New 4-H Members
What is 4-H?
4-H is an informal, practical, learn-by-doing educational program for youths ages 5 to 19, from rural and urban areas, and from all racial, cultural, economic, and social backgrounds. 4-H helps you set goals, and it can help you learn how to be a good citizen. And you have fun in the process! In 4-H, you learn to solve problems facing you and your community. The knowledge and skills you acquire in 4-H can open the door to a lifetime of personal growth. 4-H is the youth program of the Mississippi State University Extension Service.
Sometimes it can be hard to figure out if a new activity is the right fit for you and your family, and 4-H can be a little overwhelming! So many options! So many opportunities! So many people who seem to have been in 4-H since before they were born!
Here are a few facts to help you get started:
- To be a member of 4-H, you must be officially 5 years old. Kids ages 5-7 are called Cloverbuds, and they focus on exploring all that 4-H has to offer. Typically their activities are restricted to the county, and they do not compete in any contests. You can be in 4-H until you’re 18/19. (Learn more about “aging out” from your county agent!)
- You can be a member in only one county and one state at a time. You are welcome to travel to other places to participate in activities with other clubs, but your membership must stay in one county/state.
- What exactly is a project? The 4-H slogan is “Learn by doing,” and 4-H itself is an informal educational organization. So while 4-H is a lot of fun, a “4-H project” has a specific meaning: work done with animals, crops/plants, articles made, or some other definite enterprise undertaken by the member. Your local agent can tell you more about the types of projects going on by 4-H’ers in your area. But you can expect enthusiasm, goal-setting, hands-on activities, record-keeping, field trips and guest speakers!
- What is a 4-H club, and why do they all seem different? Typically, you will find general interest clubs and special interest clubs. A general interest club may meet together, take field trips together, and have a club project, but the members are all pursuing different individual projects. For example, in one general interest club, after their general meeting, they break up into smaller groups for robotics, wildlife habitat judging, sewing, and Cloverbuds. A special interest club is one in which all of the members in the club are interested in the same project, such as horses, livestock, or shooting sports. All of their activities revolve around that primary topic of interest.
- 4-H does not charge membership dues, does not require members to wear uniforms, and relies on volunteers to make the clubs successful.