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Wikipedia

4-H

4-H is a U.S.-based network of youth organizations whose mission is "engaging youth to reach their fullest potential while advancing the field of youth development".[1] Its name is a reference to the occurrence of the initial letter H four times in the organization's original motto head, heart, hands, and health, which was later incorporated into the fuller pledge officially adopted in 1927. In the United States, the organization is administered by the National Institute of Food and Agriculture of the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA). 4-H Canada is an independent non-profit organization overseeing the operation of branches throughout Canada.[2] There are 4-H organizations in over 50 countries;[3] the organization and administration varies from country to country.

4-H
Official 4-H emblem
Formation1912–1914
TypeYouth organization
Legal statusFederal governmental program administered through Land-grant university system in each state and territory
Purpose"Engaging youth to reach their fullest potential while advancing the field of youth development."
HeadquartersWashington, DC (offices in Kansas City, MO)
Region served
United States (affiliated programs worldwide)
Membership
6.5 million members in the United States, ages 5 to 21
Director, Division of Youth & 4-H
Shannon Horrillo
Main organ
National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA)
Parent organization
United States Department of Agriculture (USDA)
AffiliationsLand-grant university system, National 4-H Council
Website4-H.org
4-H
Standard uniform colors for the 4 H
 Scouting portal

The goal of 4-H is to develop citizenship, leadership, responsibility and life skills of youth through experiential learning programs and a positive youth development approach. Though typically thought of as an agriculturally focused organization as a result of its history, 4-H today focuses on citizenship, healthy living, science, engineering, and technology programs. Clubs in today's 4-H world consist of a wide range of options each allowing for personal growth and career success. The 4-H motto is "To make the best better", while its slogan is "Learn by doing" (sometimes written as "Learn to do by doing"). As of 2016, the organization had nearly 6 million active participants and more than 25 million alumni.[4]

History edit

 
4-H boys showing prize heifers at a 4-H Fair in Charleston, West Virginia, 1921
 
4-H Home demonstration agents in Florida in 1933
 
4-H Club member storing food she canned from her garden, Rockbridge County, Virginia, ca. 1942

The foundations of 4-H began in 1902 with the work of several people in different parts of the United States. The focal point of 4-H has been the idea of practical and hands-on learning, which came from the desire to make public school education more connected to rural life. Early programs incorporated both public and private resources. 4-H was founded with the purpose of instructing rural youth in improved farming and farm-homemaking practices. By the 1970s, it was broadening its goals to cover a full range of youth, including minorities, and a wide range of life experiences.[5]

 
A brochure for the 4-H Forestry Program

During this time, researchers at experiment stations of the land-grant universities and USDA saw that adults in the farming community did not readily accept new agricultural discoveries. However, educators found that youth would experiment with these new ideas and then share their experiences and successes with the adults. As a result rural youth programs became a way to introduce new agriculture technology to the adults.

Club work began wherever a public-spirited person did something to give rural children respect for themselves and their ways of life and it is very difficult to credit one sole individual.[6] Instances of work with rural boys and girls can be found all throughout the 19th century. In the spring of 1882, Delaware College announced a statewide corn contest for boys, in which each boy was to plant a quarter of an acre, according to instructions sent out from the college, and cash prizes, certificates, and subscriptions to the American Agriculturalist were rewarded.[7]

In 1892, in an effort to improve the Kewaunee County Fair, Ransom Asa Moore, the president of the Kewaunee Fair, the Agricultural Society, and Superintendent of the Kewaunee County Schools in Wisconsin, organized a "youth movement", which he called "Young People's Contest Clubs", in which he solicited the support of 6,000 young farm folks to produce and exhibit fruits, vegetables, and livestock.[8] The fairs were quite successful.[9] In 1904, while working for the University of Wisconsin–Madison and trying to repeat what he had accomplished in Kewaunee County over a decade before but with different intentions, "Daddy" R.A. Moore convinced R.H. Burns, then Superintendent of Schools of Richland County, Wisconsin, to have the Richland County Boys and Girls organize and assist in a corn-project activity to help market and distribute improved seeds to the farmers in the state of Wisconsin (and beyond).[9]

A. B. Graham began one of the youth programs in Clark County, Ohio, in 1902, which is also considered one of the births of the 4-H program in the United States. The first club was called "The Tomato Club" or the "Corn Growing Club". T.A. "Dad" Erickson of Douglas County, Minnesota, started local agricultural after-school clubs and fairs also in 1902. Jessie Field Shambaugh developed the clover pin with an H on each leaf in 1910, and, by 1912, they were called 4-H clubs.[10] Early 4-H programs in Colorado began with youth instruction offered by college agricultural agents as early as 1910, as part of the outreach mission of the Colorado land grant institutions.[11]

The national 4-H organization was formed in 1914, when the United States Congress created the Cooperative Extension Service of the USDA by passage of the Smith-Lever Act of 1914, it included within the CES charter the work of various boys' and girls' clubs involved with agriculture, home economics and related subjects.[12] The Smith-Lever Act formalized the 4-H programs and clubs that began in the midwestern region of the United States. Although different activities were emphasized for boys and girls, 4-H was one of the first youth organizations to give equal attention to both genders (cf., erstwhile Boys Clubs of America).[13] The first appearance of the term "4-H Club" in a federal document was in "Organization and Results of Boys' and Girls' Club Work," by Oscar Herman Benson (1875–1951) and Gertrude L. Warren, in 1920.[14][15] By 1924, the clubs were organized as 4-H clubs, and the clover emblem was adopted.[16] Warren expanded the scope of girls' activities under the program (promoting garment making, room decorating, and hot lunches), and wrote extensive training materials.[17][14]

The first 4-H camp was held in Randolph County, West Virginia. Originally, these camps were for what was referred to as "Corn Clubs". Campers slept in corn fields in tents, only to wake up and work almost the entirety of each day. Superintendent of Schools G. C. Adams began a boys' corn club in Newton County, Georgia, in 1904.[citation needed]

4-H membership hit an all-time high in 1974 as a result of its popular educational program about nutrition, Mulligan Stew, shown in schools and on television across the country. Today, 4-H clubs and activities are no longer focused primarily on agricultural activities, instead emphasizing personal growth and preparation for lifelong learning. Participation is greatest during the elementary school years, with enrollment in programs and activities peaking in the 4th grade.[citation needed]

In the southern United States during the mid-1960s 4-H began to broaden its programming to cover life experiences unrelated to agriculture. It merged its segregated African American and white programs, but full-fledged integration proved elusive. 4-H was successful in removing gender-based restrictions on participation.[18]

