AgricultureMississippi

Animal Science in Mississippi

See How It Works

Mississippi's Animal Science pathway prepares students for careers in livestock production, animal health, and agricultural operations. Students develop expertise in animal breeding, nutrition, health management, and facility management while understanding modern livestock production practices. This pathway serves Mississippi's significant cattle, poultry, and aquaculture industries.

Curriculum emphasizes hands-on experience with animal care, livestock management, and facility operations. Students learn scientific principles underlying animal production, disease prevention, and welfare practices reflecting standards used by professional livestock operations throughout Mississippi.

Graduates find employment with livestock operations, animal health facilities, agricultural research institutions, and animal production companies throughout the state. The pathway creates pathways into herd management, veterinary technology, or agricultural science.

Animal Science at a Glance

3

Courses

8

Credentials

4

Career Paths

State Standards & Framework

Mississippi CTE Standards for Animal Science require demonstrated competency in animal care, breeding principles, nutrition management, and health practices. Students must achieve proficiency in animal welfare, facility management, and industry standards from Mississippi Department of Education and Career Success.

Pathway standards integrate workplace readiness skills including safety, animal welfare ethics, and scientific reasoning. Students gain experience with livestock breeds and management practices reflecting Mississippi's diverse animal agriculture operations.

View Mississippi CTE Framework →

Typical Course Sequence

Course
Principles of Agriscience
Diversified Agriculture - Animals Core
Advanced Animal Science

View Mississippi course standards →

Industry Certifications & Credentials

Career Opportunities

Salary data from U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (May 2024). Growth projections from BLS Employment Projections (2023-2033). Cost-of-living adjustment uses BEA Regional Price Parities (2023). Entry-level salaries reflect the 25th percentile; experienced salaries reflect the median.

Livestock Technician

Entry Level
$37,440in Mississippi
National: $31,220+20%

Salary range: $37,440 - $40,890

Adjusted for cost of living: $42,892

-4.6% growth700 openings/yr
Search jobs on Indeed →

Herd Manager

Experienced
$88,290in Mississippi
National: $102,950-14%

Salary range: $58,360 - $133,270

Adjusted for cost of living: $101,146

+0.4% growth4,100 openings/yr
Search jobs on Indeed →

Animal Production Supervisor

Experienced
$64,510in Mississippi
National: $71,190-9%

Salary range: $49,690 - $83,110

Adjusted for cost of living: $73,903

+2.5% growth3,700 openings/yr
Search jobs on Indeed →

Agricultural Consultant

Experienced
$87,980in Mississippi
National: $87,980

Salary range: $67,970 - $115,200

Adjusted for cost of living: $100,790

+2.3% growth100 openings/yr
Search jobs on Indeed →

Work-Based Learning Opportunities

Students work with livestock operations throughout Mississippi, gaining hands-on experience in animal care, facility management, and production practices.

Career & Technical Student Organization

Students in this pathway can participate in National FFA Organization, gaining leadership experience and competing in career-related events.

How Sage Helps Mississippi CTE Programs

AI-Powered Curriculum

Generate standards-aligned lesson plans in minutes, not months

Mississippi Standards Built In

Pre-loaded with Mississippi's CTE standards and frameworks

Teacher Customization

Teachers personalize content while maintaining standards alignment

Ongoing Updates

Curriculum stays current as Mississippi standards and industry needs evolve

Related Pathways in Mississippi

Agricultural Technician

Mississippi's Agricultural Technician pathway prepares students for essential roles supporting agricultural production, equipment maintenance, and farm operations. Students develop practical skills in crop management, animal husbandry, equipment operation, and farm maintenance while understanding modern agricultural practices. This pathway serves Mississippi's significant agricultural sector, which generates billions in economic activity annually. Curriculum emphasizes hands-on experience with farm equipment, livestock handling, and crop production techniques aligned with practices used by farmers throughout Mississippi. Students learn precision agriculture basics, equipment troubleshooting, and farm management principles that support sustainable and productive operations. Graduates find employment with farms, agricultural cooperatives, equipment dealers, and agribusiness operations throughout Mississippi. The pathway creates pathways into farm management, agricultural sales, or continued education in agricultural sciences.

Agriculture

Agriculture Science and Technology

Mississippi's Agriculture Science and Technology pathway prepares students for careers in the state's vital agricultural sector, supporting Mississippi's $7.5 billion agriculture industry including cotton, soybeans, poultry, catfish aquaculture, and forestry. Agriculture remains foundational to Mississippi's economy, creating diverse career opportunities from production agriculture to agricultural business and technology. Students explore plant and animal science, agricultural mechanics, soil science, agribusiness, and emerging agricultural technologies through hands-on supervised agricultural experiences (SAE). The pathway emphasizes sustainable agriculture practices, precision agriculture technologies, and agricultural entrepreneurship essential for modern farming operations. Mississippi's Agriculture programs leverage the state's strong agricultural heritage and Mississippi State University Extension partnerships to provide real-world learning experiences. Students participate in FFA competitions, agricultural research projects, and farm management experiences preparing them for Mississippi's agricultural careers or postsecondary agricultural education.

Agriculture, Food & Natural Resources

Crop Production

Mississippi's Crop Production pathway prepares students for careers in agricultural crop management, farming operations, and production leadership. Students develop expertise in soil science, crop selection, pest management, and harvesting practices while understanding principles of sustainable crop production. This pathway serves Mississippi's substantial cotton, corn, soybean, and rice farming operations. Curriculum emphasizes hands-on experience with crop production from soil preparation through harvest, incorporating modern agricultural technology and precision farming techniques. Students learn disease and pest management, fertilization strategies, and marketing concepts reflecting practices used by successful farmers across Mississippi. Graduates pursue careers as crop farmers, production managers, agricultural consultants, or sales representatives with agricultural companies. Many continue into agricultural science programs at universities.

Agriculture

Ready to Build Animal Science Programs at Scale?

See how Sage can help you create standards-aligned curriculum for Animal Science in Mississippi.

Aligned to Mississippi Standards
Curriculum in Weeks, Not Years
Ongoing Partnership
No commitment required 20-minute discovery call