OBJECTIVE OF STUDY AND COURSE CONTENT FOR PROFESSIONAL EXECUTIVE DIPLOMA IN AGRICULTURE AND FARMING MANAGEMENT
MISSION AND OBJECTIVE OF THE PROGRAM
The mission of the Professional Executive Diploma (PED) in Agriculture and Farming Management degree program is to enhance the career trajectory of agricultural professionals, practitioners, and educators by improving their ability to apply new and emerging scientific findings and technologies to the advancement and expansion of their disciplines through:
Successful completion of high quality courses designed to support expertise expansion in targeted areas or disciplines;
Participation in an immersion-based, high quality research experience;
Opportunities to disseminate knowledge through participation in and/or development of extension programs or media.
The degree program is primarily designed to support the educational advancement of place bound, time bound students in a distance learning course delivery format; however, students on our e-campus also may access the degree program.
The overall goal of the program is to prepare high level graduates for professional, practitioner, and educator opportunities in agriculture, so that they may provide leadership and disseminate knowledge to an increasingly complex society.
PED in Agriculture Program Objectives:
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To prepare students to become experts in professional fields related to agriculture and farming.
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To prepare students to become outstanding educators or practitioners in agricultural disciplines.
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To prepare students to become outstanding leaders and team players in collaborative and interdisciplinary application of their expertise to address local, regional, national and/or global problems associated with agriculture.
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To provide students with an experiential-based research opportunity designed to translate content provided in coursework to reality.
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To both enhance the visibility and impact of graduate programs in agricultural sciences and provide students with a pathway for manifesting their career objectives.
Plant Health Management (PHM): To meet an expanding demand for plant health management specialists to promote food security and food safety on a global scale, the PHM option is designed to provide students with a foundational understanding of the essential components of plant protection through courses in the plant health management core, as well as a basic understanding of market aspects of the business through courses in the management core.
Student Learning Outcomes
Objective 1. To prepare students to become experts in professional fields related to agriculture. Students will:
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Expand breadth of knowledge and expertise in agricultural disciplines and closely related fields.
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Increase depth of knowledge and expertise in agriculture as related to the student’s professional goals.
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Enhance ability to adapt to emerging changes in technology, economics, societal influences, and communication that have a dramatic impact on the agricultural industry.
Objective 2. To prepare students to become outstanding educators or practitioners in agricultural disciplines. Students will:
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Develop critical thinking skills and ability to assess and comprehend societal problems, stakeholder concerns and scientific questions that formulate major issues to be addressed through applied and/or basic research.
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Develop scientific literacy by independently assessing, interpreting, and summarizing literature and other sources of knowledge on the research topic.
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Develop research objectives and hypotheses through the use of logic and critical thinking.
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Propose, evaluate or execute experimental protocol regarding stated hypothesis.
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Collect, summarize, and interpret research data.
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Effectively communicate at different levels the results of research in written, graphic, and verbal modes.
Objective 3. To prepare students to become outstanding leaders and team players in collaborative and interdisciplinary application of their expertise to address local, regional, national and/or global problems associated with agriculture. Students will:
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Acquire advanced knowledge and skills necessary to function as an effective leader, manager, or team player.
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Identify, assess and address the interactions among the many issues associated with agriculture and society at large.
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Foster commitment to ethical behavior and appreciation for diversity, global cultures, traditions and perspectives.
Objective 4. To provide students with an experiential-based research opportunity designed to translate content provided in coursework to reality
Objective 5. To both enhance the visibility and impact of graduate programs in agricultural sciences and provide students with a pathway for manifesting their career objectives. The program will:
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Increase the number and diversity of high quality applicants and students in the program.
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Strengthen the college’s role in distance delivery by expanding access.
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Place more our university graduates in lead positions within agricultural related fields.
Syllabus Course content
Week 1
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Introduction and definition
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Some definition of Agriculture
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More of what is Agriculture
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Definitions from court decisions
Week 2
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What is plant?
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Various main groupings of plant
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Plant characteristics
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Non vascular and vascular plants
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What are seed plants?