The organization is funded by the USDA and by state and local governments.[19] The National 4-H Council's programs are also supported by a number of corporations including Google, Verizon, Microsoft, Land O'Lakes Inc., and Tractor Supply Co.[20][21]

Past Honorary Chairmen of Council have included U.S. Presidents Calvin Coolidge, Herbert Hoover, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry Truman, Dwight Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson, Richard Nixon, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, George H. W. Bush, and Bill Clinton.[22][23]

 
A newspaper clipping of 4-H club members attending a convention in Georgia, 1950

Pledge edit

The 4-H pledge is:

I pledge my head to clearer thinking,
my heart to greater loyalty,
my hands to larger service,
and my health to better living,
for my club, my community, my country, and my world.[24]

Otis E. Hall wrote the original pledge of Kansas in 1918. Some California 4-H clubs add either "As a true 4-H member" or "As a loyal 4-H member" at the beginning of the pledge. Minnesota and Maine 4-H clubs add "for my family" to the last line of the pledge.[25] Initially, the pledge ended in "and my country," but in 1973, "and my world" was added.


It is a common practice to involve hand motions to accompany these spoken words. While reciting the first line of the pledge, the speaker points to their head with both of their hands. As the speaker recites the second line, they place their right hand over their heart much like during the Pledge of Allegiance. For the third line, the speaker presents their hands, palm side up, before them. For the fourth line, the speaker motions to their body down their sides. For the final line, the speaker usually places their right hand out for the club, left hand for the community, brings them together for the country, and then brings their hands upwards in a circle representing the world.

Emblem edit

 
4-H emblem in Oldham County in Vega west of Amarillo, Texas

The official 4-H emblem is a green four-leaf clover with a white H on each leaf standing for Head, Heart, Hands, and Health. The stem of the clover always points to the right.

The idea of using the four-leaf clover as an emblem for the 4-H program is credited to Oscar Herman Benson (1875–1951) of Wright County, Iowa. He awarded three-leaf and four-leaf clover pennants and pins for students' agricultural and domestic science exhibits at school fairs.[26]

The 4-H name and emblem had U.S. federal protection, previous under federal code 18 U.S.C. 707.[27] The federal protection made it a mark unto and of itself with protection that supersedes the limited authorities of both a trademark and a copyright. The Secretary of Agriculture is given responsibility and stewardship for the 4-H name and emblem, at the direct request of the U.S. Congress. These protections placed the 4-H emblem in a unique category of protected emblems, also along with the U.S. Presidential Seal, Red Cross, Smokey Bear and the Olympic rings.[28] Protections for the 4-H emblem were repealed by Title XI of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021.[29]

Youth development research edit

Through the program's tie to land-grant institutions of higher education, 4-H academic staff are responsible for advancing the field of youth development.[1] Professional academic staff are committed to innovation, the creation of new knowledge, and the dissemination of new forms of program practice and research on topics like University of California's study of thriving in young people. Youth development research is undertaken in a variety of forms including program evaluation, applied research, and introduction of new programs.

Volunteers edit

Over 540,000 volunteer leaders help to coordinate the 4-H program at the county level. Volunteers plan and conduct 4-H related activities, develop and maintain educational programs, or assist in fundraising. Activities include youth development programs, project groups, camps, conferences, or animal shows. The volunteers' goal is to help youth achieve greater self-confidence and self-responsibility, learn new skills, and build relationships.[30]

Volunteers are directed by 4-H's professional staff.

The National 4-H Hall of Fame honors 4-H volunteers, extension professionals and staff employees, donors and others, according to a criterion of "significant impact on the 4-H program and/or 4-H members through the contribution of time, energy, financial resources, etc.".[31] The hall of fame was established in 2002 by the National Association of Extension 4-H Youth Development Professionals (NAE4-HYDP).[32]

Additional programs edit

After-school edit

 
A girl presenting her rabbit at the Calaveras County Fair in California 2016

4-H Afterschool helps 4-H and other youth-serving organizations create and improve programs for students in communities across the U.S. 4-H Afterschool is an extension-enhanced program that:

  • Offers youth a safe, healthy, caring and enriching environment.
  • Engages youth in long-term, structured learning in partnership with adults.
  • Addresses the interests of youth and their physical, cognitive, social and emotional needs.

4-H Afterschool programs utilize experimental and cooperative learning activities and provide interaction with competent adults. Results of retrospective pre/post-surveys indicate that children enrolled in the program showed life skill gain over time, and that gains on specific life skills differed as a function of age, gender, and ethnicity.

The life skills gained through 4-H Afterschool give children the tools they need for perceiving and responding to diverse life situations and achieving their personal goals. Participation in these quality programs which use experiential and cooperative learning have all been found to contribute to children's social development and academic success.[33]

Camping edit

 
Debbie McDonald, who was the West Virginia state 4-H Leader at the time, poses with the newly relocated Camp Good Luck marker (July 8, 2015).

Each state runs its own camping program. The world's first 4-H camp was held in July 1915 on the Crouch family farm along the Tygart Valley River near Elkwater, West Virginia. The youth in attendance named the location "Camp Good Luck."[34]

The first state 4-H camp was held at Jackson's Mill outside of Weston, West Virginia. 4-H camping programs in most states are run through land-grant institutions, such as Washington State University, which runs the Washington program, and Pennsylvania State University runs Pennsylvania's. The Georgia 4-H camping program has the largest youth center in the world, called Rock Eagle.

On July 8, 2015, to mark the centennial of 4-H camping, youth from Randolph County, West Virginia traveled back to the original Camp Good Luck site for a special commemoration and campfire program. A stone marker honoring Camp Good Luck had been placed adjacent to US 219 near the site, but was moved to a spot off of Bell Crouch Rd. for greater safety and accessibility through the efforts of Randolph County 4-H volunteers and the West Virginia Division of Highways.

Five- to eight-year-old youth edit

Some states offer programs for youth in grades K-2 called Cloverbuds, Cloverkids, 4-H Adventurers, Primary Members, or Mini 4-H. Some states prohibit this age group from competition due to research in child development demonstrating that competition is unhealthy for youth ages five to eight.[35]

Collegiate edit

 
National Collegiate 4-H club emblem

Many colleges and universities have collegiate 4-H clubs. Usually members are students who are 4-H alumni and want to continue a connection to 4-H, but any interested students are welcome. Clubs provide service and support to their local and state 4-H programs, such as serving as judges and conducting training workshops. They are also a service and social group for campus students. The very first collegiate 4-H club started in 1916 on the Oklahoma State University - Stillwater campus.

