In the teen center at the Franklin Library in the Phillips neighborhood of Minneapolis, it doesn't take long to figure out that this isn't your typical sheep shearing and quiltmaking 4-H Club.
No longer the exclusive domain of rural kids and county fairs, the new 4-H is as likely to deal with robotics as it is roosters.
"We try to create a club that reflects the voices of the people involved, the values of the community, the things that matter, the dreams, the passions, the aspirations," said Kathryn Sharpe, a program manager for the University of Minnesota Extension Service, which coordinates the state's 4-H programs.
At the Franklin Library 4-H Club, those voices come largely from Somali, Ethiopian and other East African kids. They are among 1,600 kids in urban 4-H programs in Minnesota, out of more than 33,000 overall.
Some were born in refugee camps before coming to the United States. Before joining, most knew nothing of the century-old agricultural traditions of 4-H, which has some of its roots in Minnesota.
Club members do a decent job of remembering what the four H's stand for (head, heart, hands and health), but they don't recite it like a kid from the 1960s might. Last year the Franklin Library club began exploring 4-H robotics, which culminated in a presentation at the Hennepin County Fair.
When she heard about a 4-H program at the local library, 17-year-old Habso Khalifa, who was born in a Kenyan refugee camp, admits she thought the idea of getting together in the library after school was "lame." After moving to Minneapolis from Baltimore, she came one day and liked it. She came back the next day to find out the club only meets on Tuesdays. She's been coming for three years.
"My mom always asks me where I go on Tuesdays, and I say, 'Mom, there is a place I call a second home,' " she said. "I was upset when I moved here, then I met the 4-H and that's when everything changed. I learned a lot of things I don't learn in school. I learn to communicate in different ways. I learned how many different people live in the community."