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Showing posts from March, 2022

SAE visit to the Vet Clinic

I was able to visit Courtney at one of her SAE projects. She is a Sophomore this year and an FFA officer. Her career goals are currently to become a large animal vet. She is not enrolled in an ag classes this year due to her high level of science classes, but she is enrolled in an independent study for SAE.  She has multiple SAEs but the one we visited was where she works at a local vet clinic. She is a vet tech assistant essentially. The clinic was Friends for Life Vet Clinic. There they focus on mainly cats and dogs, all pets, and they have no large animals.  During the visit, Courtney showed us a tour of the clinic. She took us through the different exams room, kennels, surgical areas and discussed how things were organized and ran at the clinic. Courtney works along side the vet and vet techs to help make sure area is cleaned, tools and supplies are organized, and animals are taken care of. Unfortunately, due to insurance reasons, she can not assist with any surgeries or p...

Visit to Dover!

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 I was able to visit Dover Area High School and their Ag Program with Michaela.  It was a great visit  and cool to see another program that is different than Honesdale in many ways. This was a 3 teacher program and had brand new facilities since it is a new school. I think it would be nice to have the support of 3 teachers and have someone in your corner essentially, but I also think that can bring some challenges too.  The classrooms were newer which was nice that they were updated, but 2 of the 3 teachers had essentially regular classrooms. With that they were more crowded with the bigger classes they had but was still nice to have new technology and resources. While I was there, I got to visit their greenhouse where most of their plant science class takes place in and also is one student's SAE project. Another really cool aspect to their greenhouse is it is connected to the classroom through a head house. I think this can help with management and would be a nice s...

Champ Comes to Class!

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This week I was able to bring a bottle baby goat, Champ, from my house into to class for the week, which was an awesome opportunity for my animal science class to learn hands on.  I always have talked about how I want to create hands-on opportunities for my students to get real life experience and I was able to do that. We went away from my unit plan somewhat and the students just got to learn. This goat had issues with breathing and his front legs so students had to brainstorm how to fix this and take care of this. We are between animal health and physical exams units so this fit in pretty well.  The students decided to try and splint his legs and we also practiced giving shots and taking vital signs. Along with this I made students take records of everything we did to Champ which was perfect for talking about keeping records. It is a lot easier to talk about how to keep records and why that would be important while the goat is right in front of you.  I hope as I continu...

Inquiry Based Learning

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How do we best give up control for students to inquire but still manage their safety and learning?   This week we made yogurt in my intro class which went well in the fact that they enjoyed making and tasting, however, going forward I want to think about how can I better set up labs to make them more meaningful. In an ideal world, this lesson was supposed to be 3 days but due to a snowday it became 2 lessons with no day for provide context or background so the first day we had to help students moving to get the yogurt ready to set and the second day was taste test along with a few conclusion question but with having students at all different paces there was no real wrap up so how do I make that meaningful? I do plan to go back next week and review what happened, but what tips are there to have student inquire without background but still help them get the content you intend? In my animal science class we did the tracking the spread lesson which the students enjoyed and it went extr...

Spirit Games, Strawberries, and Seeding

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This week was busy as usual, here are a few highlights! We started out the week with Spirit Games, which is most definitely a must see event at Honesdale high school. Students take a pause from classes for the day compete against the other grades for a ultimate winner in a variety of games from volleyball to relays to dance battles. It was cool to sit back and watch all the students come together and get involved. I have never seen something quite like that but hope that my future school does some sort of activities to get student involved. We also had our strawberries come in this week for our fundraiser. I was able to see how Honesdale ran their fundraiser and ideas for when I am completely in charge of a fundraiser. One nice part was we were able to keep them in the head house and after school students and parents and others came to pick up their strawberries and then the students were responsible for  delivering the strawberry orders that they got. I think this fundraiser was f...