Week 3
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Types of seed plants
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Advent of Angiosperm: why are they important
Week 4
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What is a flower?
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Common usage
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Misconception
Week 5
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What is plant root
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Extent of root growth
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Function of the plant root
Week 6
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Propagation
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Plant cutting for propagation
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Propagated plant cutting
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Examples of plants that can be propagated by root cuttings
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Examples of plants that can be propagated by leaf cutting
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Examples of plants that can be propagated by stem cutting
Week 7
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Air layering
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What is air layering
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Factors affecting root regeneration
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Advantages of air layering compared to other vegetative propagation methods
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Disadvantages of air layering compared to other vegetative propagation methods
Week 8
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Sexual propagation
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What is sexual propagation?
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What are recalcitrant seeds?
Week 9
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Plant sex
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Does plant sex really exist?
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Descriptive terms referring to the various types of plant sex
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List of terms on plant classification according to natural adaptation
Week 10
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Totipotency
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What is Totipotency?
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The significance of Totipotency in plant development and in plant regeneration
Week 11
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The major stages of development in plant
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How plant grow from seed
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The vegetative stage
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The reproductive stage
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The ripening stage
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Senescence
Week 12
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Plant growth factor in relation to crop farming
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Introductory review: Genetic factors control crop growth and yield
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The chromosome as a genetic factor
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Advances applying the concept of Genetic factors affecting plant growth and development
Week 13
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Pollination
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Self- and cross- pollination
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Other types of pollination
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Agents of pollination
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What is pollination
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Types of pollination according to agents of pollination
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Natural mechanism in plants that favour self-pollination
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Mechanism in plants that promote self-pollination
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Forms of cleistogamy
Week 14
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Review: Natural mechanism that deters self-pollination, but favour cross-pollination in the Angiosperms
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Plant mechanism that promotes cross-pollination or outcrossing
Week 15
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Ca$h crops
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What is cash crops farming
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How cash crops farming evolved
Week 16
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Proper site and crop selection
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7 major factors to be considered in crop selection
Week 17
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Farm site selection
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8 MUST considered factors in location and farm site selection
Week 18
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Methods of planting crops
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What is direct seeding?
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What is transplanting?
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Direct seeding vs. transplanting
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Basic factors that must be used to determine maximum yield
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Crop examples
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More about direct seeding and transplanting
Week 19
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What is, and how crops are arranged in row planting
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The advantage of row planting over broad casting or scatter planting
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Row planting arrangement
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Spatial arrangement in intercropping
Week 20
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Orchards
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Common planting patterns for orchards
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Comparison of plant population densities
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Intercropping and crop rotation
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Advantages of intercropping and crop rotation
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Advantages of crop rotation compared to monoculture
Week 21
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Urban farming
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City farming
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Benefits of urban farming
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Pot gardening
Week 22
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Vertical farming
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General information on vertical farming
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Intensive horizontal farming
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How will vertical farming make a difference
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Origin of vertical farming
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Technical feasibility of vertical farming
Week 23
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How to prune fruit trees
Week 24
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Fertilizers
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Fertilizer application and its development
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Manuring
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How to manufacture different types of fertilizers in domestic and commercial quantity
Week 25
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Photosynthesis
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What is photosynthesis
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Function of photosynthesis
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Importance of heterotrophs
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Advantages of photosynthesis
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Recent advances
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Early research contributions
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The process of photosynthesis, its light and dark reactions
Week 26
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Light
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What is light
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Definitions and meaning as it relates to agriculture
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Importance to plant
Week 27
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Climate
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What is climate
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What is weather
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Microclimate
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Macroclimate
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Macroclimate vs. microclimate
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Effect of climate
Week 28
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Water
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What is water
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The importance of water in plants and in crops Agriculture: a climatic factor
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Properties of water
Week 29
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Grafting
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What is grafting
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The propagation methods
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Producing botanical curiosities
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Repairing damaged trees
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Indexing for virus diseases
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List of grafting techniques used in plant propagation
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Top grafting or top working, which is better
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Adoption of the technology
Week 30
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How to produce edible mushrooms while vermicomposting