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National 4-H Week In Florida Highlights
Celebration And Service By America's Largest Youth Organization
By: Ami Neiberger-Miller
(703)421-1472
aneiberger@mail.ifas.ufl.edu
Source: Marilyn Norman
(863)206-1654
mnnorman@mail.ifas.ufl.edu
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
October 8, 2002
GAINESVILLE, Fla.---4-H is 100 years old, and it's
time for America's largest youth organization to have a party. The
yearlong celebration of 4-H's centennial continues during National 4-H
Week (October 6-12, 2002), with proclamations, parties and community
service.
Active throughout Florida in both rural and urban
areas, 4-H involves more than 287,000 young people ages 5-18 annually.
Organized by the University of Florida's Cooperative Extension Service,
4-H has focused on positive youth development using a hands-on learning
philosophy for a century. There are 6.7 million members nationally.
Jacksonville's City Council will proclaim National
4-H Week Oct. 8. Downtown Lake Placid in Highlands County will host a 4-H
birthday party Oct. 12 for the public, complete with clowns, a bicycle
safety rodeo, and of course, a huge birthday cake. Displays about 4-H will
dot the Lakeland area with green and white.
Libraries in Seminole County will distribute 3,000
bookmarks made by the Teens in Action 4-H Club during National 4-H Week.
The Royal Ride 4-H Club will host story time at the Jay library in Santa
Rosa County on Friday this week. The projects tie into the statewide Tales
From Teens: a 4-H Literacy Initiative, a youth-led effort to improve
literacy in Florida.
Throughout Santa Rosa County, Power of YOUth and
anti-violence pledges will be collected in area high schools by the 4-H
Teen Council. The PAIR-UP 4-H club, a ballet class for underprivileged
children, and the Growing Gardeners Project will host a parent expo on
Monday at the Milton Housing Project.
"4-H is marking its centennial by giving back
to communities through the Power of YOUth pledge campaign," said
Marilyn Norman, state 4-H leader at UF's Institute of Food and
Agricultural Sciences in Gainesville. She said that Floridians pledged
more than 54,560 hours in the national Power of YOUth pledge drive so far
this year. Pledges can be made online at www.4hcentennial.org.
<http://www.4hcentennial.org>
"We view giving back to the community as an
important part of youth development, which is represented in the 4-H
pledge when we say giving our "hands to larger service,'" said
Norman. She said that many 4-H clubs conduct service projects throughout
the year.
Originally founded to spread new agricultural
techniques to rural youth, 4-H has mushroomed in recent decades and
branched out beyond cows and cooking, organizers say.
Innovation, youth involvement, hands-on learning and
tailoring programs to meet local needs are at the heart of the 4-H youth
movement, Norman said. "We teach young people about the connections
between society and living things. We still offer agricultural programs,
and our animal science remains very popular, but we also have programs in
leadership development, service learning, public speaking, cooking,
seatbelt safety and financial management, just to name a few."
This week is also a time to mark history. In Osceola
County, county 4-H Council members will "sign the walls" in the
old agricultural center and thank the county commissioners for helping
build a new agricultural center. The council has met for decades in the
building, and the Osceola County Cooperative Extension Service is moving
to a new facility next week.
A luncheon in Marion County will thank 150-200
volunteers and donors for their support throughout the year. Supporters
also will be thanked in Bradford County, with visits from 4-H members
carrying baskets of cookies. In the panhandle, Holmes County 4-H will host
its awards program Oct. 8 at the agricultural center and Gadsden County
4-H will be featured in advertising in several area newspapers.
And of course, there are plenty of parties planned
for this week. In Palm Beach County, a 4-H centennial celebration with a
poster contest will be held at the Clayton Hutchinson Agricultural Center
Oct. 12. A centennial party and county 4-H Council officer installation
will happen in Arcadia for Desoto County 4-H.
For more information about Florida 4-H, visit www.florida4h.org.
<http://www.florida4h.org>
To volunteer with 4-H, call toll-free 1-888-4HCLUBS or contact your county
extension office.
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