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Section
D: Reflecting and Creating
Guiding Questions
- In what ways does the enterprise we looked
at yesterday illustrate what we learned on Days
1 & 2?
- How could you create your own sustainable
enterprise or evaluate an existing enterprise?
- How are other people working to achieve the
goals of sustainability in other parts of the
US ?
Projected
Outcomes This segment will help students:
- Know how to evaluate the “sustainability”
of an enterprise based on how well it contributes
economic, environmental, and community benefits.
- Build teamwork and technology skills as they
work cooperatively and use the internet to research
and develop their own sustainable project.
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Introduction
This section is designed to get students to apply
the concepts covered in sections A and B to the
case studies in Section C, and then to projects.
The section consists entirely of guided discussion
and student activities . If the class did not
go on a field trip and/or if groups are reporting
on case studies for their “Creating” projects,
the “Reflecting” discussion can be omitted.
Time needed:
- 20 to 30 minutes for the “Reflecting” discussion,
- One hour for groups to research and prepare
their “Creating” reports,
- Five to ten minutes for each group to present
its report.
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Reflecting
- In what ways does the enterprise we looked
at yesterday illustrate what we learned on Days
1 & 2?
Have students share what they recorded on their
worksheets. In what ways did the enterprise provide
benefits in the three areas? What specific practices
contributed to those benefits? Which areas were
strong and which needed improvement? Encourage
the students to brainstorm ways that the enterprise
could add practices to help reach the goals of
profitability, environmental quality, and supporting
family and community.
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Creating
- Create and present your own sustainable enterprise;
Design and present your own farm agro-ecosystem,
processing venture, or local food system (see
project ideas below); Or evaluate and present
one of the 48 case study enterprises from the
New American Farmer.
(Browse or search by commodity or problem addressed.)
Remember that sustainable agriculture and food
systems utilize ecologically sound practices —
to create value-added products for markets — that
improve local community economies and quality
of life. So your sustainable enterprise could
be about growing, processing, or developing a
value-added product, creating a community-based
food project, or restoring natural resource and
ecological systems that support our farming and
food systems.
- First, have students get in team groups of
3 to 4 people.
- Have each team choose a project idea from
the Project Ideas
Workshee (MS Word document).
- OR Design their own sustainable agrecosystem,
processing venture, or local food system,
- OR choose one of the 48 New American Farmer case study enterprises (Browse or search by commodity or problem
addressed).
- Give each team the guiding questions. They
should try to answer them in their reports.
- Give each team 30 or more minutes to research
the project idea or case study on the suggested
web sites, the links on those web sites, and
other resources in your classroom, library,
or community.
- Give each team 10 or more minutes to prepare
their report.
- Have each team present a 5 to 10-minute report
on their project idea or case study to the class.
- Encourage at least 3 questions from the audience
for each team presentation.
Guiding
Questions Worksheet (MS Word Document)
Project Ideas Worksheet
(MS Word Document)
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