Models that relate composite reflectance to its components are useful for inferring crop growth information from measured scene reflectance. Radiation measurements in Thematic Mapper bands (TM1, TM2, TM3, and TM4) were made from cotton, soybean, sunflower and grain sorghum at three stages of growth and used to evaluate three reflectance models. Two models, AIRM1 and AIRM2, assumed that scene components contribute in an additive independent manner to composite reflectance. The third model, TRIM, assumes that radiation transmitted through the canopy interacts with bare soil in two scene components. The AIRM2 and TRIM models divide the composite reflectance into canopy, bare soil, and shadow components, but AIRM1 considers only canopy and bare soil. Ranking of models in order of decreasing accuracy for predicting composite reflectance in bands TM3 and TM4 was AIRM2, TRIM, and AIRM1. The AIRM1 and AIRM2 models estimated average TM3 reflectance at full plant cover between 1 and 4 per cent for all crops. Their estimations in band TM4 were 60 per cent for cotton, soybean, and sunflower with grain sorghum being 50 percent.