Davenport honored for lifetime of teaching

FALLS VILLAGE — Karen Davenport, Agricultural Science and Technology teacher and department chair at Housatonic Valley Regional High School (HVRHS), has been awarded the James C. Kapteyn Prize.The Kapteyn Prize was established in 2009 as a fund of Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation to honor the memory of the late James C. Kapteyn of Deerfield Academy in Deerfield, Mass., and is awarded to a high school educator who exemplifies excellence in “whole child teaching,”serving in multiple capacities within a public or private school community.The prize includes an award of $10,000.Davenport, 51, has been teaching agricultural education for 25 years.She has bachelor’s and master’s degrees from the University of Connecticut, and went straight into teaching. (She admitted, sheepishly, that she brought lesson plans on her honeymoon.)Davenport did her student teaching in 1983 at Housatonic, under longtime department chair George Wheeler. The following year, Wheeler took a sabbatical and Davenport signed on as a long-term substitute, but midway through the year a job opened up at Wamogo High School in Litchfield and Davenport was encouraged to apply.She stayed at Wamogo for seven years, had two children and returned to HVRHS in 1995.Asked why she decided to go into teaching, she said she initially wanted to be a veterinarian and applied to the Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine at Tufts University. “But Tufts was only taking one female from Connecticut. I’m not sure I was dedicated enough anyway.”Davenport grew up in Noank, on Long Island Sound, and attended Ledyard High School, which had (and continues to have) an excellent agricultural education program.“In those days it was considered vocational education, not agriculture education.”It was a long bus ride for the out-of-district student, but her parents were in favor. “They said it’s in the genes.” Davenport had a great aunt who taught for 60 years in a one-room schoolhouse. The next generation included two teachers.And even as a child, she was trying to teach her younger brother.Davenport had to raise 10 chickens as part of her Ledyard program. The Noank Planning and Zoning Commission had to OK it. Luckily, her father was on the commission.Davenport said in 1998 the emphasis shifted from vocational (and what was then called vo-ag) to what is today known as ag-ed. “The number of farmers was way down, and ‘agriculture’ encompasses more than just cows,” she explained of the shift, adding that now, “There’s a huge business component,” as well as leadership training and instruction in the natural sciences.“The model is never stagnant.”To demonstrate, Davenport drew three overlapping circles on a sheet of paper. The circles were: classroom/labs, supervised agriculture experience and FFA.“So the classroom and labs is the theory, the SAE is the homework, and the FFA is putting it all in practice.”The FFA is a national organization; HVRHS has a strong local chapter. Of the 150 or so ag-ed students at HVRHS this year, Davenport can only think of two who are actually from farms. Ag-ed students today do environmental studies, forestry, horticulture and even aquaculture. Farming, she added, is an increasingly tough business.“In order to stay in business you need to be the best, to be innovative. And crazy, maybe.“I get to practice what I preach,” she added. Davenport and her family live on a farm in Ancramdale, N.Y., with 120 Holstein cows.“I grew up lobstering,” said Davenport. “I never touched a cow until college.”Incidentally, the man who facilitated her first bovine experience later became her husband, Jim.“It was ‘cows-met,’ ” she said with a laugh.Davenport said she would like to use her award money to do some kind of agriculture instruction in a poor country through her church, United Methodist Church in Copake, N.Y.An award ceremony will be held on Sunday, Sept. 22, 1 p.m. at the HVRHS auditorium. The public is welcome to attend.

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