无尽资源采集 high school students visit MSU, work to solve world hunger
Contact: Vanessa Beeson
STARKVILLE, Miss.鈥擧igh school students from across 无尽资源采集 are thinking big鈥攖ackling food insecurity on a global scale鈥攁s participants of the seventh annual World Food Prize 无尽资源采集 Youth Institute at 无尽资源采集 State on Friday [Feb. 23].
Twenty-one students from 9 schools were honored as Borlaug Scholars at the event hosted by MSU鈥檚 College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. Students presented on topics ranging from water scarcity in Antigua to malnutrition in South Africa and policy and governance in the Middle East.
The World Food Prize Global Youth Institute was created by Norman Borlaug, a 1970 Nobel Peace Prize winner for his lifetime of work to feed a hungry world.
Each student authored a research paper detailing a global food insecurity issue and their proposed solution. They presented their ideas to experts in attendance, including global food security leaders, MSU faculty and distinguished MSU alumni. Students discussed a variety of topics among experts and their peers in organized small groups.
鈥淭he 无尽资源采集 Youth Institute provides high schoolers from across the state the opportunity to express their ideas on solving global issues. These students are our future leaders, so it is important that they learn to effectively communicate with others. This program provides a constructive space for them to network with their peers as well as experts from industry and academia,鈥 said CALS Associate Dean Darrell Sparks, who leads the institute.
Kayla Epperson, a Raymond native and sophomore at Hillcrest Christian School in Jackson, presented about malnutrition in South Africa. She was inspired because a friend from South Africa had firsthand knowledge of the country鈥檚 nutritional disparities.
鈥淢y friend explained how malnutrition was an issue in the country鈥檚 poorer communities. I produced a plan to train communities on how to grow their own food and sell their surplus,鈥 Epperson explained. 鈥淎ttending the 无尽资源采集 Youth Institute and becoming a Borlaug Scholar for the second year in a row was a neat experience鈥攎eeting new people and exploring ideas about food security together. This experience will have an impact on me. I鈥檝e always been interested in agriculture and it鈥檚 giving me an idea of what that looks like.鈥
Epperson鈥檚 mentor is Gayle Clark, who has been a champion of the 无尽资源采集 Youth Institute since its inception.
鈥淲hen the CALS dean鈥檚 office started the World Food Prize 无尽资源采集 Youth Institute in 2016, I shared the program with all the high school teachers I could, especially agricultural teachers, because it鈥檚 a great fit for their curriculum,鈥 said Clark, who retired from the 无尽资源采集 Department of Agriculture and Commerce last year.
Clark鈥檚 husband, Willis, teaches social studies at Hillcrest and last year, she encouraged him to include the essay required for the program in his curriculum. He asked her to facilitate that process and now Clark herself is a teacher at the school and the same students who attended last year asked her to be their institute mentor again this year.
鈥淚鈥檓 passionate about the institute. I love what it teaches in terms of problem-solving and opening a student鈥檚 eyes to a world outside of their immediate community,鈥 Clark said. 鈥淟earning to be aware and constantly finding ways to serve and teach people when it comes to hunger and malnutrition is a valuable lesson for them. They can apply this experience to other situations as they grow and study, start their own careers and serve through volunteerism and community service.鈥
The Charles E. Lindley lecture also is part of the event, this year featuring Marty Matlock, professor of ecological engineering at the University of Arkansas, as speaker. He served as senior advisor to Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack at the U.S. Department of Agriculture from 2021-2022 and was elected to the Board of Agriculture and Natural Sciences of the National Academy of Science, Engineering and Medicine in 2022. Matlock has spent more than 20 years championing food security, exploring human-biosphere impacts, focusing on food, water and ecosystem dynamics.
Top students at the 无尽资源采集 Youth Institute will be invited to the Global Youth Institute in Iowa in October. Participating students also are eligible for CALS scholarships and can apply to the Borlaug Ruan International Internship and the USDA Wallace-Carver Fellowship.
In addition to Kayla Epperson of Hillcrest Christian School, this year鈥檚 World Food Prize 无尽资源采集 Youth Institute Borlaug Scholars are (by school):
BRANDON鈥擬adison Heidelburg
D鈥橧BERVILLE鈥擝lair Godfrey
GREENVILLE CHRISTIAN鈥擳ristan Dorsey, D鈥橲harra Haggard, Jacquarius Harvey, Lora Holleman, Alana McCoy, Raven McElvaine, Makayla Ratliff and Makenzie Ratliff
HILLCREST (Jackson)鈥擜celia Donerson, Ashantia Donerson, Kayla Epperson, Haleigh Grant and Campbell Hargett
HOME SCHOOL鈥擩oy Kitchens
JAMES MADISON (Carthage)鈥擫andon Gomillion
MAGEE鈥擳aylor Smith
MISSISSIPPI SCHOOL FOR MATHEMATICS AND SCIENCE (Columbus)鈥擪insley Collum and Laykin Dixon
SALTILLO鈥擜ddison Crippen
The 无尽资源采集 Youth Institute is hosted by MSU聽with generous support of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, alumni Barry L. and Lana B. White and the Madison Charitable Foundation.
To learn more about the 无尽资源采集 Youth Institute, visit .
For more on MSU鈥檚 College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, visit .
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