Success StoryCombing Core Content with Natural Resources and Agriculture to Educate Students
Combing Core Content with Natural Resources and Agriculture to Educate Students
Author: Whitney Carman
Planning Unit: Grayson County CES
Major Program: Sustainable Agriculture
Plan of Work: Diversified Agriculture and Rural Development
Outcome: Initial Outcome
The average student in Grayson County is now three generations removed from agriculture, even though they rely on it every day. What people do not often realize is that core content can be taught using agriculture and natural resources as a platform where they learn both topics in their everyday lessons. Another highlight in today’s student curriculum is STEM (Science Technology Engineering and Math), one which agriculture fits very well. The agriculture and natural resources agent has been working diligently to work with youth and utilize those types of core content like STEM and infuse it with agriculture education. So when the high school 9th grade teacher reached out to the Extension Service for help on natural resource programming, the agent used those resources to educate students about agriculture and science. The agent made 2 class visits through the year, reaching 177 students (102 male, 75 female, 6 Black, 1 Asian, 3 American India, 1 native Hawaiian, and 2 other). The first session was a Soil Lab Kit project that is used to demonstrate simple pH, Nitrogen, Phosphorus, and Potassium tests, and what roles each of those chemicals play in the health of that soil. They then discussed the effects of erosion and ways to help aid in saving the top soil. The second session utilized the national 4-H Eco-Bot program where students had to be engineers to create an Eco-Bot to clean up a simulated oil spill. Students were very creative in using their items and were able utilize team-work, math, and engineering principles. The groups discussed the issue with oil spills and their effect on the environment.
Through these classes, the Agriculture and Natural Resources agent has gained an audience of youth for future educational programs. The science teacher has also began planning programs for the following year, so that the Extension Service can do a program with the youth once a trimester.
Stories by Whitney Carman
Wallace Avenue Community Garden Increasing Access to Nutritious Foods
In the most recent Community Health Needs Assessment, nutrition and obesity were two of the top heal... Read More
Lincoln Trail Area Fencing School
Fencing projects are an investment that many farmers do not take lightly. Done correctly, it can be ... Read More
Stories by Grayson County CES
4-H SET Squad
Grayson County 4-H has had a member on the state 4-H Science, Engineering, and Technology Board for ... Read More
Mini-Day Camps: A New Way to Cloverbud
The purpose of the 4-H Cloverbud program is to help young children learn life skills to become compe... Read More
Stories by Sustainable Agriculture
WAVE 4 River Counties Ag Initiative
According to the 2017 Census of Agriculture, Hickman County had 246 farm operations on 118,474 acres... Read More
Utilizing Tobacco Settlement Dollars to Build Youth Opportunities in Agriculture
According to the 2017 Census of Agriculture, there are 50,908 acres of land in 308 farms in Carroll ... Read More
© 2024 University of Kentucky, Martin-Gatton College of Agriculture, Food and Environment