All Stars edit

Finding its roots in the early 4-H movement in West Virginia, the 4-H All-Star program strives to recognize and challenge 4-H members and volunteers. State 4-H Club Leader William H. "Teepi" Kendrick sought to develop youth to "be yourself at your best" and to "make the best better" through a fourfold personal development pattern involving the head, hands, heart, and, at that time, hustle. It was with this philosophy, in collaboration with others, that the 4-H emblem was born. In an attempt to harbor further individual growth, Kendrick recognized excellence with pins bearing one, two, three, and four H's. Recognition for outstanding participation was rewarded from 1917 to 1921 with trips to a Prize Winner's Course at West Virginia University. Members who demonstrated outstanding qualities at these courses were awarded five-pointed red pins with five H's, with this additional H to symbolize honor. The recipients of these pins were referred to by Kendrick as "All Stars". It was following the pin consecration ceremony in 1919 that the official West Virginia 4-H All Stars organization was chartered, becoming the Alpha Chapter of the nationwide 4-H honorary.[36]

The symbol of the All Stars is a red star enveloping a gemstone chip over the 4-H emblem. Each point of the star represents a pillar of character: "Beauty, Fortitude, Service, Truth, and Love".[37]

Many states have All Star programs, although All Star programs vary from state to state. Selection as a 4-H All Star is a recognition of achievement. In California for example, it is the highest achievement award at the county level and is a position awarded annually.[38] Similarly, the capstone award in Texas 4-H is the Gold Star Award, which is given to Seniors who have shown outstanding leadership and proficiency in their project areas.[39]

In Virginia, on the other hand, All-Stars are not simply those who have achieved an All-Star award, but are those who have gained membership into the Virginia All-Stars organization. After reaching the age of 15, 4-H members are eligible to apply for membership into the All-Stars organization, which promotes the continuation of 4-H principles.[40]

Conferences edit

 
National 4-H Youth Conference Center in Chevy Chase, Maryland

Many conferences are held at various levels of the 4-H program for youth and adults. The National 4-H Conference, which was held at the National 4-H Youth Conference Center in Chevy Chase, Maryland, until it was sold in 2021, is the USDA Secretary's premier youth development opportunity to engage youth in developing recommendations for the 4-H Youth Development Program. The Conference still meets annually in and around Washington, DC. The 2024 National 4-H Conference will be held in Arlington, VA. [41]

The National 4-H Congress is an annual educational conference that brings together 4-H delegates between the ages of 14 and 19 from across America to share cultural experiences and discuss important issues facing youth. This five-day event is typically held during the weekend of Thanksgiving and has been hosted in Atlanta, since 1998. Throughout the conference, 4-H delegates attend numerous workshops, participate in community service activities, and listen to speakers in an effort to develop compassion and increase social awareness.[42][43]

Citizenship Washington Focus is a week-long conference offered for high school-aged students.[44] At the conference, students have the opportunity to learn how to be citizen leaders in their communities. Throughout the week in Washington, D.C, participants visit monuments, meet with members of Congress, and develop communication, leadership and citizenship skills.

The following national conferences are held yearly, and are focused on specific activities inside of 4-H:

  • National 4-H Dairy Conference[45]
  • Eastern National 4-H Horse Roundup[46]
  • Western National 4-H Horse Roundup[47]
  • National 4-H Shooting Sports Invitational Match[48]
  • National 4-H True Leaders in Equity Institute[49]
  • National 4-H Youth Summit Series[50]
    • STEM Summit
    • Healthy Living Summit
    • Agri-science Summit

Other conferences are held by regional and state entities for youth, for volunteer development, or for professional development for staff.

Controversy edit

Native Americans edit

For many years, use of Native American names and certain themed activities was part of the summer camping programs of some eastern states. However, the practice was considered to be offensive and protests were raised. A complaint to the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Office of Civil Rights in 2002 and an ensuing investigation that threatened to cut off funds to the state's program[51] prompted the West Virginia University Extension Service to abandon offensive and stereotypic practices such as face-painting, and use of imagery not a part of the culture of local Native people, such as tepees and totem poles.[51] They also eliminated the practice of having children wear feather headdresses, and stopped having campers engage in "stereotypical motions and dances," including chanting "Ugh! Ugh! Ugh!". However, the state program deemed the dividing of campers into groups, called "tribes" named after actual Indian Nations, to be respectful and acceptable.[52] In the same year, the Virginia Extension Service removed all references to symbols or camp "traditions" related to Native Americans, including the decades-long practice of dividing campers into "tribes" using names of nations considered native to Virginia, replacing the group names with animal names.[53]

Alumni edit

Some 4-H alumni credit the program with helping them in later life.[54]

