MURFREESBORO — Some
1,200 Murfreesboro City Schools’ children experienced the sights, sounds and
smells of life on the MTSU farm and dairy Tuesday (May 12) in Lascassas,
Tennessee.
It took 19 buses to bring the third-graders from 12 city
schools — Black Fox, Erma Siegel, Hobgood, John Pittard, Northfield, Overall
Creek, Reeves-Rogers and Scales Elementary; Bradley and Cason Lane Academy; the
Discovery School at Bellwood and Mitchell-Neilson Schools — from the city to
the country on a picture-perfect day.
The field trip is part of a partnership between Murfreesboro
City Schools and MTSU. The two entities have collaborated to bring more than
21,000 students for three Education Days at MTSU women’s basketball games and
teamed for a multitude of student-teaching events and educational and academic
endeavors through the years.
“MTSU is a fantastic partner,” said Meri Leigh Smith,
coordinated school health supervisor with the City Schools. “They have been
very gracious in hosting all 1,200 students, supplying milk and being on hand
to be educational spokespeople.”
MTSU faculty, students and staff, city schools’ faculty and
staff and even help from Leshan Dixon, Rutherford County Health Department
health educator, and others combined to facilitate the handling of two groups
of about 600 students in separate two-hour field trips.
While one group visited four stations atop the hill with the
dairy facilities, another group of 300 moved through four stations featuring
agriculture.
The dairy area stations included feed and equipment and MTSU
chocolate milk, the milking parlor, the pack barn and compost and an education
station, where the students learned how cream is turned into butter.
“I really liked the cows,” said Caitlen Olsen, 10, a
Discovery School at Bellwood student who was shy about approaching a cow. “When
I petted the cow, it felt both rough and soft. The cow produces one of my
favorite drinks. I love milk.”
The agriculture-related stations featured bees, beekeeping
and honey, feed and equipment, chocolate milk, plants, vegetables and
greenhouse and a city schools’ education area making a craft out of lima beans.
MTSU senior plant and soil science major Viktoria Coan of
Franklin, Tennessee, told the youngsters that while their parents may buy food
at grocery stores, it actually comes from the farm.
Murfreesboro City Schools participates in the national
Farm2School Network program.
Smith said the students who visited the farm and dairy,
officially called the School of Agribusiness and Agriscience Experiential
Learning and Research Center, already have been shown the transportation and
distribution side of the process. By the end of the term, they will learn about
good gardening practices.
“They’re getting to experience a little bit of that today,”
added Smith, who hopes future City Schools’ students can visit the MTSU
property.
MTSU faculty member Alanna Vaught coordinated the effort for
MTSU.
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