Native American Researcher Native American Researcher

Tribal Agriculture Fellowship

Program Contact

Dr. LaKisha Odom
lodom@foundationfar.org

Development Contact

Shannyn Smith
ssmith@foundationfar.org

Applications due January 17, 2025

Close-up of a fingerprint. Our Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Commitment

About the Tribal Agriculture Fellowship

In recognition of the need for more agriculture education opportunities specifically geared toward Native students, the Native American Agriculture Fund (NAAF) and the Foundation for Food & Agriculture Research (FFAR) established the Tribal Agriculture Fellowship (TAF) with additional support provided by John DeereFarmer Mac and the Farm Credit. TAF supports Native American, Alaska Native and Native Hawaiian students pursuing technical, undergraduate and graduate degrees in agriculture.

The mission of TAF is to create opportunities for students to advance their education in agriculture, increase specialized knowledge and preserve and promote the legacy of agriculture in tribal communities. The program is designed to close the financial gap to allow Fellows to place their primary focus on their academic pursuits, while allowing Fellows to have the time and resources needed to participate in educational enrichment activities.

The program provides a generous benefits package that can include up to four years of fellowship status, with funding to earn agricultural degrees or technical certifications. TAF resources can be utilized for:

  • Tuition & fees,
  • Housing,
  • Meal plans,
  • Equipment fees and testing costs,
  • Professional development

TAF is managed by the nonprofit organization, Native Agriculture Education Fellowship Program (NAEFP).

For more information visit the TAF website or watch this webinar recorded June 18, 2024, featuring FFAR Scientific Program Director Dr. LaKisha Odom and TAF Executive Director Nicole DeVon, along with select TAF student fellows, in which they discuss the importance of scientific workforce development in the food and agriculture industry.

Tribal Agriculture Fellows

2024 Year

Trey Blackhawk (Winnebago)

Trey Blackhawk is a member of the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska. He is the Farm Manager for the Winnebago Tribal Farm, which specializes in fruit and vegetable production, and is pursuing a degree in applied sciences in the College of Agricultural Sciences & Natural Resources at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

Kyle Chavis (Lumbee)

Kyle Chavis is a member of the Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina. He graduated from North Carolina State University with a bachelor's degree in agricultural education and a minor in animal science and is now getting his master’s degree in agricultural and Extension education from there. Kyle plans to teach high school agriculture and make a positive impact on student lives.

Sydney Ivey (Coharie)

Sydney Ivey is a member of the Coharie Tribe. She is getting her bachelor's degree at North Carolina State University, majoring in agricultural business management with a minor in agricultural entrepreneurship. She aims to work in the agriculture industry and inspire others to do the same.  

Kristy Kinlicheenie (Navajo)

Kristy Kinlicheenie is part of the Navajo tribe from Northern Arizona. She received an associate’s degree in veterinary technology at Navajo Technical University, a bachelor's degree in equine science from Colorado State University and a master’s degree in agriculture Extension education from the University of Arizona. Kristy is pursuing her doctoral degree at Texas Tech University, focusing on agriculture education. Her goal is to give Native American youth and communities the opportunity and confidence to seek higher education and apply knowledge learned to improve their agriculture endeavors.

Bree Lameman (Diné)

Breanna Lameman is Diné from Shiprock, Navajo Nation. She is a PhD student at the University of Arizona in the health behaviors health promotion program with a focus in Indigenous food, water & energy systems. Breanna’s research focus is Indigenous food sovereignty, food security and hydroponics.

Keona Mason (Kickapoo)

Keona Mason is a member of the Kickapoo Tribe of Oklahoma. She graduated from Oklahoma State University with a bachelor's degree in agricultural communications and plans to remain at Oklahoma State University to receive her master's degree in agricultural communications. She hopes to serve in a career where she can advocate for agriculturalists and continue her swine operation.

Peyton Mcmillan (Lumbee)

Peyton McMillan is a member of the Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina. She graduated from North Carolina State University with bachelor's degrees in biological and agricultural engineering technology and crop and soil sciences, with a minor in agriculture business management. She plans to pursue a master’s degree in crop and soil sciences, after which she intends to return to her native community to improve farming practices for the preservation of her people’s land and natural resources.

Davin Mendez (Mescalero)

Davin Mendez is from the Pueblo of Acoma and the Mescalero Apache Tribe. Davin is attending New Mexico State University seeking a degree in rangeland science. He has a deep-rooted connection to the land and a passion for sustainable agriculture and rangeland management. He plans to return to both his tribal communities to help promote and preserve the legacy of agriculture.