In 2021, Minnesota-based photographer R. J. Kern, along with writer Alison Nordström, published, "The Unchosen Ones: Portraits of an American Pastoral" The book highlights portraits of dozens of youth, who spent a year raising and training their animal and then entered into a 4-H livestock competition, but were unsuccessful in winning the top award in their competitions, then revisits the same youth four years later, and asked the young subjects what they had carried forward from their previous experience. [55]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "The California 4-H Youth Development Program - Directions for the Decade Ahead" (PDF). Winter 2003. Retrieved 7 June 2010.
  2. ^ . 4-H Canada. Archived from the original on 15 May 2015. Retrieved 8 May 2015.
  3. ^ "4-H Around the World". 4-H (USA). Retrieved 8 May 2015.
  4. ^ "National 4-H Council 2016 Annual Report" (PDF). 4-H. p. 4. Retrieved 17 March 2022.
  5. ^ Rosenberg, 2015
  6. ^ The Father of Wisconsin 4-H. The Ransom Asa Moore Story, Author: Gleason, Marjorie and William, Publication: 1989 Accurate Publishing & Printing Inc., pg. 9
  7. ^ The Father of Wisconsin 4-H. The Ransom Asa Moore Story, Author: Gleason, Marjorie and William, Publication: 1989 Accurate Publishing & Printing Inc., pg. 10
  8. ^ Kewaunee Enterprise, February 26, 1941, "Death Takes Prof. Moore"
  9. ^ a b The Father of Wisconsin 4-H. The Ransom Asa Moore Story, Author: Gleason, Marjorie and William, Publication: 1989 Accurate Publishing & Printing Inc.
  10. ^ Longden, Tom. Famous Iowans: Jessie Field Shambaugh. Des Moines Register
  11. ^ Rettig, Patricia. "Guide to the Records of the Colorado 4-H". lib2.colostate.edu.
  12. ^ . National Agricultural Library Digital Repository. Archived from the original on 14 June 2010. Retrieved 7 June 2010.
  13. ^ Journal of Research in Childhood Education. "Cooperative and Competitive Orientations in 4-H and Non-4-H Children". Retrieved 28 March 2012.
  14. ^ a b Reck, Franklin A. (1951). The 4-H Story: A History of 4-H Club Work (PDF). Chicago, IL: National 4-H Service Committee. pp. 166–168, 210. OCLC 950057521.
  15. ^ Benson, Oscar Herman; Warren, Gertrude L. (February 1920). Organization and Results of Boys' and Girls' Club Work (Northern and Western States): 1918. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Agriculture. Retrieved 21 August 2018.
  16. ^ . College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, University of Arizona. Archived from the original on 19 June 2010. Retrieved 7 June 2010.
  17. ^ "Folks Who Helped Make 4-H Great: Gertrude Warren". National 4-H History Preservation Program. 8 March 2016. Retrieved 8 August 2018.
  18. ^ Thompson, "The Changing Needs of Our Youth Today" (2012)
  19. ^ "How 4-H is Implemented | National Institute of Food and Agriculture". nifa.usda.gov. Retrieved 26 January 2022.
  20. ^ Major, Derek (26 May 2021). "National 4-H Council Teams With Verizon, Micorsoft Digital Skills". Black Enterprise. Retrieved 26 January 2022.
  21. ^ Rogers, James (12 June 2019). "Google makes $6 million grant to bring computer science education to underserved youth". Fox News. Retrieved 26 January 2022.
  22. ^ "U.S. Presidents and 4-H", 4-H History Preservation. Retrieved 1 feb 2017
  23. ^ "U.S. Presidents As Honorary Chairmen", 4-H History Preservation. Retrieved 1 feb 2017
  24. ^ "4-h Pledge". 4-H. Retrieved 6 November 2018.
  25. ^ https://extension.umn.edu/4-h-member-resources/4-h-pledge
  26. ^ . National Agricultural Library. Archived from the original on 14 April 2010. Retrieved 7 June 2010.
  27. ^ . Office of the Law Revision Counsel. Archived from the original on 3 March 2012. Retrieved 7 June 2010.
  28. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 May 2010. Retrieved 7 June 2010.
  29. ^ Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 116–260 (text) (PDF), 134 Stat. 2155
  30. ^ "Relationships Between 4-H Volunteer Leader Competencies and Skills Youth Learn in 4-H Programs". The Journal of Extension. Retrieved 28 March 2012.
  31. ^ "4-H Hall of Fame - Welcome". www.4-h-hof.com.
  32. ^ "National Association of Extension 4-H Youth Development Professionals".
  33. ^ Child Study Journal. . Archived from the original on 18 October 2015. Retrieved 28 March 2012.
  34. ^ Betler, Bruce. "Camp Good Luck". West Virginia Encyclopedia. West Virginia Humanities Council. Retrieved 20 March 2017.
  35. ^ "Programming Parameters for 5-to-8-Year-Old Children in 4-H". The Journal of Extension. Retrieved 7 June 2010.
  36. ^ . West Virginia 4-H All Star Website. Archived from the original on 24 June 2009. Retrieved 7 June 2010.
  37. ^ "Extension Service | 4-H All Stars". extension.wvu.edu. Retrieved 14 February 2021.
  38. ^ . University of California 4-H Youth Development Program. Archived from the original on 20 June 2009. Retrieved 7 June 2010.
  39. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 March 2009. Retrieved 7 June 2010.
  40. ^ Virginia 4-H "All-Star Brochure" 2007-02-07 at the Wayback Machine by the Virginia Cooperative Extension.
  41. ^ https://4-h.org/events/national-4-h-conference/
  42. ^ . National4-hheadquarters.gov. 22 July 2009. Archived from the original on 7 June 2010. Retrieved 7 June 2010.
  43. ^ . National 4-H Congress. Archived from the original on 14 July 2011. Retrieved 7 June 2010.
  44. ^ "Citizenship Washington Focus". 4-H.
  45. ^ . Wisconsin 4-H Youth Development. Archived from the original on 10 October 2011. Retrieved 1 March 2012.
  46. ^ "Eastern National 4-H Horse Roundup". Eastern National 4-H Roundup. Retrieved 1 March 2012.
  47. ^ "Western National 4-H Horse Roundup". Western National 4-H Roundup. Retrieved 1 March 2012.
  48. ^ . 4-H Shooting Sports. Archived from the original on 20 March 2012. Retrieved 1 March 2012.
  49. ^ "True Leaders in Equity". 4-H. Retrieved 27 March 2022.
  50. ^ "National Youth Summit Series". 4-H. Retrieved 14 February 2021.
  51. ^ a b Washington, The (25 June 2002). ""Administration probes 4-H Indian themes" Washington Times, June 25, 2002". Washingtontimes.com. Retrieved 28 November 2013.
  52. ^ "West Virginia 4-H clubs abandoning offensive Indian practices, but will keep tribal names" Bismarck Tribune, December 17, 2002
  53. ^ "Virginia 4-H yields; Officials drop terms offensive to some Indians" by Jon Ward, The Washington Times, June 28, 2002
  54. ^ Radhakrishna, Rama B.; Sinasky, Megan (December 2005). "4-H Experiences Contributing to Leadership and Personal Development of 4-H Alumni". The Journal of Extension. 43 (6). Retrieved 28 March 2012.; of 1,254 members in Penn State alumni database, 289 were sampled for a survey and 168 provided useful data; 99% of these said they received some benefit from their participation
  55. ^ https://mweditions.com/books/the-unchosen-ones-portraits-of-an-american-pastoral/

Bibliography edit

  • Buck, Holly (2004). "'Amusements and Recreations... Makes Our Working Hours Profitable': Utah 4- H, 1940-1960". Utah Historical Quarterly. 72 (1): 69–84. doi:10.1093/whq/35.3.409.
  • Holt, Marilyn Irvin (1992). "From Better Babies to 4-H: A Look at Rural America". Prologue: The Journal of the National Archives. 24 (3): 245–255.
  • Holt, Marilyn Irvin. Linoleum, Better Babies, and the Modern Farm Woman, 1890-1930 (U of New Mexico Press, 1995).
  • Keathley, Clarence R; Ham, Donna M. (1979). "4-H Club Work in Missouri". Missouri Historical Review. 51 (1): 209–220.
  • Kern, R. J. and Alison Nordström. The Unchosen Ones: Portraits of an American Pastoral (MW Editions, 2021).
  • Rosenberg, Gabriel N. The 4-H Harvest: Sexuality and the State in Rural America (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015)
  • Thompson, Ellen Natasha. " The Changing Needs of Our Youth Today: The Response of 4-H to Social and Economic Transformations in Twentieth-century North Carolina." (PhD Diss. University of North Carolina at Greensboro, 2012).
  • Wessel, Thomas R. and Marilyn Wessel. 4-H: An American Idea, 1900-1980: A History of 4-H (Chevy Chase, MD: 4-H National Council, 1982).

