense of belonging, expand social skills through networking, develop youth-adult partnerships, and become acquainted with the University of Kentucky to aid in college and career readiness of Kentucky 4-Hers.
The leadership event attracted 544 individuals to the University of Kentucky campus: 428 youth and 116 adults from 81 Kentucky counties. The event was sponsored by the University of Kentucky Martin Gatton College of Agriculture, Food and Environment Cooperative Extension Service 4-H Program, the Kentucky 4-H Foundation, Farm Credit Mid-America, the Kentucky Soybean Board Kentucky Farm Bureau, Valvoline, and Tarter.
During the educational experience all youth participated in a UK recruitment session with the Office of Enrollment Management. Additionally, they received academic exploration materials from the Martin Gatton College of Agriculture, Food and Environment Center for Student Success. This exposure provided youth the opportunity to see what the University of Kentucky has to offer and begin the conversation about their potential to attend the University of Kentucky as a student. Youth were provided with an evaluation following the conference where they were asked about their plans after high school. Of those that responded, 77% showed an interest in attending the University of Kentucky and 25% were interested in learning more about Agriculture. Ninety percent of youth responded positively about the conference this year. Of those that responded, 64% attended as first year members, 25% as second year members and 11% had attended the conference for 3+ years. To capture the progressive experience youth were also asked about their previous involvement in 4-H and of those that responded 81% attended 4-H Camp, and 38% attended 4-H Summit.
4-H partnered with 27 different units and departments across the University for participants to gain six hours of educational content in a subject (major) of their choice. Youth engaged in hands-on lessons inside and outside of classrooms at the University of Kentucky, showing them what student life might be like if they attended UK. The majors focused on: agriculture, health, natural resources, expressive arts, family consumer sciences, science, engineering and technology, and communication.
In addition, participants engaged in five hours of leadership development and service learning. All youth participated in a mentorship workshop led by a youth-adult facilitation team. 4-H collaborated with over 25 community serving organizations to engage in three hours of service work. The 428-youth logged 1,284 hours of service. This translates into a cost savings of $9,309 (3 hours x $7.25/hour) for organizations versus using paid employees. These efforts supported local service organizations and empowered 4-Hers to think about their ability to impact change in their community.
Henderson County had five youth attend Teen Conference, three of which completed an Area Teen Leadership Academy this year, and all five whom had been very active on the W3/W4 Area Teen Council this year. One youth received his bronze level achievement while at Teen Conference. All five youth plan on returning to Teen Conference in 2024 and talked about the impact being on campus, their service projects, and overall networking had on them while at Teen Conference. One youth also joined the State Teen SET Board shortly after Teen Conference ended. Two delegates also talked about future leadership roles they want to pursue at the area and state levels because of attending teen conference.
Total Demographics For 2023 Teen Conference
Race/Ethnicity: | Non - Hispanic | Hispanic | |
White | 500 | 12 | |
Black | 11 |
| |
Asian / Pacific Islander | 6 |
| |
Native American Indian / Alaska Native | 4 | 1 | |
Hawaiian | 2 |
| |
Multi / Two or more Races |
|
| |
Other/Choose Not to Identify | 7 | 1 | |
Cannot be determined |
|
| Total |
| 530 | 14 | 544 |
Gender | Male | Female | |
| 154 | 390 | |
Youth | 428 | ||
Adults volunteer | 6 | ||
Intern | 10 | ||
Program Assistant | 11 | ||
Agent | 78 | ||
State Staff | 11 | ||
544 | Total |
According to the American Heart Association, teaching youth how to prepare their own food will give ... Read More
Many youth in Henderson County want to learn more about the environment and want to immerse themselv... Read More
According to data from the AmeriCorps, 978,627 Kentuckians volunteered their time, talent and effort... Read More
With COVID-19, adaptation to the new situation was a given, but we werent sure how that was going to... Read More