The award is granted to high-performing, early-career professionals who have had their terminal degree for less than seven years. The department’s faculty nominated Hendricks and he was selected based on his qualifications, presentation proposal and curriculum vitae sent in with his nomination.
Winners are invited to give an empirical or conceptual presentation in a symposia session at the SAEA annual meeting, which was Feb. 1-4 in Atlanta. Presentations address issues on the frontier of knowledge in either research, extension or instruction. Winners are then recognized at the SAEA business meeting, which is in conjunction with the annual meeting, and receive a $250 honorarium.
The Graduate Students in Agricultural Economics (GSAE) is an organization which promotes the academic, professional and social interests of all graduate students majoring in agricultural economics at Kansas State University.
Graduate student, Weldensie Teklay, explains his current research project during the Brown Bag Seminar on March 2.
The organization consists of more than 30 active members who meet once a month to discuss development opportunities, plan social events and establish professional relationships. In addition to monthly meetings, the GSAE hosts bi-weekly social events, monthly breakfast socials with the Agricultural Economics faculty and staff, and hosts Brown Bag seminars.
GSAE meets monthly for “breakfast club” meetings with the agricultural economics faculty and staff.
Annually, GSAE members compete in numerous professional competitions. This year there are two teams from GSAE competing in the International Food and Agribusiness Management Association’s (IFAMA) case study competition this June in Minneapolis. At the Applied and Agricultural Economics Association (AAEA) and Western Agricultural Economics Association (WAEA) joint conference in July in San Francisco, students will participate in the case study and extension competitions and present their research papers and posters. Throughout the year, the members present at other professional and K-State events such as the Risk and Profit Conference.
New assistant professor, Terry Griffin, discusses spatial econometrics at the March 2 GSAE Brown Bag Seminar.
GSAE strives to not only create a community among our graduate students but to also develop members’ ability to apply economic knowledge and skills to real world agricultural issues.
Please visit the NEW website to learn more about club events, research and awards. Follow GSAE on Facebook at /ksugsae.
The Kansas State University National Agri-Marketing Association (NAMA) Chapter is an organization dedicated to the professional development of its members. The club meets twice per month to discuss marketing tactics as well as help members prepare for their future careers. There is also a team that develops a marketing plan for a new agricultural product selected in the fall. The marketing plan is presented in the Student Marketing Competition at the national NAMA conference in April.
K-State NAMA develops marketing plans to aid businesses in the 17 poorest Kansas counties.
The club received a portion of the USDA Rural Development Grant called “Project 17”. This semester they made the main focus of the club to reach out to the 17 poorest counties in Kansas by helping different small businesses make effective marketing plans for their products. The club joined forces in this endeavor with the Pi Sigma Epsilon Marketing Club from the College of Business. While this is a great opportunity for the companies, it is also provides real-world marketing experience for KSU NAMA. Past experiences preparing and exhibiting in the NAMA Marketing Competition gave them a “leg up” as they strived to design effective marking plans for these companies.
K-State NAMA’s competition team researches at practice to prepare the 2015 marketing plan for SafeNut peanut butter, which is free of allergens.
This year’s NAMA competition was held April 14-16, the team was very busy getting their marketing plan ready. This year’s team made it to semi-finals in competition. The department’s faculty and staff are very proud of their efforts.
Please follow the club on Twitter @KansasStateNAMA and “Like” them on Facebook at K-State NAMA to keep up with all that they are doing!
K-State NAMA’s competition team prepares its SafeNut marketing plan for the April 14-16 conference.
The Agricultural Economics and Agribusiness Club’s current officers are Michael Porter, president; Nick Wineinger, vice president; Cody O’Brien, secretary; Shannon Maxwell, treasurer; Casey Thyer and Nathan Smart, membership co-chairs; Bryan Otott and Lucas Sudbeck, social co-chairs; and Ryan Goetzmann, Ag Council representative.
From April 30 – May 2, the club will take a spring trip to visit Gavilon and John Deere. These events encourage interaction with fellow students, department faculty and staff, and industry leaders.
Club officers socialize with faculty and staff at the April 1 bake sale.
Zamorano University, located just outside of Tegucigalpa, Honduras, is 2,500 miles from Kansas State University, equivalent to 47 hours by car or 11 hours by plane. For graduate interns Ricardo Auz, Ecuador; Lauren Benavidez, Nicaragua; and Paul Leiva, Honduras; the trip to Kansas has been well worth it.
Ricardo Auz, Lauren Benavidez and Paul Leiva (L to R) call Waters Hall home this semester during their graduate student internships, which is possible through a partnership between K-State and Zamorano University.
The students’ internships are part of a partnership between K-State and Zamorano. Many Zamorano alumni have spent time in K-State’s Department of Agricultural Economics. The interns enroll in classes and work with professors on research projects.
“I think this is a good experience for us and also it opens doors to future interns from Zamorano to have the same experience,” Benavidez said. “Also, working with grad students is good because they provide us with advice about how we can get a master’s degree or how we can be better in some areas.”
All three students share a course schedule that includes AGEC 599, Food and Agribusiness Management Strategy with Aleksan Shanoyan, assistant professor; and AGEC 712, Optimization Techniques in Agricultural Economics, with Jason Bergtold, associate professor. Shanoyan’s class is a requirement for the students, however Bergtold’s class was chosen based on interests and recommendations from former Zamorano interns.
Auz, whose interests are in stock markets, works with Christine Wilson, professor, to update research about the equity markets for some companies in the food industry.
Benavidez studies international trade with Tian Xia, associate professor, looking specifically at exports of hard red winter wheat to Asia and how the Asian culture uses the exported wheat.
Leiva, who is interested in studying production economics at K-State, researches geographic information systems to study the distance from farms to ethanol plants in Kansas with Mykel Taylor, assistant professor, and Allen Featherstone, department head and professor.
The school system at Zamorano is set on a strict schedule of five classes in the morning followed by a specific lunch hour and work experience in the afternoon, whether it be in the fields, beef unit or elsewhere. The school provides the students with food and uniforms with laundry services so that the university serves as its own community. The students agree that despite the tight schedule at Zamorano, studying is much more time consuming at K-State.
Auz says the classes here take more focus, especially with the language difference. The emphasis on graduate student research at K-State rather than the emphasis on work experience at Zamorano also makes a big difference for the students because it presents a different type of learning opportunity.
“In my case, I studied in my same country,” Leiva said. “I had been to the U.S. before but never for so long, so for me it’s like a new experience to be with other people, other cultures and live in another country in a really different way from how I would live in my country. It has been really helpful and I have learned lots of things.”
Both Auz and Benavidez said that responsibility is one of the biggest lessons they have gotten out of studying here at K-State. Auz said that in addition, timeliness had been a big adjustment for him because arriving early is not a custom in South America. Benavidez added that she has learned the importance of patience in reviewing long lists of data to compile her weekly reports.
The students found many differences in the communities as well. Coming from the closed Zamorano community to a community 50 times larger, the students have seen more opportunities for interaction, especially with the graduate students. They have spent time with the Graduate Students in Agricultural Economics for breakfast club meetings, bowling and brown bag lunch sessions. They also interacted with other Zamorano alumni on campus.
The students have had a great time at K-State so far. All echoed that the K-State community is definitely like a family, and that they would recommend the program to other Zamorano students.
“K-State should maintain this program because it is so helpful for us and it is a good opportunity for us,” Auz said. “The people here are so kind.”
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