2. When do you need curriculum design?
• When you are offering educational programs
and opportunities for students & schools.
• When you want to move beyond ‘Ag Fact’
tours to offer programs with more substance
and relevance.
• When you want to be sure students ‘get it’
and can make connections between their
everyday lives, their communities, and their
futures in agriculture!
3. What are the educational goals of a farm-based curriculum?
Students
Teachers
Farm
4. What FBE Need to Know…
What Teachers Need to Know…
Curriculum is not the same
as a lesson.
Farms are complex
systems of economics,
ecology, history, plant and
animal agriculture.
Assessment is ongoing and
important.
Don’t disregard educational
standards or best practices.
Use teachers as educational
partners not just
chaperones.
Farms are excellent
classrooms but important
safety and management
rules must be followed.
Farms are not zoos,
amusement parks, or
museums - they are
working lands that bring
us food, fiber, fodder.
5. The student becomes the
‘translator’ between the
language of education
and agriculture:
Pigs are cool because
they allow me to study
and become proficient in:
• Ag History/Heritage
• Farm Business
• Life Sciences
6. What kinds of curriculum design work with ag?
Experiential
Process
Oriented
Technical-
Scientific
Non-Technical
Non-Scientific
Product
Oriented
7. Q: But I’m not an educator – and I don’t have the time to learn a whole new
language of education just to put a few lessons together – what do I do?
A: Team up with fellow ag educators and a few teachers willing to help you.
Q: Who can help us do that?
A: The Mid-Atlantic Farm-Based Educators Network!
9. Understanding By Design (Backwards Design)
Outcomes
•
•
•
•
Understandings
Essential Questions
Students will know…
Students will be able to…
Evidence
• Performance Tasks
• Written & Oral Responses
• Self-Reflection
Lesson Plan
• Overview of Session
• Instructional Model
McTighe & Wiggins (2004) Understanding by Design , Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development
10. Now we need an Instructional Model that fits our
Curriculum Design…
Discovery
Learning
Inquiry
Learning
Problembased
Learning
ProjectBased
Learning
Social
Learning
Constructive
Learning
Woo Hoo!
11. What is constructive learning and why does it work
best in experiential learning?
“Constructivism is a learning strategy that draws on students' existing knowledge,
beliefs, and skills. With a constructivist approach, students synthesize new
understanding from prior learning and new information.
The constructivist teacher sets up problems and monitors student exploration,
guides student inquiry, and promotes new patterns of thinking. Working mostly
with raw data, primary sources, and interactive material, constructivist teaching
asks students to work with their own data and learn to direct their own
explorations. Ultimately, students begin to think of learning as accumulated,
evolving knowledge. Constructivist approaches work well with learners of all
ages, including adults. “ - WBGH, Enhancing Education
16. Peggy Eppig
Mid-Atlantic Farm-Based Education
MD Ag Ed Foundation
Havre de Grace, MD 20178
410-939-9030 (office)
443-299-8552 (cell)
peppig@maefonline.com
Karen Fedor
Maryland Farm to School
MD Dept. of Ag
Annapolis, MD
Karen.Fedor@maryland.gov