Seeing
the forest:
Few Urban Students Realize Potential Ag Sciences Have for
Them
The word “spirit” comes to mind when speaking with Tina Terrell.
Whether she’s discussing Penn State Nittany Lion football or protecting
forestland, there’s a passion in her voice that commands attention.
Tina
is the supervisor of the 460,000-acre Cleveland National Forest near
San Diego, Cal. Responsible for 440 park employees, a 30-engine firefighting
force
stationed in the forest, and the safety of every camper, hiker and tourist who
visits, Tina has a lot on her mind.
Ask her about Penn State, though, and
she’ll
find time to talk. Terrell attended the University Park campus from 1983 to
1987. Amazingly, she remains
the only African American to earn a bachelor’s degree in forestry from
the University Park campus.
Terrell grew up in west Philadelphia
where there are not a lot of trees to enjoy. Her mother introduced her
to Penn State football
at the age of 2. Her
autumn
Saturdays, from that point on, were spent tracking the success of the Nittany
Lions and head coach Joe Paterno. She can tell you the history of the team
from 1967 to today.
“Penn State is the only school
I applied to—it’s the only school
I would ever have applied to,” she says.
Fairmont Park in Philadelphia
started her love of the outdoors. During her high school years, inner-city
counselors pointed her toward more urban
careers
such
as being a doctor or lawyer. But her Scholastic Aptitude Test scores
indicated environmental science.
Terrell enrolled in Penn State’s
College of Agricultural Sciences and selected environmental resource
management as her major. After her first year, she was
contacted by a recruiter looking for minority students in the forestry
field to work a summer job just outside Philadelphia. At that time, there
were none,
but Tina took the job.
That summer, her eyes were opened to
the power that humans hold over nature, and the responsibility that comes
with
it. During the course
of the forestry
job, she saw a massive tree cut down.
“It was the power of a human to
kill something that God created,” she
reflects. “It’s very important that we use, not abuse, our
resources.” After
that summer, she decided to switch her major to forestry.
It quickly became
obvious to Terrell that she was the only African American in her major
classes, and one of just a handful of women. However, Rex
Melton, a
professor in the School of Forest Resources and her adviser at the time,
saw something special in Terrell.
“He was there to nurture interest
and help students survive and thrive,” Tina
recalls. She still remembers his love of forestry and people. “I
want to return the favor that Rex did for me to other young people.”
And
she is returning that favor by recruiting for the Cleveland National
Forest and environmental awareness in general. She admits there’s
a misconception about agricultural sciences.
“Eighty percent of Americans live
in urban centers. They just don’t
know about the opportunities,” she says. “They don’t
know they can go into forestry.”
For the most part, the agricultural
sciences aren’t promoted in the inner
city, according to Terrell. The professions are considered dirty jobs,
dealing with bugs and animals. Overall, they just aren’t appealing
to urban youth.
One of her strategies in recruiting is
to let young people know they can have any kind of job, anywhere, in
the agricultural sciences.
“If you want to work in an office, you can. If you want to work in the
field, you can. If you want to work with technology, it’s there,” she
says. “What people don’t understand is that it takes more people,
more activity, marketing and technology to sell a gallon of milk than just milking
a cow.
“We need to communicate with and educate the people in the inner city,” Terrell
says. “Let them know they can have a say in this field. It’s their
land. It does have an impact on them.”
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