Inverness teacher attends national agricultural workshop

Published 3:35 pm Monday, July 15, 2019

FROM STAFF REPORTS

Jen Nicholson sees more than 600 students a week as the library media specialist at Inverness Elementary School in Shelby County. After attending an American Farm Bureau Foundation for Agriculture workshop, she discovered lots of new tools to interest her students in science, technology, engineering and math.

Nichols was one of 60 educators from across the nation chosen to attend the workshop June 21-23 in Syracuse, New York. She was Alabama’s only representative.

“It was a wonderful program and very well done,” Nicholson said. “I met folks from throughout the agriculture industry and other educators from across the country. It was great talking to them about what we learned and about how we plan to use those things for students.”

In addition to the workshop in Syracuse, the American Farm Bureau Foundation for Agriculture also sponsored a workshop in Kansas. The On The Farm experience seeks to build awareness, understanding and a positive public perception of agriculture through education. Nicholson said the programs hit each target.

“Our unit was based around beef cattle production and covered everything from birth to harvest,” Nicholson said. “We talked directly to farmers, and they were completely transparent about everything. I thought it was fascinating to learn how much beef producers rely on genetics to help improve their herds. It was also interesting to learn that raising a calf to harvest is basically a two-year process and a lot goes into it before you have the possibility of a profit.”

Nicholson said she has several activities in mind for students thanks to what she learned. She’s planning a basic genetics workshop, a program on crop and forage rotation, and possibly an exercise focused on a cow’s life cycle.

“I found that farmers really care about the animals they raise and are concerned about improving the environment,” she said.