Ag
in the Classroom teaches Mount Pulaski students about pumpkins
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[November 08, 2021]
Ag in the Classroom, a University of Illinois Extension
partnership with Logan County Farm Bureau to educate youngsters on
the importance of agriculture in our daily lives, is back up and
running for the 2021-22 school year.
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Since its inception, extension staff member Amy Hyde
has been the ag educator with the program. She is excited about
being back out with the kids.
In October, the students in Kindergarten through fifth grade
students at Mount Pulaski Grade School learned about growing
pumpkins. The third through fifth grade classes then made a pumpkin
Catapult and tested their engineering skills using candy pumpkins.
The students learned that over 85% of the world’s canned pumpkin is
processed in nearby Morton, Libby’s cannery.
The Kindergarten through second grades learned about the pumpkin
life cycle and the value of listening and following directions
through a fun jack-o-lantern glyph!
The third through fifth grade students got to see how Libby’s
produces and cans pumpkins and built their catapults. Pumpkin
pitching is a popular activity in the Morton area.
The STEM challenge, using Science, Technology, Engineering and Math,
was for students to help the farmer with his equipment breakdown and
the farmer’s need to get his pumpkins in the wagon!
The Pumpkin Ag Mag is online if you would like to explore it further
at
http://www.aginthe
classroom.org/TeacherResources/AgMags/
Pumpkin%20Ag%20Mag_Interactive_4.23%20Update.pdf.
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About Ag in the Classroom
Logan County Ag in the Classroom program is sponsored by Logan County University
of Illinois Extension, Logan County Farm Bureau, Ag in the Classroom and
Logan-Sangamon-Menard Agricultural Education Partnership.
The goal of this organization is to teach students about the farms where their
food comes from.
[Amy Hyde]
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