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Teach Ag

Teaching Agriculture is a Great Lifestyle

Teaching agriculture allows you to share your passion for the industry with the next generation. You will be able to create hands-on lessons to explore topics in animal science, horticulture, mechanics, and many others. Clemson University is the best place to prepare you for a career in agricultural education. Majoring in agricultural education here allows you to experience a diverse curriculum, taking courses in plant science, agricultural mechanics, animal science, and education. In our agricultural education courses, you will have the opportunity to take the knowledge you receive from your other classes and learn exciting ways to teach that material to your future students. With a heavy emphasis on inquiry-based and laboratory instruction, agricultural education courses at Clemson University are highly interactive, and our extensive resources mean that your opportunities are endless. In addition to on-campus lectures and laboratories, you will travel, both in and out of state, to see secondary agricultural educators and their programs at work. School-based agricultural education (SBAE) observation opportunities may begin as early as you first semester. Here in Clemson’s agricultural education program, you are more than just a student in a classroom. The moment you join the program, you become part of tight-knit community with a high-level of interaction between students and faculty.

students learning about seed size

3 Stats on the importance of teaching agriculture in South Carolina

  • #1

    Agricultural educators are in high demand. The demand for agricultural education teacher in South Carolina continues to grow annually due to program growth, expansion, retirements and new middle and high school programs.

  • #2

    School districts in South Carolina value the agricultural education model of rigorous STEM based classroom and laboratory instruction, experiential learning, and leadership development.

  • #3

    Agricultural education teachers prepare students with the skills needed to move on to postsecondary education and become productive citizens to enter the workforce. South Carolina agriculture and forestry has an annual economic impact of $41.7 billion and supports 212, 000 careers in the state. Nationally, South Carolina is 2nd in peach, 5th in peanut, 6th in tobacco, 8th in pecan and 9th in tomato production.

Sponsors

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Department of Agricultural Sciences Agricultural Education
Department of Agricultural Sciences Agricultural Education | McAdams Hall #251