External links edit

  • 4-H Website Official website
  • Index of National 4-H Hall of Fame
  • 4-H Canada

redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, based, network, youth, organizations, whose, mission, engaging, youth, reach, their, fullest, potential, while, advancing, field, youth, development, name, reference, occurrence, initial, letter, four, times, organ. 4H redirects here For other uses see 4H disambiguation 4 H is a U S based network of youth organizations whose mission is engaging youth to reach their fullest potential while advancing the field of youth development 1 Its name is a reference to the occurrence of the initial letter H four times in the organization s original motto head heart hands and health which was later incorporated into the fuller pledge officially adopted in 1927 In the United States the organization is administered by the National Institute of Food and Agriculture of the United States Department of Agriculture USDA 4 H Canada is an independent non profit organization overseeing the operation of branches throughout Canada 2 There are 4 H organizations in over 50 countries 3 the organization and administration varies from country to country 4 HOfficial 4 H emblemFormation1912 1914TypeYouth organizationLegal statusFederal governmental program administered through Land grant university system in each state and territoryPurpose Engaging youth to reach their fullest potential while advancing the field of youth development HeadquartersWashington DC offices in Kansas City MO Region servedUnited States affiliated programs worldwide Membership6 5 million members in the United States ages 5 to 21Director Division of Youth amp 4 HShannon HorrilloMain organNational Institute of Food and Agriculture NIFA Parent organizationUnited States Department of Agriculture USDA AffiliationsLand grant university system National 4 H CouncilWebsite4 H org4 HStandard uniform colors for the 4 H Scouting portalThe goal of 4 H is to develop citizenship leadership responsibility and life skills of youth through experiential learning programs and a positive youth development approach Though typically thought of as an agriculturally focused organization as a result of its history 4 H today focuses on citizenship healthy living science engineering and technology programs Clubs in today s 4 H world consist of a wide range of options each allowing for personal growth and career success The 4 H motto is To make the best better while its slogan is Learn by doing sometimes written as Learn to do by doing As of 2016 the organization had nearly 6 million active participants and more than 25 million alumni 4 Contents 1 History 2 Pledge 3 Emblem 4 Youth development research 5 Volunteers 6 Additional programs 6 1 After school 6 2 Camping 6 3 Five to eight year old youth 6 4 Collegiate 6 5 All Stars 7 Conferences 8 Controversy 8 1 Native Americans 9 Alumni 10 See also 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 External linksHistory edit nbsp 4 H boys showing prize heifers at a 4 H Fair in Charleston West Virginia 1921 nbsp 4 H Home demonstration agents in Florida in 1933 nbsp 4 H Club member storing food she canned from her garden Rockbridge County Virginia ca 1942The foundations of 4 H began in 1902 with the work of several people in different parts of the United States The focal point of 4 H has been the idea of practical and hands on learning which came from the desire to make public school education more connected to rural life Early programs incorporated both public and private resources 4 H was founded with the purpose of instructing rural youth in improved farming and farm homemaking practices By the 1970s it was broadening its goals to cover a full range of youth including minorities and a wide range of life experiences 5 nbsp A brochure for the 4 H Forestry ProgramDuring this time researchers at experiment stations of the land grant universities and USDA saw that adults in the farming community did not readily accept new agricultural discoveries However educators found that youth would experiment with these new ideas and then share their experiences and successes with the adults As a result rural youth programs became a way to introduce new agriculture technology to the adults Club work began wherever a public spirited person did something to give rural children respect for themselves and their ways of life and it is very difficult to credit one sole individual 6 Instances of work with rural boys and girls can be found all throughout the 19th century In the spring of 1882 Delaware College announced a statewide corn contest for boys in which each boy was to plant a quarter of an acre according to instructions sent out from the college and cash prizes certificates and subscriptions to the American Agriculturalist were rewarded 7 In 1892 in an effort to improve the Kewaunee County Fair Ransom Asa Moore the president of the Kewaunee Fair the Agricultural Society and Superintendent of the Kewaunee County Schools in Wisconsin organized a youth movement which he called Young People s Contest Clubs in which he solicited the support of 6 000 young farm folks to produce and exhibit fruits vegetables and livestock 8 The fairs were quite successful 9 In 1904 while working for the University of Wisconsin Madison and trying to repeat what he had accomplished in Kewaunee County over a decade before but with different intentions Daddy R A Moore convinced R H Burns then Superintendent of Schools of Richland County Wisconsin to have the Richland County Boys and Girls organize and assist in a corn project activity to help market and distribute improved seeds to the farmers in the state of Wisconsin and beyond 9 A B Graham began one of the youth programs in Clark County Ohio in 1902 which is also considered one of the births of the 4 H program in the United States The first club was called The Tomato Club or the Corn Growing Club T A Dad Erickson of Douglas County Minnesota started local agricultural after school clubs and fairs also in 1902 Jessie Field Shambaugh developed the clover pin with an H on each leaf in 1910 and by 1912 they were called 4 H clubs 10 Early 4 H programs in Colorado began with youth instruction offered by college agricultural agents as early as 1910 as part of the outreach mission of the Colorado land grant institutions 11 The national 4 H organization was formed in 1914 when the United States Congress created the Cooperative Extension Service of the USDA by passage of the Smith Lever Act of 1914 it included within the CES charter the work of various boys and girls clubs involved with agriculture home economics and related subjects 12 The Smith Lever Act formalized the 4 H programs and clubs that began in the midwestern region of the United States Although different activities were emphasized for boys and girls 4 H was one of the first youth organizations to give equal attention to both genders cf erstwhile Boys Clubs of America 13 The first appearance of the term 4 H Club in a federal document was in Organization and Results of Boys and Girls Club Work by Oscar Herman Benson 1875 1951 and Gertrude L Warren in 1920 14 15 By 1924 the clubs were organized as 4 H clubs and the clover emblem was adopted 16 Warren expanded the scope of girls activities under the program promoting garment making room decorating and hot lunches and wrote extensive training materials 17 14 The first 4 H camp was held in Randolph County West Virginia Originally these camps were for what was referred to as Corn Clubs Campers slept in corn fields in tents only to wake up