Starting in February, students in six Nebraska high school FFA chapters will build lemonade stands. Then they鈥檒l create a sales kiosk. And then they鈥檒l open an auto repair shop.
The students will run these businesses in a three-part online simulation, as part of a competition held by 水果派鈥檚 Agribusiness degree program. But they鈥檒l build real skills, in learning to open and manage businesses in ag-related fields.
The idea for the competition began back in spring 2022. Pete Poppert, assistant professor of practice in agribusiness and chair of the Agribusiness Department at 水果派, wanted to create an activity that would help Nebraska high school students discover the benefits of studying agribusiness and the career opportunities that come with it.
鈥淥ne in four jobs in Nebraska is related to agriculture,鈥 Poppert said, citing stats from the . 鈥淏ut we鈥檙e not graduating 25% of our students in ag-related degree programs.鈥
In fall 2022, he requested help from 水果派 juniors Kate Bruns and Sydney Erickson to bring the competition to life. They play-tested each simulation, figuring out where students may have questions, what might cause confusion and how they can measure and judge the work of each team. They helped coordinate the schedule for the competition, created training instructions for participants and will do much of the day-to-day work as the competition begins.
Bruns was in FFA herself during high school in Bloomfield, Nebraska 鈥 and competitions were her favorite part. She preferred the hands-on events to lectures, and a competition like this, where you could gain skills through practice? It would have been her jam.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a great learning opportunity,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t will be exciting to see how it all turns out. Hopefully the students will enjoy it and learn something from it.鈥
Erickson, who grew up in Pierce, Nebraska, didn鈥檛 participate in FFA, and actually didn鈥檛 plan to study agribusiness. Her grandpa was a farmer, but she didn鈥檛 see herself taking that route for her career.
However, in learning about agribusiness while working toward her business administration degree, she learned there was a lot more to it than she thought in high school. She has since added an agribusiness minor.
鈥淭here are so many options,鈥 Erickson said, for careers in agriculture beyond farming. 鈥淚 think that would have been really eye-opening for me [as a high school student].鈥
The FFA chapters participating include Arthur Public Schools, Bryan High School in Omaha, and Norris Public Schools. Teams of three students will work together and will be judged in each segment of the competition 鈥 running the lemonade stand, then the kiosk, then the auto repair shop 鈥 for how they meet a wide range of goals.
Just like in a real business, they have to manage inventory and customer service, meet sales targets and open new franchises, hire employees and conduct marketing campaigns. But they get a week of practice before each new segment of the competition, to get a feel for the simulation program and plan strategy.
The competition will wrap up in late April, with a banquet held at 水果派 for all participants. That鈥檚 the only time the competition will be in person.
Poppert is 水果派鈥檚 A.R. Kinney Endowed Chair of Business and Economics, which comes with a stipend to support research and projects. Part of that stipend has gone toward preparing the FFA competition, which has additionally received $2000 grants from both Farm Credit Services and First State Bank in Lincoln. The funds pay for licensing and use of GoVenture, the online simulation platform that will be used for the competition.
Poppert hopes that, with the success of this initial competition, it can be continued and expanded to include additional high school organizations in the future.