Success Story4-H Embryology
4-H Embryology
Author: Kelly Smith
Planning Unit: Jefferson County CES
Major Program: Agriculture
Plan of Work: Promoting Sustainable Agriculture, Natural Resources, and Urban Forestry
Outcome: Initial Outcome
Many classrooms lack direct, hands-on science experiences that connect curricular concepts, like life cycles, nutrition and animal care to real world applications. Without these experiential learning opportunities, students often struggle to see how classroom lessons translate into everyday life skills.
The Jefferson County 4-H Embryology program partnered with 23 area schools and numerous homeschool families to help provide the hands on experience.
We provided participating teachers with:
- A complete embryology curriculum packet
- Incubators and fertilized eggs
- Guidance on integrating embryology lessons and best practices for chick care
Schools included this program year were Anchorage School, Ascension School, Bloom Elementary, Blue Lick Elementary, Brooklawn Schools, Chance School, Cochran Elementary, Coral Ridge Elementary, Eisenhower Elementary, Fairdale Elementary, Field Elementary, Hazelwood Elementary, Maupin Elementary, Norton Commons Elementary, Norton Elementary, Our Savior Lutheran School, Portland Christian School, St. Mary’s Academy, St. Nicholas Academy, Tully Elementary, Watterson Elementary, Westport Road Baptist Church Pre-school, plus homeschool families.
Over 2,000 youth engaged in the program this year, representing many areas throughout Jefferson County.
Post-program evaluations showed that 100% of participating teachers observed measurable gains in student understanding of the chicken life cycle and animal-care responsibilities. Educators also reported universal improvements in teamwork behaviors such as communication, role-sharing and problem-solving and increased student awareness of nutrition and food-source concepts. In student feedback, all participants rated the hands-on hatching process as “very important” for their learning. These evaluation data demonstrate that the 4-H Embryology program not only enhanced scientific literacy but also fostered key life skills and sustained engagement across more than 2,000 young learners.
Stories by Kelly Smith
Learning more than Sewing
Studies indicate that sewing is not only a productive hobby and life skill, but it can also reduce s... Read More
Jam, Butter and Biscuits camp
Jefferson County 4-H Youth had taken an off day at school and learned how to make some southern deli... Read More
Stories by Jefferson County CES

Inc. Farm Program and Millers Lane
The problem was lack of access to land and not having access to farming and business classes.The edu... Read More

Winter Cover Crop Giveaway for Community Gardens and Jefferson County Residents
The problem found within community gardens is soil erosion and poor soil quality due to over product... Read More
© 2024 University of Kentucky, Martin-Gatton College of Agriculture, Food and Environment