Kimberlynnibah Yazzie (Navajo)

Kimberlynnibah Yazzie is a tribal member of the Navajo Nation. She is Bita'hnii (Within his Cover Clan) and born for Ashiihii (Salt People Clan). Kimberlynnibah is pursuing an undergraduate degree in animal science with a concentration in pre-veterinary medicine at Oklahoma State University in the Ferguson College of Agriculture. She plans to get a doctorate degree in veterinary medicine and be able to provide services to tribal and non-tribal communities.

Kirsten Begay- (Dine [Navajo])

Kirsten Begay- (Diné [Navajo])

Kirsten Begay is a Diné citizen and a Junior transferring from Diné College to the University of Arizona, majoring in veterinary sciences. Kirsten is a hardworking, animal-loving student who hopes to return the knowledge I gain to her community and reservation. She wants to make veterinary medicine more accessible to her community and to educate the next generation of agriculture in the Navajo Nation.

Greta Gustafson- (Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara)

Greta Gustafson – (Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara)

Greta Gustafson is a proud member of the Three Affiliated Tribes: Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara. She grew up in the heart of the Amskapipikuni lands on the Two Medicine River (Naa-to-ko-ka-tsi). She has her bachelor’s degree in microbiology from Montana State University and is currently a fourth-year student at Washington State University College of Veterinary Medicine.

Keona Mason- (Kickapoo)

Keona Mason – (Kickapoo)

Keona Mason, from Tishomingo, Oklahoma, is a member of the Kickapoo Tribe of Oklahoma. Keona is an Oklahoma State University (OSU) agricultural communication major and active in OSU Collegiate 4-H, Swine Club and Agricultural Communicators of Tomorrow. She is passionate about the pork industry and still raise pigs with her swine operation, 2S show pigs, for members to start their agricultural projects and donate pork to local food pantries.. In October 2021, she received her American Farmer Degree. Keona hopes to serve in a career where she can advocate for Oklahoma youth agriculture programs and Native American agriculturalists.

Jonathan Romero- (Pueblo of Jemez)

Jonathan Romero – (Pueblo of Jemez)

Jonathan Romero is a Range Program Manager for the Pueblo of Jemez- Natural Resources Department. In addition, he serves as a County Committee member for USDA- Farm Service Agency. Jonathan works to enhance tribal rangelands, provides leadership and assists in extension-like services to tribal producers in Agriculture. Other interests include beef cattle management and wildlife management. He earned his bachelor’s degree in biology from the University of New Mexico and is currently enrolled at West Texas A&M University for a master's program in Agriculture. Upon a tribal appointment, he served as a Lt. Governor for his community in 2017. He is a member of the New Mexico Cattle Growers Association, the Intertribal Ag Council and Society for Range Management.

Peter Thais - (Saint Regis Mohawk)

Peter Thais – (Saint Regis Mohawk)

Peter Thais is a member of the Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe on the Akwesasne Indian Reservation and is pursuing a biological engineering degree in the Colleges of Agriculture and Life Sciences (CALS) at Cornell University. Peter is an active member of the Indigenous community at Cornell, where he is on the executive board of the Native American and Indigenous Student organization, works as an ambassador for the Indigenous Studies Program, is President of the Cornell Chapter of AISES and is on Hall Council at the Akwe:kon Native American Program House. Peter was recently elected as a National Representative to the Board of Directors of the American Indian Sciences and Engineering Society (AISES).

Bailey Tom - (Dine [Navajo])

Bailey Tom – (Diné [Navajo])

Bailey Lasalle Tom’s tribal affiliation is Diné (Navajo). Bailey has a bachelor’s degree in agriculture business and agriculture economics form graduated from New Mexico State University. She is currently interning at Timmerman Feedyard Management. After completing the internship, Bailey plans to continue her education at Texas A&M University, pursuing a master’s in agriculture business.

Matea Whittington - (Choctaw-Apache Tribe)

Matea Whittington (Choctaw-Apache Tribe)

Matea Whittington is a 2023 honor graduate of Zwolle High School, and a member of the Choctaw Apache Tribe of Ebarb, where she serve as the Sr. Tribal Princess & Chairman of the Rising Sun Youth Group. Matea has served as a Northwest Louisiana Agriculture Ambassador, ZHS 4-H Club President, Sabine Parish 4-H Jr. Leader President & 2022-2023 Miss Sabine Parish 4-H. She will attend Southern Arkansas University in the fall of 2023, to study agriculture education.

