Olympia FFA Recognizes National FFA Week

Send a link to a friend  Share

[March 07, 2024]     Olympia High School celebrated National FFA Week from February 19-23.

Olympia High School celebrated National FFA Week from February 19-23.

FFA members participated in various activities throughout the week including dress up days, drive your tractor to school day, bring anything but a backpack to school, the truck competition, kiss a pig, multiple assemblies, and relays.

Senior, Chase Litwiller, took the prize for the straw bale tossing competition. There was a great turn out with 16 tractors driven to school on Tuesday morning.

Our FFA Officers spent Wednesday morning cooking and serving a home cooked breakfast to FFA members and staff at OHS.

At Tuesday’s assembly, Kamryn Rader shared ‘The FFA Creed’ with the student body.

At another all school assembly, FFA Chapter president and Illinois State Scholar Logan Demling delivered a great speech about the value of FFA as youth enter the real world of adulthood and adult decisions and responsibilities.

We had a fun-filled week of activities and sharing our love for FFA with our school.
 

FFA members serve a homemade breakfast for FFA members and staff!

FFA members enjoy the free breakfast.

These students won their respective divisions of our truck competition.

Olympia FFA members drove their tractors to school during FFA Week.

Olympia FFA members celebrated FFA Week with an all school assembly on Friday.

[to top of second column]

FFA Speech
What Is FFA All About?
By Logan Demling

When most students think of FFA they think of farmers because it’s honestly hard not to, Especially at Olympia [High School], where the majority of FFA members are farm or country kids.

But the truth is, FFA is so much more than just farming. Anyone who has taken Intro to Ag with Mr. Hoffman knows that he starts the class with the three circles of agricultural education.

For anyone who hasn’t taken the class or needs a refresher, the three circles are a Venn diagram of classroom instruction, a supervised agricultural experience, and leadership.

For me personally, the experiences that I’ve gained through FFA are worth far more than the classroom education itself. I’ve heard time and time again from many of you in the bleachers that school doesn’t prepare us for real life. That is something that I’ve never heard in FFA.

Personally, I’ve learned public speaking skills, interview skills, gained a better understanding of finances, and how to build things with my hands, along with generally becoming more social. The list could go on and on about millions of other small things that I’ve picked up along the way, but I can summarize them by saying that FFA gives you experience and knowledge as a high school student you won’t get anywhere else.

Within four years, all of us will be in the real world. We aren't going to have parents paying our bills, scheduling [our] appointments, or fixing a flat tire. It’s going to be on us to solve these problems ourselves.

This is the reason that I love FFA. Even if you brush aside the classroom education, it prepares you for real life in millions of tiny ways you don’t even realize. Now, I know that there may be some FFA members in the stands that think I’m crazy right now, thinking that I’m just saying this and FFA isn’t all that awesome.

Well, my answer to you is that you get out of it the work you put in. Get more involved, try some career development events.

I want to encourage everyone who has ever felt underprepared, worried, or curious about real life to join FFA. The experience that you gain is completely worth your time. And this isn’t only to the freshman out there. Sophomores, juniors, it’s not too late to join. I know it can sometimes feel weird to be in class with underclassman, but I promise that it will be totally worth it in the long run.

Joining FFA and becoming involved was the smartest decision I ever made in high school, and I hope that you make that choice too.

[Bryce Hoffman]

 

Back to top