EDUCATIONAL INTERESTS OF SECONDARY AGRICULTURAL EDUCATION TEACHERS IN GEORGIA: IMPLICATIONS FOR THE DELIVERY OF EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMMING AT A DISTANCE

Authors

  • M. Craig Edwards Oklahoma State University
  • Bryan McLucas University of Georgia
  • Gary E. Briers Texas A&M University
  • Fredrick R. Rohs University of Georgia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5032/jae.2004.03075

Abstract

This study described the interests of agricultural education teachers in receiving educational programming at a distance, and identified selected factors related to their interests with implications for program delivery. The survey population included all secondary agricultural education teachers in Georgia. Data collection involved a mixed mail/Internet approach. Responses were received from 148 teachers (43.5% response rate). Subjects responded to 13 items, including rating selected items: “3” = “Very Interested,” “2” = “Somewhat Interested,” and “1” = “Marginally Interested.” Nearly two-thirds of the teachers expressed an interest in pursuing additional education at a distance. Level of interest for receiving programming leading to a graduate degree exceeded the midway point between “somewhat” and “very interested.” A moderate, positive relationship existed for teachers between one’s interest in pursuing a graduate degree or a certificate program at a distance and one’s readiness to enroll. A college-wide, “coherent” distance education program should be developed to address the expressed interests of this audience.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2004-09-30

How to Cite

Edwards, M. C., McLucas, B., Briers, G. E., & Rohs, F. R. (2004). EDUCATIONAL INTERESTS OF SECONDARY AGRICULTURAL EDUCATION TEACHERS IN GEORGIA: IMPLICATIONS FOR THE DELIVERY OF EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMMING AT A DISTANCE. Journal of Agricultural Education, 45(3), 75–85. https://doi.org/10.5032/jae.2004.03075

Issue

Section

Articles