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Alabama Certified Nursery
Professional
(ACNP) The Alabama Nursery &
Landscape Association is dedicated to developing the skills and
knowledge of its industry members. The ALNLA designs programs,
seminars and events to provide education and training for its
members. The Alabama Certified Nursery Professional Program
was implemented in 1979, following two years of research and
the cooperative efforts of industry professionals and
educators in organization and preparation. Realizing the need
to identify their employees as highly-trained, qualified
industry experts, more and more business owners and managers
are encouraging their personnel to take the exam and become an
ALABAMA CERTIFIED NURSERY PROFESSIONAL. Certification status
is earned through practical experience in the industry,
passing a written test on the basics of our industry, and a
commitment to continuing education. Educational seminars are
held prior to the Trade Show.
Alabama
Certified Landscape Professional (ACLP)
ACLP Graduates
Tony
Glover - Regional Extension Agent (205-879-6964)
We
will be conducting our scheduled Alabama Certified Landscape
Professional Exam (ACLP) at the Birmingham Botanical
Gardens on January 18th and 19th, 2007.
The Alabama Certified Landscape Professional Program (ACLP),
based on the program developed in Georgia by the Georgia
Green Industry Association and the University of Georgia,
offers landscape professionals the opportunity to be
recognized as the "best in their field" by mastering the
Alabama Certified Landscape Professional test. Successfully
used in Georgia since 1993, the program here is in its
infancy, and marketing materials for those who pass the
program are being developed to help you announce your
achievement to your client base.
All landscapers in the State of Alabama are required to
have two licenses- the SLP, or Setting of Landscape Plants,
and the OTPC, or Ornamental Turf and Pest Control.
Successfully testing for these two licenses illustrates a
basic proficiency in the field. The ACLP, administered as a
joint project of the Alabama Nursery and Landscape
Association and the Alabama Cooperative Extension System, is
a voluntary testing program that acknowledges those
in the landscape profession who are willing to test their
skills at the next level: to show to themselves, their
colleagues and their customers that they have a thorough
knowledge and understanding of job skills required to be
successful in the industry.
All state plant setters and design tests are still
required to be in the profession. The ACLP exam cannot
be taken in lieu of the Alabama state-required licensing
exams.
The test consists of four written components and nine
outdoor hands-on components and requires two days to
complete. Students who enroll to take the test are provided
a 200+ page study manual, instructions on how to study and
prepare for the exam, and access to a WEB Study Site
developed by the University of Georgia.
The four written components of the test include:
- A multiple-choice test
based on the study manual.
- A plan reading skill test
that requires participants to read and
interpret a landscape plan, to answer questions
pertaining to the plan, and to make calculations, such
as square foot areas, plant quantities per area, etc.
- A test on common insect,
disease and environmental problems.
Participants must identify 25 samples (photos or actual
specimens).
- A plant identification
test that requires participants to identify fifty plant
samples from a list of over 270 provided. Actual samples
of trees, shrubs, vines, ground covers, herbaceous
perennials, annuals, weeds and turfgrasses will be
placed on tables for ID.
The nine outdoor hands-on components include:
- Plan Lay-out: The
participant will be given a planting plan and will be
required to arrange containerized plants within a given
are according to the plan.
- Tree Planting and Staking:
The participant must plant a tree according to
specifications provided and show how to install a
staking system.
- Grading and Drainage:
The participant must read a topographical map and
demonstrate how to contour the grade of a site in a 10
ft. x 10 ft. sand box.
- Pruning: The
participant will show where and how to make pruning cuts
and how to prune selected trees and shrubs.
- Sod Installation:
The participant must demonstrate the correct technique
for laying sod in a given area.
- Job Evaluation -
Installation: The participant will evaluate a
recently installed landscape and identify five
acceptable and five unacceptable conditions.
- Job Evaluation -
Maintenance: The participant will evaluate a
section of landscape and list five acceptable and five
unacceptable practices previously performed by a
maintenance crew.
- Pesticide Application:
The participant will demonstrate how to mix and apply
pesticides properly and will discuss appropriate
clothing to wear during pesticide application. He/she
must also be prepared to discuss handling and disposal
techniques.
- Equipment Operation:
The participant will discuss routine maintenance
practices and proper operation of several power
equipment items (mowers, weedeaters, edgers, etc.).
The written and hands-on portions of the exam are scored
separately. Certification is based on a cumulative point
score. Each component must be passed with a 70 percent
score. Participants who previously passed the Certified
Nursery Professional exam are exempt from the Plant ID
portion of the test.
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Written test: |
100
points |
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Plant Take-Off and Plant Selection: |
25
points |
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Pest
and Problem ID: |
25
points |
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Plant ID: |
50
points |
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Hands-on Components: |
10
points each |
The written and hands-on exams are each given at least
two times each year. The written components are given at the
Gulf State Horticultural Expo in January/February and at the
Southern Nurserymen's Convention in Atlanta in August. The
hands-on components are given spring and fall, currently at
Auburn, but soon expanding to other locations in the state.
For information about testing dates and locations and
testing fees, contact the ALNLA office at 334-821-5148.
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Voluntary: This is an industry-supported program, entirely voluntary, designed to offer
recognition and education for industry professionals.
·
Contacts: Alabama Nursery and Landscape Association
(334-821-5148, email
info@alnla.org).
Dr. Ken Tilt Auburn University (334-844-5484, email tiltken@auburn.edu).
·
Study Materials: the study manual
may be
purchased through ALNLA (above) and on the website (www.ag.auburn.edu/landscape).
The website offers pictures of all the plant materials and
pest identification samples required for the test. There
is a video tape that gives a visual overview of the practical
exam that can be requested from ALNLA or Ken Tilt.
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Cost: The cost of the program is
$100 for members of ALNLA and $150 for non-members. This
includes your manual and the cost of the two tests.
·
Testing: You are required
to make a 70 percent score or above on several tests. There is
a one day written test that includes 100 questions, a plant
identification exam with 50 plant samples to ID and 25 pest
specimens to recognize. There is also an architectural
landscape plan take-off exam with 25 questions. A
separate day has a practical exam requiring applicants to show
their knowledge of planting, pruning, grading (no equipment
required) reading architectural plans, operating and
maintaining machinery, laying sod and application and safety
of using chemicals. Regional Horticulture Extension Agents
will soon be able to monitor written exams in 6 regional areas
of the state to make the testing opportunities more frequent
and convenient.
·
Continuing Education: Part of
being a professional is constantly striving to keep up with
the latest information and technology in the field.
Requirements are being formulated for earning points towards
continued certification by attending educational programs or
doing home study assignments each year.
·
The ACLP member will receive
public recognition and promotion for their achievement.
This is a University-aided, industry-managed, voluntary
program. Individuals completing the program will be asked to
help in testing and teaching when time is available. The
standards are set and maintained by the industry.
The
program is new and still evolving in
Alabama
but has been very successful in
Georgia
. Please call or email for more information. We want to help
you achieve recognition for a new standard of excellence.
Special Seminars/Bulletins
ALNLA responds to the needs of our members for current information
involving issues or concerns about the industry. Bulletins are
sent to members relaying information such as U.S.D.A. guidelines
and E.P.A. actions. To provide a greater depth of coverage,
special seminars bring in experts to answer members' questions.
A large component of
the educational program of the Alabama Nursery & Landscape Association
is its participation in the planning and implementation of the
educational program for the Gulf
States Horticultural Expo.
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