25
Farm and Home Management Educators is a notable career in the 25 category. This page provides verified data from BLS OEWS 2024 + O*NET 29.0 (2024), helping you compare Farm and Home Management Educators against similar careers and make data-driven decisions.
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| soc | 25-9021 |
| title | Farm and Home Management Educators |
| onet code | 25-9021.00 |
| description | Instruct and advise individuals and families engaged in agriculture, agricultural-related processes, or home management activities. Demonstrate procedures and apply research findings to advance agricultural and home management activities. May develop educational outreach programs. May instruct on either agricultural issues such as agricultural processes and techniques, pest management, and food safety, or on home management issues such as budgeting, nutrition, and child development. |
| job zone | 5 |
| major group | 25 |
| tot emp | 10,260 |
| a mean | 60,470 |
| a median | 58,120 |
| a pct10 | 36,780 |
| a pct25 | 46,010 |
| a pct75 | 69,110 |
| a pct90 | 85,230 |
| h mean | 29 |
| h median | 27 |
The day-to-day work of a farm and home management educators typically centers on advise farmers and demonstrate techniques in areas such as feeding and health maintenance of livestock, growing and harvesting practices, and financial planning. Every task listed below is classified as Core in O*NET — they collectively define the role. Task descriptions below are quoted from the U.S. Department of Labor's O*NET 29.0 occupation profile.
Workers in this occupation rely most on Active Listening, Speaking, and Reading Comprehension. Across the top 10 skills, the average O*NET importance score is 3.93 out of 5 — highly rated for this role. Importance reflects how essential each skill is for adequate job performance.
Among working farm and home management educators, the most common entry qualification is a Master's Degree (70.4%). Bachelor's-degree-or-higher credentials are reported by 89% of incumbents. This is a degree-heavy profession — most incumbents hold a four-year degree or beyond.
Median annual pay is highest in Idaho at $103,430 and lowest in Georgia at $31,760 — a 3.3× spread. The top five states (Idaho, California, Oregon, Maryland, Nebraska) average $86,106. Figures reflect BLS OEWS May 2024 state-level wage estimates; percentiles shown are for full-time wage-earners in each state.
| State | Median | Mean | 10th % | 90th % | Employed |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Idaho | $103,430 | $97,940 | $58,840 | $126,210 | 70 |
| California | $98,810 | $89,940 | $45,370 | $108,070 | 140 |
| Oregon | $85,230 | $82,630 | $57,440 | $106,710 | — |
| Maryland | $76,790 | $77,320 | $48,340 | $120,170 | 160 |
| Nebraska | $66,270 | $65,560 | $38,260 | $103,230 | 120 |
| South Dakota | $64,330 | $62,610 | $35,950 | $82,790 | 60 |
| Colorado | $63,560 | $68,720 | $51,880 | $79,160 | 70 |
| Indiana | $63,080 | $62,290 | $49,920 | $78,270 | 370 |
| Virginia | $62,960 | $68,400 | $48,640 | $93,390 | 600 |
| Montana | $62,920 | $61,650 | $50,450 | $80,050 | 90 |
| Delaware | $62,640 | $67,620 | $37,220 | $99,730 | 60 |
| North Carolina | $62,570 | $62,210 | $49,080 | $79,540 | 750 |
| Kansas | $62,560 | $62,040 | $44,200 | $79,340 | 310 |
| Washington | $62,460 | $68,060 | $52,420 | $86,280 | 40 |
| Michigan | $62,410 | $62,760 | $46,010 | $100,130 | 330 |
| New Mexico | $62,400 | $63,380 | $51,880 | $69,690 | 110 |
| Maine | $61,860 | $69,040 | $46,290 | $102,190 | 70 |
| North Dakota | $60,910 | $63,940 | $42,000 | $80,880 | 70 |
| Alabama | $60,060 | $62,280 | $45,650 | $81,360 | 260 |
| Wisconsin | $58,640 | $58,940 | $45,100 | $72,790 | 670 |
| Kentucky | $57,920 | $59,170 | $43,290 | $78,830 | 430 |
| Wyoming | $57,040 | $64,870 | $44,720 | $98,520 | 120 |
| Florida | $56,610 | $58,150 | $36,510 | $94,440 | 2,900 |
| Pennsylvania | $52,060 | $59,060 | $37,130 | $82,510 | 440 |
| Iowa | $52,000 | $55,410 | $36,400 | $77,640 | 360 |
| Arkansas | $49,340 | $51,980 | $36,900 | $71,440 | 200 |
| West Virginia | $47,640 | $54,500 | $42,840 | $75,770 | 90 |
| Hawaii | $47,590 | $47,180 | $38,480 | $58,360 | — |
| New York | $45,280 | $51,250 | $34,070 | $76,200 | 70 |
| Texas | $34,110 | $40,440 | $20,420 | $67,450 | 480 |
| Georgia | $31,760 | $47,580 | $15,080 | $62,380 | 210 |
Recruiters and job boards use several alternate titles for farm and home management educators. Knowing these variants widens your job search — listings for 4-H Agent or 4-H Club Agent frequently describe the same role. The list below is a sample of the most common industry variants.
This data helps you understand how Farm and Home Management Educators compares to others in the 25 category. Use it to make informed decisions based on verified data from BLS OEWS 2024 + O*NET 29.0.
careers with the closest data values to Farm and Home Management Educators
The CertifyWize editorial team aggregates and verifies careers data from BLS OEWS 2024 + O*NET 29.0. Every statistic on this site is cross-referenced against the official source before publication, with quarterly re-verification cycles.
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