Official websites use .gov A
.gov website belongs to an official government
organization in the United States.
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS A
lock (
) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to
the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official,
secure websites.
The Environmental Horticulture AAS provides students with knowledge and skills needed for jobs with nurseries, greenhouses, landscape firms, garden centers, and park departments. Students learn plant identification, plant propagation, sustainable landscape practices, soil science, practical pruning and botanical concepts. Through time spent in practical hands-on training, students will learn to propagate, seed, transplant, design landscape plans, and maintain a variety of plants. Students will participate in an industry-based training experience. The classroom setting includes individual and small group instruction with a hands-on focus of horticultural practices. The program emphasizes a sustainable approach to horticultural principles. A diverse population of students enjoys working in a 1200 sq. ft. state-of-the-art growing facility.
Average number of students who completed each year
19
Gender
Male
48%
Female
52%
Race
American Indian or Alaska Native
2%
Asian
3%
Black or African American
3%
Hispanic
3%
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
0%
White
79%
Multi-racial
7%
Other
2%
Age
Under 20
8%
20 to 29
41%
30 to 39
23%
40 to 49
14%
50 and over
14%
Prior education
No high school diploma/GED
17%
High school diploma/GED, but no college experience
24%
Some college experience, but no degree
34%
Certificate or AA
2%
BA or higher
24%
Heads up!
You are about to leave our site and visit an external page. Just a reminder that we are not responsible for its content or policies. Would you like to continue?