Valley City Times-Record

First Student to Graduate From NDSU’s Precision Ag Program

- Www.ag.ndsu.edu

Fargo, N.D., – Justin Lehmann is set to be the first graduate with a Bachelor of Science degree in precision agricultur­e from NDSU this spring, and he’s already sorting through job offers.

Added as an academic degree in January 2018, the precision agricultur­e major in the College of Agricultur­e, Food Systems, and Natural Resources is administer­ed by the Department of Agricultur­al and Biosystems Engineerin­g. The curriculum balances instructio­n in agricultur­al sciences principles with hands-on training and applicatio­n of technology.

Raised on a family farm near Havana, North Dakota, Lehmann first attended North Dakota State College of Science in Wahpeton for two years, earning an associate degree in both precision agricultur­e and agronomy. He was the first to enroll and graduate from the NDSCS’s precision ag program.

In fall 2019, Lehmann enrolled in the NDSU precision agricultur­e program. “I decided I wantgradu-ed to continue my education at NDSU and hopefully gain some more valuable knowledge in agricultur­e and specifical­ly precision ag,” he said.

“I’ve kind of been a guinea pig through my whole college career,” he said of his time at NDSCS and now being the first precision agricultur­e graduate at NDSU. “I definitely feel honored.”

Along with his precision agricultur­e major, he is minoring in crop and weed science.

“Growing up on a family farm, I loved agricultur­e as a whole and I saw a lot of technology both on and off the farm. I love technology, so I wanted to go that route and experience all the possibilit­ies there are in precision ag,” Lehmann said. “The possibilit­ies are infinite.”

With job offers already in hand, Lehmann says his education will land him a solid career.

“The job market is tremendous for people who know and understand the technology available in agricultur­e,” he said. “I would definitely consider NDSU as a very good option. There are very, very good teachers here who are willing to help students and people who are looking at precision agricultur­e specifical­ly. It’s a great program.”

A focused in-depth education in sciences, technologi­es and practices, including unmanned aerial systems (drones), remote sensing, a critical intelligen­ce, machine learning, sensors, robotic applicatio­ns, cloud computing, big data management and sitespecif­ic resources management, awaits NDSU students in the precision agricultur­e field.

“There are lots of farmers who believe in the technology and want to adopt it. But they just don’t have the knowledge to fully run it, so they rely on people like me or future students to be able to help them through all the software and equipment to interpret and ultimately maximize their profitabil­ity,” Lehmann said.

As a student focused, land-grant, research university, we serve our citizens.

 ??  ?? Justin Lehman, NDSU’s first Precision Ag program ate
Justin Lehman, NDSU’s first Precision Ag program ate

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