By WILL PERKINS
Glasgow News 1
Donning their new blue corduroy jackets, freshman Jenna Grace Pedigo and sophomore Noah Morgan joined other Glasgow High School students in celebrating career and technical education. They gathered around Glasgow Mayor Henry Royse and Barren County Judge-Executive Jamie Bewley Byrd earlier this week as February was declared CTE Month.
Pedigo and Morgan are ambassadors for the high school’s new Future Farmers of America chapter.
“For the first year here, I mean it is really exciting because we’ve never had it,” Morgan said. “We get to see other schools do it. …You’re looking at their uniforms like: ‘Man, I wish I could wear that with Glasgow in the back of it and represent my school and myself and my name.’
“To do it, finally, is fulfilling — being able to be a part of the FFA journey.”
In addition to joining the FFA, Glasgow Independent students can now take classes in the new Agribusiness pathway, which Pedigo said has been really exciting.
“It’s just such a good program,” she said. “We went to Triple H Dairy as a class, and we got to learn how dairy farms worked and about the milk process.”
Pedigo said she would see Barren County students get these types of opportunities in the past.
“So it feels good to have it here.”
Glasgow High School sophomore Noah Morgan and freshman Jenna Grace Pedigo pose with Glasgow Mayor Henry Royse and Barren County Judge-Executive Jamie Bewley Byrd on Jan. 20, 2026, in the high school’s front lobby. The heads of the city and county signed a proclamation declaring Feb. 21-28 as National FFA Week. Will Perkins/Glasgow News 1







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