Nebraska College of Technical Agriculture explained

Nebraska College of Technical Agriculture
Image Alt:Three-story brick building
Established:1965
Type:Public technical college
Parent:University of Nebraska system
City:Curtis
State:Nebraska
Country:United States
Campus:Rural
Students:300
Nickname:Aggies
Website:www.ncta.unl.edu

Nebraska College of Technical Agriculture (UNL–NCTA) is a public technical college in Curtis, Nebraska. It is part of the University of Nebraska system.

History

The Nebraska Legislature passed a bill to establish a Nebraska School of Agriculture as a boarding school for high school students in 1911. Curtis was selected as the site for the new school, over 11 other applicants in the state. Classes began in 1913.[1]

In the 1960s, the Nebraska Legislature passed legislation to convert the school to a post-secondary agriculture school, the University of Nebraska School of Technical Agriculture (UNSTA). The college opened in 1965.[1]

UNSTA was adopted by the University of Nebraska system as the Nebraska College of Technical Agriculture in Curtis in 1994.[1]

Academics

Students at the college may seek A.A.S. degree, A.S. degrees, or certificates in agribusiness management, agriculture production systems or veterinary technology.[1]

Campus and athletics

NCTA and its earlier institutions have continually operated with business offices and the administration located in the first building on campus, Agriculture Hall at 404 East 7th Street, Curtis. NCTA is not a member of any athletic conference or association but fields a limited number of mixed-gender teams in dog, horse, and shooting sports.[2] [3]

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://ncta.unl.edu/about-ncta/Human-Resources/History.NCTA.2015.pdf Technical Agriculture Education in Curtis, Nebraska
  2. Web site: Clubs, Teams & Activities. March 21, 2024. ncta.unl.edu.
  3. Web site: Equity in Athletics Disclosure Act (EADA) - NCTA Athletic Team Participation by Gender. March 21, 2024. NCTA. October 12, 2023.