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Contact Information

Craig Wood, Ph.D
Acting Associate Dean & Director
UK Cooperative Extension Service

S-107 Ag. Science Center North Lexington, KY 40546-0091

+1 (859) 257-4302

craig.wood@uky.edu

Impacts

Contact Information

Craig Wood, Ph.D
Acting Associate Dean & Director
UK Cooperative Extension Service

S-107 Ag. Science Center North Lexington, KY 40546-0091

+1 (859) 257-4302

craig.wood@uky.edu




Fiscal Year:
Jul 1, 2024 - Jun 30, 2025


Success Story4-H School Clubs



4-H School Clubs

Author: Gary Druin

Planning Unit: Ohio County CES

Major Program: 4-H Youth Development Programming

Plan of Work: Leadership Development

Outcome: Intermediate Outcome

Ohio County 4-H collaborates with local schools to provide research-based 4-H Youth Development educational curriculum to youth in a classroom club format.  Local 4-H, community, and school leaders strongly support the efforts of professional 4-H staff in the classroom settings as these relationships provide a tremendous marketing opportunity of other 4-H programs to 4-H age youth.  Principals, teachers and school staff embrace the 4-H program into the classroom setting because “curricula” provided as part of the 4-H club content, is consistent with the Kentucky Department of Education’s Core Content for Assessment.  

Cooperative Extension Service staff, in cooperation with local teachers, created forty-seven classroom clubs in the Ohio County School system involving 905 youth (102 youth -11.3% minority).   CES provided curricula, core content checklists, and materials for eight monthly meetings for each club, which featured a Core Content lesson.  Lessons were offered in the core content areas of Natural Resources, Communications, Public Speaking, Citizenship, Leadership, SET, Nutrition, Health and Wellness. All clubs elected officers using the democratic process, all candidates presented speeches before the class, and elected officers conducted the meetings using formal business meeting structure throughout the year.  

Evaluations revealed:

81% of youth understood the principals of a democratic election used to elect club officers.

100% of elected officers carried out their roles in the club meeting.

90% of youth utilized information learned in their 4-H meetings to help them make decisions.

86% used skills learned in their 4-H club meetings at home, school, or in the community.

93% of youth stated they felt connected to 4-H staff as adults who were interested in them and their success in life.

Teachers acknowledged the best component of the in-class 4-H Club program were the hands-on, engaging activities that focused on the core content.







Stories by Gary Druin


Green River Area 4-H Team Challenge

about 1 months ago by Gary Druin

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4-H Club Youth Leadership

about 3 months ago by Gary Druin

The 4-H Thriving Model is the theory of change for positive youth development in 4-H. The model illu... Read More


Stories by Ohio County CES


Maple Day at Hitchel Farms

yesterday by Gregory Comer

Native Americans made maple sap into maple sugar long before the Europeans arrived in America. U.S. ... Read More


Green River Area 4-H Team Challenge

about 1 months ago by Gary Druin

4-H Team ChallengeThe Kentucky 4-H Core curriculum is used to develop workforce skills that include ... Read More