Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Farm Safety Days


Throughout my internship at Carle, I have been working all semester for the Progressive Ag Safety Days events put on by Carle.  This spring there were three safety days.  These safety days were in Gibson City, Piatt County, and Vermilion County.  These safety days range for students in 4th to 6th grade depending on the school.  According to Carle, 

“each year, more than 100 children are killed in farming accidents nationwide.  These hands-on safety days teach children how to accept responsibility for their own safety, how to deal with farm emergencies and what it would be like to live with the consequences.  School staff and community leaders help select topics that are most appropriate for their community.”

Part of my job relating to these safety days has been many different tasks.  I have contacted schools to verify classes attending, teacher names, and phone numbers.  I have created excel sheets with each teacher and his or her class.  After creating the excel sheets I organized classes and teachers by schools and then by each safety day.

Another part of preparing for the safety days is creating nametags for each student and teacher.  A student and teacher each get a nametag, lanyard, and goodie bag.  Stuffing goodie bags and teacher packets were long days of organization, attention to detail, and volunteers who came in to help.  Without volunteers and organization the process of preparing materials for the safety days would take much longer. 

Students and teachers also get a safety day t-shirt.  This year there were close to 900 hundred t-shirts.  Amy, my supervisor, and I spent a couple days sorting through them and putting them into categories by class and then by school.  Below is a photo of the sorting day. 


This past Friday was the first safety day.  I helped with the set up, took photos for Amy and led two different stations.  I taught students about chemical safety and water safety. Below are some pictures of the safety day.  This coming week I will be preparing for the Vermilion County safety day, which is May 16th.  This will be the last day of my internship and I couldn’t think of a better way to leave! I am excited to see the final product of my internship.   

This is a picture during the chemical safety station.  Here the students learned about chemical look-a-likes by guessing which was the chemical from each pair. 

Here, Blaire and I taught students about water safety, giving personal experiences of water safety.  We also did an activity using life rings.  We had students practice tossing life rings to a safety cone, pretending the cone were a drowning victim and helping them when they were in need.

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