Author: Rhonda Jewell
Planning Unit: Caldwell County CES
Major Program: Leadership
Plan of Work: Enhance Life Skills and Workforce Development
Outcome: Intermediate Outcome
When the COVID-19 pandemic shut down programming in March 2020 youth, families, and communities experienced long-term isolation and alteration of their typical lives related to in and out of school activities. Youth out-of-school time programs, such as 4-H, are essential ecological assets and their disruption during the pandemic may have a major impact on youth’s developmental pathways (Ettekal & Aganas, 2020). For many youth COVID-19 will be the defining issue of their lives and affect them in ways that will mark the course of their life-long development (Bartlett & Virette, 2020). As we emerge from the COVID-19 pandemic, it is imperative that programs, communities, and families that are involved in the lives of youth make a diligent effort to restore and rebuild opportunities that provide experiences to develop interpersonal life-skills. Hosting the Kentucky 4-H Teen Conference in June 2021 was an attempt to provide a typical cumulative experience for senior-level 4-H members. Due to COVID-19 capacity restrictions, the conference was open to only those senior-level youth who participated throughout the program year in a Kentucky 4-H leadership board or the Kentucky 4-H Achievement Program.
208 youth representing 68 counties participated in the 2021 Kentucky 4-H Teen Conference. Youth reported that it was important to attend the conference this year because:
Youth reported how they benefited from Kentucky 4-H Teen Conference:
Attending 4-H Teen Conference at the University of Kentucky is a valuable experience for youth from across the Commonwealth:
There were five teens and one 4-H agent that attended 4-H Teen Conference from Caldwell County. Four of the teens were eligible to attend because they were Kentucky 4-H Achievement Awards winners; one being a gold recipient, one silver and two bronze. There was also a teen from the statewide pool that was eligible to attend the conference because of her participation in 4-H through the years.
4-H Teen Conference was just what our teens needed after a year of dealing with Covid. I saw one young man grow personally and gain independence while at Teen Conference. He went from an awkward boy to a more confident young man who made new friends and really blossomed during the conference. One teen was unsure of her college choice, but after seeing the campus and staying in the dorms has decided to attend the University of Kentucky and major in animal science.
Even with the restrictions and having to wear masks, the 2021 4-H Teen Conference was essential to our teen’s well-being because it provided a sense of “normal” in a social setting. Something many had been without for a very long time.
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