
College Establishes Latino Ag Resource Center

Isabel Hanson, coordinator of the Latino Agricultural Resource Center,
discusses Spanish-language programming
with graduate student Edly Santiago Andino. |
|
Responding to the growth
of the Hispanic population in the United States and its growing involvement
in agriculture, the College of Agricultural Sciences has established
a Latino Agricultural Resource Center. The center will be a focal point
for existing initiatives that serve Latino audiences, as well as for planned
new programs.
“There are few
focused efforts like this in the United States,” says
Deanna Behring, the college’s
director of international programs. “Hispanics are the largest
and fastest-growing minority group in the country, and that creates a
need
for more coordinated and
comprehensive educational programming.”
To illustrate the need, Behring
cites federal census statistics:
- Over the past 10 years, the Hispanic
population in Pennsylvania has grown by 70 percent.
- Between 1997 and
2002, the number of Hispanic-run farming operations in the United States
rose by 51 percent, to a total of more than 50,000.
- During the
same time frame, the number of Pennsylvania farms owned and operated
by Hispanics
grew by 27 percent, to 350.
- Mexico now is the third largest market (behind only Canada and Japan)
for U.S. agricultural exports, accounting for $8.6 billion in sales.
- Forty-three
percent of U.S. horticultural imports come from Mexico and Latin America.
The Latino Agricultural
Resource Center will coordinate several key activities:
Development of
Spanish
language instruction and materials.
The college already partners
with Penn State’s College of Liberal Arts to offer Spanish
for Students in Agricultural Sciences. Plans call for other specialized
Spanish courses
covering specific segments of agriculture, as well as courses to be offered
through distance education
and other nontraditional methods. “These courses can give our students
a competitive edge when seeking jobs in agricultural industries,” says
Behring.
In addition, educational
programs will be designed for Penn State Cooperative Extension county-based
educators and their clientele. “The Hispanic workforce has become
vital for the survival of some agricultural sectors, and managers need
to be able to bridge language and cultural barriers to maintain employee
morale and productivity,” explains Daney Jackson,
director of Penn State Cooperative Extension.
Translation of educational
materials.
The center will be a clearinghouse for fee-based translation of publications
and other materials for Hispanic audiences. The goal is to provide faculty
and staff with
consistency
in quality, cost, and distribution of Spanish-language materials and
to avoid duplication of effort.
Data collection and
analysis.
The center will collect, analyze, and maintain data on domestic
and international
issues related to the growth of Latinos in agriculture. This information
will be useful to Penn State faculty and extension educators in seeking
grants and planning programs.
The Latino Agricultural
Resource Center will be administered by the college’s Office of
International Programs. To learn more, call (814) 863-0249, e-mail aginternational@psu.edu,
or visit the office’s
Web site. —Chuck Gill |