Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station, University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture
Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences
A newsletter for faculty, staff and students
.
March-April 2006 • Vol. 32, No. 2

Table of Contents

WHO, WHAT,
WHEN, WHERE

Notables
Grants
Articles Published
New Publications
New Projects

COMING EVENTS

HEADLINES
Honors Convocation is April 20
2006 Outstanding Alumnus
Outstanding seniors and grad students

Organic garden plots available at AAREC
First Web-based degree program well received
300 attend 2nd Women in Agriculture Conference
Dr. C.E. Caviness — 1923-2006
Marie Lavallard — 1912-2006
GSD Initiation and Awards Banquet April 13
GSD Student Research Competition winners
Association supports Poultry Science recruiting
Fultons endow Animal Science award
Animal Science awards
Horse Festival
BAEG shares in environmental design award
Food Science team wins College Bowl regional
Students develop new food products
HESC Student Awards
Division helps host Ozark Food Processors
OFPA presents scholarships

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Vision Archive Index

All About Advising
Monthly newsletter index

UA Agri LInks

Division of Agriculture
University of Arkansas
Dale Bumpers College of
xxxAgricultural, Food and
xxxLife Sciences
Arkansas Agricultural
xxxExperiment Station
Cooperative Extension
xxxService
Alumni and Development
Future Students
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Vision Credits
Vision is published six times a year by the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station in the U of A System's Division of Agriculture and by the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences. It is produced by the Communication Services unit of the Department of Agricultural and Extension Education, 110 Agriculture Building, U of A, Fayetteville, AR 72701. 479-575-5647.

• Editor: Howell Medders, (hmedders@uark.edu).
• Web manager: David Edmark (dedmark@uark.edu).
• Writers and photographers: Fred Miller and Karen Eskew
• Editorial Assistant: Amalie Holland
• Broadcast e-mail support: Arkansas Alumni Association

E-mail items for publication in Vision to ahollan@uark.edu

300 attend 2nd Women in Agriculture Conference
By Fred Miller

Some 300 women attended the second Arkansas Women in Agriculture Conference in Hot Springs in March. Leadership was the central theme of the conference, which was hosted by the University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture, said Jennie Popp, associate professor of agricultural economics.

 
Tracy Boswell, from left, and Vivian Alford, both of Lewisville, and Vivian Pope of Mineral Springs discuss positioning and partnering for leadership in an exercise conducted during a session on leadership at the Arkansas Women in Agriculture Conference, hosted by the University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture March 6-7 in Hot Springs.  

“We’re seeing a number of things that are thrusting women into leadership roles in agriculture,” Popp said. “Women are inheriting farmland or, in many cases, choices are being made on the farm for women to take on leadership roles.

“Women increasingly find themselves in positions of making more important decisions about buying or selling land and equipment, or making other business decisions,” Popp said.

“In Arkansas, more than 19,000 women are farm operators, and nearly 5,000 are principal operators,” Popp said.

The market value of agricultural products sold from Arkansas farms operated principally by women amounted to more than $390 million, according to the USDA 2002 Census of Agriculture.

The Arkansas Women in Agriculture Conference was begun last year to help women develop the leadership skills they need to maintain a farming operation, Popp said.

“Men and women learn differently,” Popp said. “Group learning is more appealing to women than to men. Women prefer working together, asking and answering questions in a discussion format, whereas men are more independent, even at a conference. We developed this conference in a way that compliments women’s learning styles. Women were asked to stand up, step out and lead, together.”

The Conference sessions covered a range of topics from estate planning, agricultural loans and marketing to gardening, working with cooperatives and water quality issues.

Based on conference evaluations, the opening session, “Stand Up! Step Out! Lead!” by Jolene Brown, a farmer and professional speaker from Iowa, was the standout favorite session,” Popp said. Other favorite sessions included those dealing with estate planning, financial management and future farm bill issues.

 
   Jolene Brown, a farmer and professional speaker from Iowa, leads a session titled “Stand Up! Step Up! Lead!” during the Arkansas Women in Agriculture Conference, hosted by the University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture March 6-7 in Hot Springs. About 300 participants gathered in search of information and skills needed as women take on changing roles in agriculture.

One participant wrote in her evaluation, “I am newly in charge of my farm and now I have some confidence that I can successfully lead my operation.”

“Women are increasingly interested in learning the skills they need to make them more effective in their new roles of leadership in Arkansas agriculture,” Popp said. “That’s the goal of this conference.”

Popp and colleague Janie Hipp, assistant professor and natural resources regulatory policy specialist, received a grant of $20,000 from the Women’s Giving Circle to help organize the first Arkansas Women in Agriculture Conference in 2005.

 



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