and work almost the entirety of each day Superintendent of Schools G C Adams began a boys corn club in Newton County Georgia in 1904 citation needed 4 H membership hit an all time high in 1974 as a result of its popular educational program about nutrition Mulligan Stew shown in schools and on television across the country Today 4 H clubs and activities are no longer focused primarily on agricultural activities instead emphasizing personal growth and preparation for lifelong learning Participation is greatest during the elementary school years with enrollment in programs and activities peaking in the 4th grade citation needed In the southern United States during the mid 1960s 4 H began to broaden its programming to cover life experiences unrelated to agriculture It merged its segregated African American and white programs but full fledged integration proved elusive 4 H was successful in removing gender based restrictions on participation 18 The organization is funded by the USDA and by state and local governments 19 The National 4 H Council s programs are also supported by a number of corporations including Google Verizon Microsoft Land O Lakes Inc and Tractor Supply Co 20 21 Past Honorary Chairmen of Council have included U S Presidents Calvin Coolidge Herbert Hoover Franklin D Roosevelt Harry Truman Dwight Eisenhower John F Kennedy Lyndon B Johnson Richard Nixon Jimmy Carter Ronald Reagan George H W Bush and Bill Clinton 22 23 nbsp A newspaper clipping of 4 H club members attending a convention in Georgia 1950Pledge editThe 4 H pledge is I pledge my head to clearer thinking my heart to greater loyalty my hands to larger service and my health to better living for my club my community my country and my world 24 Otis E Hall wrote the original pledge of Kansas in 1918 Some California 4 H clubs add either As a true 4 H member or As a loyal 4 H member at the beginning of the pledge Minnesota and Maine 4 H clubs add for my family to the last line of the pledge 25 Initially the pledge ended in and my country but in 1973 and my world was added It is a common practice to involve hand motions to accompany these spoken words While reciting the first line of the pledge the speaker points to their head with both of their hands As the speaker recites the second line they place their right hand over their heart much like during the Pledge of Allegiance For the third line the speaker presents their hands palm side up before them For the fourth line the speaker motions to their body down their sides For the final line the speaker usually places their right hand out for the club left hand for the community brings them together for the country and then brings their hands upwards in a circle representing the world Emblem edit nbsp 4 H emblem in Oldham County in Vega west of Amarillo TexasThe official 4 H emblem is a green four leaf clover with a white H on each leaf standing for Head Heart Hands and Health The stem of the clover always points to the right The idea of using the four leaf clover as an emblem for the 4 H program is credited to Oscar Herman Benson 1875 1951 of Wright County Iowa He awarded three leaf and four leaf clover pennants and pins for students agricultural and domestic science exhibits at school fairs 26 The 4 H name and emblem had U S federal protection previous under federal code 18 U S C 707 27 The federal protection made it a mark unto and of itself with protection that supersedes the limited authorities of both a trademark and a copyright The Secretary of Agriculture is given responsibility and stewardship for the 4 H name and emblem at the direct request of the U S Congress These protections placed the 4 H emblem in a unique category of protected emblems also along with the U S Presidential Seal Red Cross Smokey Bear and the Olympic rings 28 Protections for the 4 H emblem were repealed by Title XI of the Consolidated Appropriations Act 2021 29 Youth development research editThrough the program s tie to land grant institutions of higher education 4 H academic staff are responsible for advancing the field of youth development 1 Professional academic staff are committed to innovation the creation of new knowledge and the dissemination of new forms of program practice and research on topics like University of California s study of thriving in young people Youth development research is undertaken in a variety of forms including program evaluation applied research and introduction of new programs Volunteers editOver 540 000 volunteer leaders help to coordinate the 4 H program at the county level Volunteers plan and conduct 4 H related activities develop and maintain educational programs or assist in fundraising Activities include youth development programs project groups camps conferences or animal shows The volunteers goal is to help youth achieve greater self confidence and self responsibility learn new skills and build relationships 30 Volunteers are directed by 4 H s professional staff The National 4 H Hall of Fame honors 4 H volunteers extension professionals and staff employees donors and others according to a criterion of significant impact on the 4 H program and or 4 H members through the contribution of time energy financial resources etc 31 The hall of fame was established in 2002 by the National Association of Extension 4 H Youth Development Professionals NAE4 HYDP 32 Additional programs editAfter school edit nbsp A girl presenting her rabbit at the Calaveras County Fair in California 20164 H Afterschool helps 4 H and other youth serving organizations create and improve programs for students in communities across the U S 4 H Afterschool is an extension enhanced program that Offers youth a safe healthy caring and enriching environment Engages youth in long term structured learning in partnership with adults Addresses the interests of youth and their physical cognitive social and emotional needs 4 H Afterschool programs utilize experimental and cooperative learning activities and provide interaction with competent adults Results of retrospective pre post surveys indicate that children enrolled in the program showed life skill gain over time and that gains on specific life skills differed as a function of age gender and ethnicity The life skills gained through 4 H Afterschool give children the tools they need for perceiving and responding to diverse life situations and achieving their personal goals Participation in these quality programs which use experiential and cooperative learning have all been found to contribute to children s social development and academic success 33 Camping edit nbsp Debbie McDonald who was the West Virginia state 4 H Leader at the time poses with the newly relocated Camp Good Luck marker July 8 2015 Each state runs its own camping program The world s first 4 H camp was held in July 1915 on the Crouch family farm along the Tygart Valley River near Elkwater West Virginia The youth in attendance named the location Camp Good Luck 34 The first state 4 H camp was held at Jackson s Mill outside of Weston West Virginia 4 H camping programs in most states are run through land grant institutions such as Washington State University which runs the Washington program and Pennsylvania State University runs Pennsylvania s The Georgia 4 H camping program has the largest youth center in the world called Rock Eagle On July 8 2015 to mark the centennial of 4 H camping youth from Randolph County West Virginia traveled back to the original Camp Good Luck site for a special commemoration and campfire program A stone marker honoring Camp Good Luck had been