Students to get a farm hand
Lolita Harper
Students with lower than average test scores, disciplinary
problems or overall difficulties in school will be invited to a
special after-school program designed to motivate them into learning
through hands-on techniques, fair officials decided Thursday.
The Orange County Fair & Exposition board approved the Ranch
after-school program, saying it would give children an unparalleled
opportunity to learn various agriculturally themed lessons not always
available in traditional academic courses.
About 25 Davis Elementary fifth graders who have been determined
“at risk” by educators will take part in the pilot program, set to
begin in January. The Costa Mesa children will learn about horses,
other livestock and vegetable gardening. They will also be able to
take advantage of the Centennial Farm, also at the fairgrounds.
Officials from the fair, the Newport-Mesa Unified School District
and Costa Mesa’s Recreation Department all worked together to create
the one-of-a-kind program to offer more than the usual after-school
program.
In the proposed “horse education unit” of the program, children
will learn about the animal’s history, safety, grooming, the various
breeds and colors, tacking, feeding, equipment and health, said Jim
Bailey, the fairground’s director of special projects, who outlined
the program.
The Orange Villa Buckaroos 4-H Club, who keep their horses at the
fairgrounds, will develop the unit and walk the youngsters through
that portion of the program, using their horses and equipment.
Similarly, the other on-site 4-H clubs have volunteered their
animals for the livestock unit. This portion of the program will
highlight the different types of farm animals and their uses, Bailey
said. One of the stalls will be converted into a chicken house for
the children to care for hens and hatch incubator chicks.
Finally, in the gardening portion of the program, students will
each have their own 8-foot square plot to plant, fertilize and
harvest.
Stacia Mancini, recreation manager for Costa Mesa, said the
program will give children access to hobbies and interests they may
never have dreamed of. It will also allow those who may not flourish
in a typical academic setting -- which generally involves listening
and retaining information -- a chance to get “hands-on” and really
connect with the subject manner, Mancini said. The agricultural theme
should tie in nicely with fifth-grade science curriculum, she said.
“I know that when I was a kid it helped me to be able to do what I
was being taught and then see the results of my work,” Mancini said.
The program, aimed at students whose schoolwork is not up to
expectations, will run from 3 to 6 p.m. at the fairground’s
equestrian center for about six months, Bailey said. Ultimately, a
year-round schedule that would include summer camp sessions would be
developed, Bailey said.
For now officials are excited to get the first session up and
running.
* LOLITA HARPER covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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