Success StoryAg Safety Day



Ag Safety Day

Author: Katelyn Squires

Planning Unit: Green County CES

Major Program: Active Living and Health Promotions General

Plan of Work: Making Healthy Lifestyle Choices

Outcome: Initial Outcome

Providing rural youth knowledge and strategies to be safe in their homes and communities is a foundation skill for being a responsible adult.  Youth are at increased risk of experiencing certain types of harm. Rural youth are more likely to die in car accidents, farm accidents, and suicides than urban youth. They are also more likely to experience violence like bullying.

 

Rural youth may have fewer resources to cope with harm. Rural communities often have fewer mental health providers, substance abuse treatment programs, and other social services than urban communities. This can make it more difficult for rural youth to get help when they need it. Supporting safety for rural youth is essential for building strong and vibrant rural communities. When youth are safe and healthy, they are more likely to stay in their communities and contribute to their local economies.

 

Green County Extension partnered with the Progressive Agriculture Foundation to offer third-grade students a safety day of practical hands-on learning activities to increase their awareness and recognition of unsafe areas in their lives.  Through a $1840 in-kind grant of curriculum, training and take-home items provided by Progressive Agriculture, 115 youth participated in the program led by fifteen community volunteers.  Youth participated in safety booths related to unsafe areas around their home, alternative lifestyle habits recognizing simple exercises, detecting the sun’s possible damage during the winter months and how to make local water bodies like ponds and streams safer through simple household products like a “floating jug” on a rope as a tossible floatation device. 


Students were able to identify and learn various activities that went along with physical fitness through a game of charades. Students picked physical activity cards and acted them out for the group. This game allowed students to learn different forms of physical fitness that they could implement in their lives. Out of the 115 students, 100% of them gave me an example of an activity that they do that requires physical fitness. On the other hand, around 95% of the students could give me the amount of physical activity that is required in one day. 

 

Of the 115 youth participants, all youth were able to identify and communicate a new safety rule they had learned during the event. They documented this new skill by drawing a picture of the new rule they learned.  All youth created a sun safety device to demonstrate when their body was being exposed to the sun’s rays as a reminder to wear sunscreen or alternate clothes to protect their skin.
 






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about 3 months ago by Katelyn Squires

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