The 16-week program started in October.
"I’m older, I have two children and I’m making a career change, so for me, a typical four-year, or two-year type program wasn’t going to be the best," Kolls said. "Something short like this — 16 weeks — really played a huge, huge benefit for myself and my family."
Kolls is one of nine students enrolled in the program.
This is the first year the short course is being held at UW-River Falls. But the program is nothing new.
The short course is actually the UW system's oldest training program in the agricultural sector, originating in 1886 at UW-Madison.
In 2022, UW-Madison announced it was ending the 16-week on-campus certificate program, with plans to transition to a mix of online and in-person training.
University officials said enrollment had been declining over the last decade, and the smaller classes weren't enough to support operation.
UW-River Falls Dairy Science Professor Steve Kelm said when UW-Madison announced the program would discontinue the in-person courses, there was outcry from the dairy industry.
A bipartisan group of state lawmakers rallied around a bill to provide funding for the program and the class was moved to UW-River Falls.
"Dozens of farm owners were short course graduates," Klem said. "Those individuals are now on farming boards, community boards, school boards — and they were really disappointed about the choice to shut it down."
Klem said dairy farmers wanted to make sure students got in-person experience, but also wanted to ensure students receive college credits that could be applied to a two or four-year degree if they wanted to pursue one later.
The short course is worth eight credits. It includes classes instruction on how to give a cow an IV, agriculture business, intro to accounting, reproductive physiology and milk quality.
Most students also work part-time at a nearby farm or their own family farm, Klem said.
Click here to see more...