Vocational agriculture started in the early 20th century, with the passage of the Smith-Hughes National Vocational Education Act in 1917 in the United States. This legislation provided federal funding for vocational agriculture programs in schools and laid the foundation for agricultural education at the secondary level.
The First Morrill Act of 1862 established land-grant universities, which were required to offer instruction in agriculture and mechanical arts. This act marked the beginning of formal agricultural education in the United States.
The beginning of agriculture is often estimated to have started around 10,000 years ago during the Neolithic Revolution. This marked the transition from hunting and gathering to settled farming practices, leading to significant advancements in human society and civilization.
Agriculture is an age old practice, started by some of the earliest humans. It does not have a known inventor, and even which culture started it is hard to pin down, as so many cultures around the world bare evidence of it, each getting progressively older as archeologists find older finds.
People first started farming around 12,000 years ago during the Neolithic Revolution. This marked a shift from a hunter-gatherer lifestyle to settled agriculture, allowing humans to grow crops and domesticate animals for food.
lord canning
lord curzon
Agriculture started 10,000 to 12,000 years ago.
It is not known where the first crops were raised. Many historians have different theories on where agriculture started, but it was likely in Mesopotamia or ancient China.
Agriculture, the planting, cultivating and harvesting of crops, started thousands of years before the industrial revolution.
Manioc
who was the first agriculture minister of Pakistan
Pastoralism originated in Holocene. It started about 12,000 years ago and was the first agriculture revolution. It is also known as the Neolithic Revolution.
The first agriculture popped up about 5,000 years ago.
AnswerMost anthropologists believe agriculture began in the "fertile crescent" region between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers around 6,000 to 8,000 years ago.
I am pretty certain that agriculture (farming) was started!
During the Neolithic Era, people stopped being nomadic and started settling down in permanent villages. They also started agriculture and stopped hunting and gathering. This is the first time where we see permanent settlement and agriculture. Also, the surplus in food caused by agriculture allowed people to do other things which eventually turned into new kinds of jobs such as scribes. Because these new jobs were beginning to be valued differently, you see social stratification for the first time in history.