placed adjacent to US 219 near the site but was moved to a spot off of Bell Crouch Rd for greater safety and accessibility through the efforts of Randolph County 4 H volunteers and the West Virginia Division of Highways Five to eight year old youth edit Some states offer programs for youth in grades K 2 called Cloverbuds Cloverkids 4 H Adventurers Primary Members or Mini 4 H Some states prohibit this age group from competition due to research in child development demonstrating that competition is unhealthy for youth ages five to eight 35 Collegiate edit nbsp National Collegiate 4 H club emblemMany colleges and universities have collegiate 4 H clubs Usually members are students who are 4 H alumni and want to continue a connection to 4 H but any interested students are welcome Clubs provide service and support to their local and state 4 H programs such as serving as judges and conducting training workshops They are also a service and social group for campus students The very first collegiate 4 H club started in 1916 on the Oklahoma State University Stillwater campus All Stars edit Finding its roots in the early 4 H movement in West Virginia the 4 H All Star program strives to recognize and challenge 4 H members and volunteers State 4 H Club Leader William H Teepi Kendrick sought to develop youth to be yourself at your best and to make the best better through a fourfold personal development pattern involving the head hands heart and at that time hustle It was with this philosophy in collaboration with others that the 4 H emblem was born In an attempt to harbor further individual growth Kendrick recognized excellence with pins bearing one two three and four H s Recognition for outstanding participation was rewarded from 1917 to 1921 with trips to a Prize Winner s Course at West Virginia University Members who demonstrated outstanding qualities at these courses were awarded five pointed red pins with five H s with this additional H to symbolize honor The recipients of these pins were referred to by Kendrick as All Stars It was following the pin consecration ceremony in 1919 that the official West Virginia 4 H All Stars organization was chartered becoming the Alpha Chapter of the nationwide 4 H honorary 36 The symbol of the All Stars is a red star enveloping a gemstone chip over the 4 H emblem Each point of the star represents a pillar of character Beauty Fortitude Service Truth and Love 37 Many states have All Star programs although All Star programs vary from state to state Selection as a 4 H All Star is a recognition of achievement In California for example it is the highest achievement award at the county level and is a position awarded annually 38 Similarly the capstone award in Texas 4 H is the Gold Star Award which is given to Seniors who have shown outstanding leadership and proficiency in their project areas 39 In Virginia on the other hand All Stars are not simply those who have achieved an All Star award but are those who have gained membership into the Virginia All Stars organization After reaching the age of 15 4 H members are eligible to apply for membership into the All Stars organization which promotes the continuation of 4 H principles 40 Conferences editThis section about the organization s conferences relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this section about the organization s conferences by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources 4 H news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp National 4 H Youth Conference Center in Chevy Chase MarylandMany conferences are held at various levels of the 4 H program for youth and adults The National 4 H Conference which was held at the National 4 H Youth Conference Center in Chevy Chase Maryland until it was sold in 2021 is the USDA Secretary s premier youth development opportunity to engage youth in developing recommendations for the 4 H Youth Development Program The Conference still meets annually in and around Washington DC The 2024 National 4 H Conference will be held in Arlington VA 41 The National 4 H Congress is an annual educational conference that brings together 4 H delegates between the ages of 14 and 19 from across America to share cultural experiences and discuss important issues facing youth This five day event is typically held during the weekend of Thanksgiving and has been hosted in Atlanta since 1998 Throughout the conference 4 H delegates attend numerous workshops participate in community service activities and listen to speakers in an effort to develop compassion and increase social awareness 42 43 Citizenship Washington Focus is a week long conference offered for high school aged students 44 At the conference students have the opportunity to learn how to be citizen leaders in their communities Throughout the week in Washington D C participants visit monuments meet with members of Congress and develop communication leadership and citizenship skills The following national conferences are held yearly and are focused on specific activities inside of 4 H National 4 H Dairy Conference 45 Eastern National 4 H Horse Roundup 46 Western National 4 H Horse Roundup 47 National 4 H Shooting Sports Invitational Match 48 National 4 H True Leaders in Equity Institute 49 National 4 H Youth Summit Series 50 STEM Summit Healthy Living Summit Agri science SummitOther conferences are held by regional and state entities for youth for volunteer development or for professional development for staff Controversy editNative Americans edit For many years use of Native American names and certain themed activities was part of the summer camping programs of some eastern states However the practice was considered to be offensive and protests were raised A complaint to the U S Department of Agriculture s Office of Civil Rights in 2002 and an ensuing investigation that threatened to cut off funds to the state s program 51 prompted the West Virginia University Extension Service to abandon offensive and stereotypic practices such as face painting and use of imagery not a part of the culture of local Native people such as tepees and totem poles 51 They also eliminated the practice of having children wear feather headdresses and stopped having campers engage in stereotypical motions and dances including chanting Ugh Ugh Ugh However the state program deemed the dividing of campers into groups called tribes named after actual Indian Nations to be respectful and acceptable 52 In the same year the Virginia Extension Service removed all references to symbols or camp traditions related to Native Americans including the decades long practice of dividing campers into tribes using names of nations considered native to Virginia replacing the group names with animal names 53 Alumni editSee also List of notable 4 H alumni Some 4 H alumni credit the program with helping them in later life 54 In 2021 Minnesota based photographer R J Kern along with writer Alison Nordstrom published The Unchosen Ones Portraits of an American Pastoral The book highlights portraits of dozens of youth who spent a year raising and training their animal and then entered into a 4 H livestock competition but were unsuccessful in winning the top award in their competitions then revisits the same youth four years later and asked the young subjects what they had carried forward from their previous experience 55 See also edit4 H Shooting Sports Programs Boy Scouts of America Girl Scouts of the USA International Four H Youth Exchange National Federation of Young Farmers Clubs National FFA Organization formerly Future Farmers of America