Accomplishments and Committees

  • Awards and Accomplishments

    Blue and Gold Inaugural Winners 2024- Addy Briggs and Karlyn Scott Rising Sun Inaugural Winners 2025-Tyler Whitlatch Emblem Award Inaugural Winner 2025- Audrey Kauzlarich

  • Chapter History

    The Oskaloosa FFA Chapter was started in 1937.  In 2005 they added a school land lab that is 20 acres. With local support and donations, we are able to rotate corn and soybeans as well as maintain another 30 acres of hay ground. In 2022 we started an FFA school garden. 

  • Student Committee

    The recruitment committee goes down to the middle school to recruit students into FFA and the ag classes. During this time FFA members in this group make a presentation to talk about the ag classes and then the FFA Chapter. This helps younger students, coming into the high school learn more about the classes they…

  • Chapter Committee

    The promotion committee is a group of FFA members that promote ag and FFA. This is by a new broadcast, making posters/signs, and creating things for the merchandise store. They not only talk about the FFA Chapter but, they also promote agriculture as a whole. 

  • Community Committee

    The community committee is a group of FFA members that do ag/FFA things out in the community. They do this by making a harvester lunch, a mac n cheese sale, ag day at the Mahaska County fairgrounds, and talking to the community about our FFA Chapter. 

Original Copy of the Oskaloosa FFA Chapter

Chapter Archives

Awards form Banquet 2025

Addy Briggs- 2025 Blue and Gold Award Winner
Karlyn Scott- 2025 Blue and Gold Award Winner
Tyler Whitlatch- 2025 Rising Sun Award Winner
Audrey Kauzlarich- 2025 Emblem Award Winner
Jackson Phillips-Sisul- 2025 Dekalb Award

Jackson—known in the chapter as Ethan Rice—was also the member we chose to honor in 2025 with a senior gift: his very own FFA jacket. This was a new tradition we introduced, selecting one member to bless with a jacket, and we felt it was most fitting to present it to our graduating senior. His story will help us share the meaning behind this tradition with the freshmen and underclassmen for years to come.