🌎 Resumen en español · traducción automática
Cinco miembros de 4-H de la Universidad de Kentucky están terminando sus mandatos como oficiales estatales, representando a más de 200,000 miembros del programa en todo el estado. Los cinco oficiales, Case Shirrell (presidente), Harper Ritchey (vicepresidenta), Bethany Barber (secretaria), Creighton Smith (tesorero) y Emme Lynch (reportera), describen sus experiencias como capítulos transformadores en sus trayectorias de liderazgo juvenil. Cada uno de ellos ingresará a diferentes universidades para estudiar carreras relacionadas con agricultura, ciencias ambientales, farmacia y ciencias familiares.
Traducción y resumen generados por IA a partir del artículo en inglés. Puede contener errores; consulte el texto original.
LEXINGTON, Ky. — Five University of Kentucky 4-H members are wrapping up their terms as state officers, closing what they describe as transformative chapters in their youth leadership journeys. According to a University of Kentucky news release, the 2025-26 state officers have completed a rigorous application and interview process to represent over 200,000 4-H members across Kentucky.
Case Shirrell, state president, credits a chance classroom visit in fourth grade with launching his decade-long journey through the program. An Oldham County 4-H program assistant’s visit sparked his participation in shooting sports, which led to 4-H camp, leadership councils, and ultimately his officer role. Shirrell will attend the University of Kentucky’s Martin-Gatton College of Agriculture, Food and Environment, majoring in agricultural economics and minoring in public policy.
Harper Ritchey, vice president, grew up around UK Extension offices through her family’s work at the Research and Education Center in Caldwell County. She earned a full-ride scholarship to UK and just completed her first year majoring in natural resources, environmental science, and agricultural economics with plans for a career in environmental or agricultural law and policy.
Bethany Barber, state secretary from Monroe County, discovered her passion for mentoring youth through the 4-H babysitting club. She will attend UK majoring in pharmaceutical sciences and plans to pursue pharmacy school to become a pharmacist.
Creighton Smith, state treasurer, remembers winning his first ribbon at a Livestock Skillathon competition in 2018 as the spark that launched his involvement. The Scott County member participated in livestock competitions, shooting sports, cooking, and outdoor adventure clubs before his officer appointment. Smith will attend Kansas State University, majoring in agricultural economics with plans to return to farming.
Emme Lynch, state reporter, fell in love with 4-H at summer camp in Western Kentucky. The Crittenden County member will attend South Carolina State University majoring in family and consumer sciences and plans to become a 4-H agent.
As these officers pass their green jackets to the next generation, Kentucky 4-H has elected new state leaders for 2026-27: State President Jeremiah Jury of Owen County, Vice President Jefferson Oldfield of Montgomery County, Secretary Ella Yazell of Harrison County, Treasurer Rachel Wilson of Hickman County, and Reporter Liberty Proffit of Monroe County.
This article was generated by AI (claude-haiku-4-5-20251001) based on source material from University of Kentucky News, enriched with 2 web searches. The original source is available at https://uknow.uky.edu/uk-happenings/retiring-green-jacket-2025-26-kentucky-4-h-state-officers-reflect-leadership-service.




