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The Rural Voice, 1985-12, Page 43FARM NEWS teachers or students with propaganda from the farmer's point of view. Weitzel says she can understand where the accusations come from, but she counters that the group is trying to portray an accurate picture of agriculture to everyone. l F< , Ta / g. `.>s5, >tIt dc,`i A a>.t To introduce teachers to the many resources available when teaching agriculture in the classroom, displays were set up at the Board of Educa- tion. Carolyn Redden, a nutritionist from the Beef Information Centre, was on hand to show teachers some of the material that can be used to teach children about cattle producers and the beef industry. Lessons about farming come to life in a kindergarten class. Children who live on various types of farms share their perspectives with each other and with non-farm children, says Mary Lou Taylor -Hawley, a kindergarten teacher at South Perth Centennial School, Rannoch. Taylor-Hawley's four-week unit about farming appeared in living col- our at the Education Centre in Perth County where the more than 80 primary school teachers from Perth County gathered. Farm mobiles made by the students, stories printed by five -year-olds, and dozens of col- oured pictures and imaginative crea- tions exhibited the pupils' new understanding of farming. Taylor -Hawley cautioned teachers that if they were using older books, they may have to do some updating. For example, a dairy farm was il- lustrated in one book as using milk cans. One of Taylor-Hawley's kindergarten pupils, who lives on a dairy farm, recognized the cans as "flowerpots." She informed the class that milk today is stored in a tank and goes through a pipeline and onto trucks to be taken to the dairy. Taylor -Hawley encouraged teachers to make the point that the farm of the '80s is very different than those of the past. ❑ PC a lutfrAy //goon Redy, Wdal242„Weiv, .99hId€ 46711 ana as . at • • • • Hill AND Hill \FARMS LIMITED VARNA 519-482-3218 "YOUR FIRST LINE SEED DISTRIBUTOR” • INSULATING?? Insulate your farm buildings with Urethane Foam Insulation and reap the Rewards in $$ for years to come. Free Estimates. We will match or better any honest deal. Homes built prior to Sept. 1, 1977 are eligible for a CHIP GRANT up to a maximum of $500.00. This Grant ends Mar. 31, 1986, or at such times as funds for the program are exhausted. CGSI3 Certificate No. Ont. 250 HUNTER INSULATION LTD. Your Complete Insulation Specialists 214 -10TH STREET CALL COLLECT HANOVER 519-364-4494 or EVENINGS 519-369-6888 DF(FMBF41