Cynthia Wilson - (Dine [Navajo])

Cynthia Wilson – (Diné [Navajo])

Cynthia Wilson is a tribal member of the Navajo Nation, born and raised in Monument Valley, Utah. She holds a master’s of science in nutrition from the University of Utah and is a first-year Ph.D. student at UC Berkeley in Environmental Science, Policy and Management. Her research interests include indigenous food, water, land, ontological environmentalism and indigenous political ecology in social science. Cynthia is also a Castanea Fellow among community food justice leaders and a Native and Indigenous Rights Fellow for the Harvard Divinity School.

Portrait of Marquel Begay.

Marquel Begay (Dine’ [Navajo])

University of Montana

Level: Graduate
Major: Ecology, Management and Restoration of Rangelands
Focus Area: Ecological restoration and community-based land management planning on the Navajo Nation.
Career Goal: To serve as a good relative, educator, researcher and liaison for Tribal communities interested in improving and sustaining their agricultural and natural resources that support and strengthen their local cultural knowledge and practices for future generations. I’d like to teach at Dine’ College, our reservation TCU."

Portrait of Nicole Benally.

Nicole Benally (Navajo)

University of Montana

Level: Graduate Student
Major: Forest & Conservation Sciences
Focus Area: Indigenous Food Sovereignty
Career Goal: To serve Indigenous people by connecting them to resources that integrate contemporary community lifestyles with the preservation of their culture, food, language, and ecological knowledge.

Portrait of Maddylon Burri.

Maddylon Burris (Chickasaw)

Redlands Community College

Level: Career Technical Education
Major: Agriculture Education
Focus Area: Teaching Agriculture Education
Career Goal: To receive an Associate Degree in Agriculture Education from Redlands Community College; finish a Bachelor’s Degree at Oklahoma State University; begin teaching Agriculture Education in public schools, with the intent to focus on Native American students’ involvement in agriculture.

Portrait of Carson Capps.

Carson Capps (Citizen Potawatomi Nation)

Oklahoma State University

Level: Undergrad
Major: Agribusiness
Focus Area: Pre-Law
Career Goal: After graduating from Oklahoma State University, I plan to attend law school, specializing in Indigenous Peoples law. My intent is to use my education and advocate for agriculture and Native American communities in my home state of Oklahoma.

Portrait of Jaelyn Dove.

Jaelyn Dove (Lumbee)

North Carolina State University

Level: Undergrad
Major: Animal Science
Focus Area: Veterinary Bio-Sciences
Career Goal: To finish my animal science degree and complete veterinary school. Then, I will return to rural North Carolina to practice veterinary medicine in the Robeson/Bladen counties area.

Portrait of Henry Hainzinger.

Henry Hainzinger (Osage)

Oklahoma State University-Institute of Technology

Level: Career Technical Education
Major: Truck Technician
Focus Area: Diesel Mechanic
Career Goal: My plan is to graduate, work for someone else for two-three years, and then build my own shop in Osage county. I would eventually like to run my own shop while still being able to help on the family ranch.

Portrait of Gina McGuire.

Gina McGuire (ʻŌiwi [Native Hawaiian])

University: University of Hawai’i

Level: Graduate Student
Major: Geography & Environment
Focus Area: Indigenous Geographies of Wellness
Career Goal: To start and operate a non-profit organization focused on restoring Hawaiʻi’s traditional foods and native forest systems. 

Portrait of Santana Nez.

Santana Nez (Navajo)

University of Arizona

Level: Graduate
Major: Doctor of Veterinary Medicine
Focus Area: Mixed animal/food; animal medicine
Career Goal: To provide animal medicine services on rural Tribal and non-Tribal lands.

Portrait of Justina Slim.

Justina Slim (Navajo)

Colorado State University

Level: Undergraduate
Major: Animal Science & Agriculture Business
Focus Area: Bovine Reproduction and Genetics
Career Goal: I would like to work for forward-thinking companies like Select Sires and ABS Global to aid producers so they can make genetically informed decisions that will improve the beef product within their herds.

Portrait of Brendan Walker.

Brendan Walker (Navajo)

University of Arizona College of Veterinary Medicine

Level: Graduate
Major: Doctor of Veterinary Medicine
Focus Area: Large Animal Medicine
Career Goal: To practice as a mixed animal veterinarian on Tribal lands. 

ID: 22-000310-MOU

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