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| Students obtain “hands-on” experience through summer dairy program |
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| Written by PD Staff Writer Dario Martinez |
| Tuesday, 29 June 2010 10:02 |
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The program teaches students about large herd dairy management. Attendance has doubled since the program began; 36 students participated this year, an increase of more than 60 percent from last year. “We enforce what is learned in the classroom by tying it in at the dairy farms we visit,” says MikeTomaszewski, a Texas A&M University professor and one of the program coordinators. “Students apply what they learn in real-world situations.” Courses this year included nutrition, genetics, breeding, facility design, heifer raising and human resource management among others. Tomaszewski says few universities have courses focused in these areas, giving students exposure to this type of educational experience.
The program consisted of two separate student groups. Due to the student enrollment increase, program coordinators implemented new courses this year to accommodate an advanced class consisting of alumni students and students further advanced in their studies than a first-year student. Matt Lucy and Scott Poock, professors at the University of Missouri, taught during the fourth week of the program. During this week, first-year students learned about herd reproductive function, evaluation and performance, whereas the advanced students learned about heifer management and advanced reproductive management.
Working alongside these professionals, students dissected reproductive tracts, palpated cows to find ovaries and determined the reproductive stage of ovaries. Other activities during the week included observing, testing and analyzing bull fertility. The advanced student group traveled to a 25,000-head dairy heifer-raising facility near Plainview to learn about heifer management on a large-scale operation. “This is a unique opportunity because most universities that contributed students to the program have closed their dairy herds,” says Bob Collier, a professor from the University of Arizona. “Students don’t have access to farms. Through this program, they have the opportunity to see the actual operation of commercial dairies which has opened their eyes and some doorways.” While attending the program, students are able to engage in more than just the topics they study. Networking among each other is also a goal.
The program concludes on the sixth week. During this final week, students employed what they learned during the previous weeks as they rode to local dairies with veterinarians and identified problems in dairy cattle. “This experience is great,” says Jasper DeVos, a student from Plainview, Texas. “I was surprised; I didn’t think the program would be this valuable of an opportunity.” PD For more information about the 2011 Southern Great Plains Dairy Consortium, please visit http://sgpdct.tamu.edu. The 2011 application is due February 15 and can be found on the consortium’s website. |
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“We are not just sitting in the classroom,” says Shay McDonald, a senior dairy science major from Texas A&M University. “We are able to get exposure we otherwise would not get.”
With oversight from Poock and Lucy, students dissected and discussed the internal anatomy of an ovary in the classroom. While visiting a dairy farm near Plainview, Texas, students learned how to use ultrasound technology to observe fetal development, as well as the sexing of fetuses.
“Students involved in the program stay in contact with each other,” Collier says. “This is also a bonding experience.”
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