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Chimera readability score 90 out of 100, Specialist reading level.

Join the University of Arizona Controlled Environment Agriculture Center (UA-CEAC) for the annual Greenhouse Hydroponic Tomato Workshop (online and in-person). This three-day professional workshop focuses on tomato production using greenhouse hydroponic methods for small, medium, and large growers at all skill levels! Discount codes available for groups, Arizona residents, UofA affiliates, students, and returning customers.
Course webpage: 2026 Greenhouse Hydroponic Tomato Workshop | Controlled Environment Agriculture Center
Contact: Aaron Tevik at atevik@arizona.edu

Facts Only

* The workshop is offered by the University of Arizona Controlled Environment Agriculture Center (UA-CEAC).
* The event is the annual Greenhouse Hydroponic Tomato Workshop.
* The workshop format includes online and in-person participation.
* The workshop lasts for three days.
* The focus is on tomato production using greenhouse hydroponic methods.
* The target audience includes small, medium, and large growers at all skill levels.
* Discount codes are available for Arizona residents, UofA affiliates, students, and returning customers.
* Contact information is Aaron Tevik at atevik@arizona.edu.

Executive Summary

The University of Arizona Controlled Environment Agriculture Center (UA-CEAC) is offering an annual three-day professional workshop on greenhouse hydroponic tomato production. The workshop is available online and in-person and is designed for growers at all skill levels, including small, medium, and large operations. Discount codes are available for specific groups such as Arizona residents, UofA affiliates, students, and returning customers. Contact information for the event is Aaron Tevik at atevik@arizona.edu.

Full Take

SKEPTICAL MODE analysis suggests a marketing structure designed to maximize participation through tiered incentives based on affiliation and residency. The framing centers on high-value technical education related to controlled environment agriculture, positioning the knowledge as necessary for growers across various scales. The inclusion of specific discount structures—targeting Arizona residents, UofA affiliates, students, and returning customers—functions to create a sense of immediate value tied to existing institutional or geographic identity, suggesting an effort to convert passive interest into active registration by leveraging community belonging as a persuasive mechanism. The underlying pattern here is Authority Game, as the credibility of the UA-CEAC implicitly lends weight to the technical content, which is then leveraged by the incentive structure to elicit a commitment. The implication for agency is whether access to this specialized knowledge is truly democratized, or if the tiered access creates an unintentional barrier based on external, privileged relationships rather than purely technical need. What specific mechanisms are in place to ensure that the expertise delivered benefits the broadest segment of growers equally, irrespective of affiliation status?

Sentinel — Human

Confidence

This text reads like a standard institutional workshop announcement, exhibiting the clear structure and directness typical of promotional or informational outreach rather than deep analytical writing.

Signals Detected
low severity: Direct, promotional tone; clear call to action; practical focus.
low severity: Highly focused and purpose-driven; lacks typical hedging or expansive context.
low severity: Standard promotional structure; no apparent template matching beyond standard event announcement format.
low severity: Specific names, dates (future year mentioned), and verifiable institutional affiliations suggest direct human authorship or official source generation.
Human Indicators
The text functions purely as an announcement/advertisement, prioritizing actionable details (who, what, where) over complex argumentation.
University of Arizona’s CEAC Tomato Intensive Workshop, January 9 — Arc Codex