References edit a b The California 4 H Youth Development Program Directions for the Decade Ahead PDF Winter 2003 Retrieved 7 June 2010 4 H Structure 4 H Canada Archived from the original on 15 May 2015 Retrieved 8 May 2015 4 H Around the World 4 H USA Retrieved 8 May 2015 National 4 H Council 2016 Annual Report PDF 4 H p 4 Retrieved 17 March 2022 Rosenberg 2015 The Father of Wisconsin 4 H The Ransom Asa Moore Story Author Gleason Marjorie and William Publication 1989 Accurate Publishing amp Printing Inc pg 9 The Father of Wisconsin 4 H The Ransom Asa Moore Story Author Gleason Marjorie and William Publication 1989 Accurate Publishing amp Printing Inc pg 10 Kewaunee Enterprise February 26 1941 Death Takes Prof Moore a b The Father of Wisconsin 4 H The Ransom Asa Moore Story Author Gleason Marjorie and William Publication 1989 Accurate Publishing amp Printing Inc Longden Tom Famous Iowans Jessie Field Shambaugh Des Moines Register Rettig Patricia Guide to the Records of the Colorado 4 H lib2 colostate edu Compilation of early correspondence and publications related to Boys and Girls Club Work produced by the United States Department of Agriculture National Agricultural Library Digital Repository Archived from the original on 14 June 2010 Retrieved 7 June 2010 Journal of Research in Childhood Education Cooperative and Competitive Orientations in 4 H and Non 4 H Children Retrieved 28 March 2012 a b Reck Franklin A 1951 The 4 H Story A History of 4 H Club Work PDF Chicago IL National 4 H Service Committee pp 166 168 210 OCLC 950057521 Benson Oscar Herman Warren Gertrude L February 1920 Organization and Results of Boys and Girls Club Work Northern and Western States 1918 Washington DC U S Department of Agriculture Retrieved 21 August 2018 4 H Detailed History College of Agriculture and Life Sciences University of Arizona Archived from the original on 19 June 2010 Retrieved 7 June 2010 Folks Who Helped Make 4 H Great Gertrude Warren National 4 H History Preservation Program 8 March 2016 Retrieved 8 August 2018 Thompson The Changing Needs of Our Youth Today 2012 How 4 H is Implemented National Institute of Food and Agriculture nifa usda gov Retrieved 26 January 2022 Major Derek 26 May 2021 National 4 H Council Teams With Verizon Micorsoft Digital Skills Black Enterprise Retrieved 26 January 2022 Rogers James 12 June 2019 Google makes 6 million grant to bring computer science education to underserved youth Fox News Retrieved 26 January 2022 U S Presidents and 4 H 4 H History Preservation Retrieved 1 feb 2017 U S Presidents As Honorary Chairmen 4 H History Preservation Retrieved 1 feb 2017 4 h Pledge 4 H Retrieved 6 November 2018 https extension umn edu 4 h member resources 4 h pledge Elsie Carper Collection on Extension Service Home Economics and 4 H National Agricultural Library Archived from the original on 14 April 2010 Retrieved 7 June 2010 U S House of Representatives 18 USC Sec 707 4 H club emblem fraudulently used Office of the Law Revision Counsel Archived from the original on 3 March 2012 Retrieved 7 June 2010 Using the 4 H Name and Emblem PDF Archived from the original PDF on 28 May 2010 Retrieved 7 June 2010 Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 116 260 text PDF 134 Stat 2155 Relationships Between 4 H Volunteer Leader Competencies and Skills Youth Learn in 4 H Programs The Journal of Extension Retrieved 28 March 2012 4 H Hall of Fame Welcome www 4 h hof com National Association of Extension 4 H Youth Development Professionals Child Study Journal Building Life Skills through Afterschool Participation in Experimental and Cooperative Learning Archived from the original on 18 October 2015 Retrieved 28 March 2012 Betler Bruce Camp Good Luck West Virginia Encyclopedia West Virginia Humanities Council Retrieved 20 March 2017 Programming Parameters for 5 to 8 Year Old Children in 4 H The Journal of Extension Retrieved 7 June 2010 West Virginia 4 H All Star History West Virginia 4 H All Star Website Archived from the original on 24 June 2009 Retrieved 7 June 2010 Extension Service 4 H All Stars extension wvu edu Retrieved 14 February 2021 4 H All Star California University of California 4 H Youth Development Program Archived from the original on 20 June 2009 Retrieved 7 June 2010 Texas Gold Star Award Application PDF Archived from the original PDF on 25 March 2009 Retrieved 7 June 2010 Virginia 4 H All Star Brochure Archived 2007 02 07 at the Wayback Machine by the Virginia Cooperative Extension https 4 h org events national 4 h conference 4 H National Headquarters 4 H Conference and Congress National4 hheadquarters gov 22 July 2009 Archived from the original on 7 June 2010 Retrieved 7 June 2010 About National 4 H Congress National 4 H Congress Archived from the original on 14 July 2011 Retrieved 7 June 2010 Citizenship Washington Focus 4 H National 4 H Dairy Conference Wisconsin 4 H Youth Development Archived from the original on 10 October 2011 Retrieved 1 March 2012 Eastern National 4 H Horse Roundup Eastern National 4 H Roundup Retrieved 1 March 2012 Western National 4 H Horse Roundup Western National 4 H Roundup Retrieved 1 March 2012 National 4 H Shooting Sports Invitational Match Results 4 H Shooting Sports Archived from the original on 20 March 2012 Retrieved 1 March 2012 True Leaders in Equity 4 H Retrieved 27 March 2022 National Youth Summit Series 4 H Retrieved 14 February 2021 a b Washington The 25 June 2002 Administration probes 4 H Indian themes Washington Times June 25 2002 Washingtontimes com Retrieved 28 November 2013 West Virginia 4 H clubs abandoning offensive Indian practices but will keep tribal names Bismarck Tribune December 17 2002 Virginia 4 H yields Officials drop terms offensive to some Indians by Jon Ward The Washington Times June 28 2002 Radhakrishna Rama B Sinasky Megan December 2005 4 H Experiences Contributing to Leadership and Personal Development of 4 H Alumni The Journal of Extension 43 6 Retrieved 28 March 2012 of 1 254 members in Penn State alumni database 289 were sampled for a survey and 168 provided useful data 99 of these said they received some benefit from their participation https mweditions com books the unchosen ones portraits of an american pastoral Bibliography editBuck Holly 2004 Amusements and Recreations Makes Our Working Hours Profitable Utah 4 H 1940 1960 Utah Historical Quarterly 72 1 69 84 doi 10 1093 whq 35 3 409 Holt Marilyn Irvin 1992 From Better Babies to 4 H A Look at Rural America Prologue The Journal of the National Archives 24 3 245 255 Holt Marilyn Irvin Linoleum Better Babies and the Modern Farm Woman 1890 1930 U of New Mexico Press 1995 Keathley Clarence R Ham Donna M 1979 4 H Club Work in Missouri Missouri Historical Review 51 1 209 220 Kern R J and Alison Nordstrom The Unchosen Ones Portraits of an American Pastoral MW Editions 2021 Rosenberg Gabriel N The 4 H Harvest Sexuality and the State in Rural America University of Pennsylvania Press 2015 Thompson Ellen Natasha The Changing Needs of Our Youth Today The Response of 4 H to Social and Economic Transformations in Twentieth century North Carolina PhD Diss University of North Carolina at Greensboro 2012 online Wessel Thomas R and Marilyn Wessel 4 H An American Idea 1900 1980 A History of 4 H Chevy Chase MD 4 H National Council 1982 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to 4 H 4 H Website Official website Index of National 4 H Hall of Fame 4 H Canada Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 4 H amp oldid 1187570178, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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