Progress report for ENC23-225
Project Information
USDA and CDC research has established that childcare (CC), healthcare (HC), and health insurance (HI) impact farm economic development, risk management, and quality of life yet there are few educational resources covering these topics. This SARE PDP project will fill this gap by garnering the research and extension expertise of the project team to develop and train farm Educators to deliver farmer-ready multi-media modules and learning tools on the topics of CC, HC, and HI targeting young, beginning farmers and ranchers, women, and small and medium farmers. Using a train-the-trainer model and drawing on the best practices of adult learning we will design two modules and 21 learning tools designed to be accessible to visual, auditory, and experiential learners, including: facilitator guides; fact sheets defining key terms, planning worksheets; evaluation instruments, and case study teaching resources including a video and comic book. Open-access curriculum will be designed with whole farm planning pedagogy. We will train a cohort of 10 Educators to deliver the curriculum to 300 farmers in the North Central Region. These Educators will participate in a curriculum learning circle. We will train 210 Educators and disseminate the curriculum throughout the region through webinars, in-conference trainings, and an online resource library. Educators participating in the training will increase their knowledge, confidence, and ability to offer programs that address social sustainability issues and that sustain farming as a livelihood with the long-term goal of helping farmers increase productivity, sustainability, and quality of life.
Both farmer and train-the-trainer materials will include learning tools designed to be accessible to visual, auditory, and experiential learners. We will develop 21 evidenced based farmer-ready, open access resources that reflect farmer and educator needs and learning preferences, including: a facilitator guide; fact sheets defining key terms, individual farm planning worksheets; evaluation instruments; and a case study through which learners can practice using worksheets prior to using them for their own situations.
Teaching resources in the form of one video and one illustrated case studies/comic book support module content. The facilitator guide will embed best adult learning practices, providing guidance and ideas for implementing these practices in the context of working with farm operators on business and lifestyle topics that can be both intensely personal and extremely challenging.
Facilitator guide content will include clear learning outcomes; script templates; instructions for module set-up and use of the teaching resources; participant reflection activities; and time management. Evaluation templates will assess impact on changes in knowledge, attitudes, confidence, and intentions.
The project team will recruit and train 10 NCR Extension and non-profit Educators to participate in a two-year learning circle cohort. Pippidis and Freedgood will draw on their extensive background organizing Train-the-Trainer events to lead the design of professional development programming to increase Educator capacity and confidence to deliver the materials this project has developed around CC, HC, and HI topics. We will target Educators who focus on farm business, whole farm planning, risk management, farm safety, family resource management, succession, land access, and those who work with women, BFRs, young, and small and medium farmers. The in-person training and facilitated learning circles will be designed to provide both professional development and build trusted relationships among the participants. We anticipate this Educators will each reach a minimum of 30 farmers across the two project years, producing 300 farmer pre-post data points.
Rumble will design an accessible project website and online resource library to house all materials and resources developed as part of this project.
Interactive professional development training on the curriculum will be delivered through four online interactive webinars in Project Years 2 and 3 (total of eight webinars) and will feature experiences of Educators who have delivered the modules. We anticipate 90 webinar participants each year for a total of 180 educators from a diverse set of organizational backgrounds participating across the two years.
The team will travel to two conferences (TBD) in the North Central Region in Year 3 to present a half-day training, we anticipate 15 participants at each training (total of 30 participants).
Education
To address the sensitive nature of these issues, the Educator training and the curriculum itself were designed with the overlapping principles of Best Practices of Adult Learning and Problem Based Learning. In addition to the in-person training, the team organized two online pre-meetings to provide participants with the opportunity to meet each other and become more comfortable with the topics and program, and after the training provided participants with press release templates about their participation they could provide to their universities/newsletters.
Education & Outreach Initiatives
Develop a curriculum to assist farmers with childcare, health care, and health insurance decision making.
In October 2024 the team successfully developed of two modules (one on health care and health insurance, one on childcare), 42 new learning and evaluation tools, assembled background research articles, briefs, and popular press articles for Educators and Farmers, and designed a new project/curriculum website. All materials were designed to be accessible to visual, auditory, and experiential learners, including: educator ppts, facilitator guides; activity sheets, case studies, comic books and comic images, and evaluation tools. All of the curriculum is copyrighted under a creative commons license.
The grant originally called for 10 Educators from the North Central region to attend a 3-day in person training in Wooster and then pilot the curriculum in Winter 2025. However, we had over 50 applicants in the NCR region alone plus applications from the northeast and southern regions of the US. To accommodate the strong interest, I reconfigured the budget to accept 11 teams from the NCR plus 1 team from Penn State. Each team came included both an ANR and a CD or FCS Educator from a Land Grant University or non-profit. This approach enabled a complimentary skill set and also create a state team – so that individuals had a partner and would not have to ‘go it alone’. Childcare, health care, and health insurance are complex and personal topics. To address the sensitive nature of these issues, the Educator training and the curriculum itself were designed with the overlapping principles of Best Practices of Adult Learning and Problem Based Learning. In addition to the in-person training, I organized two online pre-meetings to provide participants with the opportunity to meet each other and become more comfortable with the topics and program, and after the training provided participants with press release templates about their participation they could provide to their universities/newsletters. Based on feedback from the participants piloting the curriculum, we will revise the curriculum in 2025.
Overall Educator feedback has been very positive. Results of a pre-post survey demonstrate the impact of the training. Educators attending the training significantly increased their knowledge about how childcare, health care, and health insurance impact farms (mean: Before 2.99, After 4.64), their ability to assist clients with integrating these topics into whole farm planning (mean: Before 2.14, After 4.13), and their confidence in their own skill and abilities to teach these topics and in their ability to find resources on both childcare (mean: Before 2.43, After 3.51) and health care/health insurance (mean: Before 2.38, After 4.25).
Educational & Outreach Activities
Participation Summary:
Learning Outcomes
Project Outcomes
Overall Educator feedback has been very positive. Results of a pre-post survey demonstrate the impact of the training. Educators attending the training significantly increased their knowledge about how childcare, health care, and health insurance impact farms (mean: Before 2.99, After 4.64), their ability to assist clients with integrating these topics into whole farm planning (mean: Before 2.14, After 4.13), and their confidence in their own skill and abilities to teach these topics and in their ability to find resources on both childcare (mean: Before 2.43, After 3.51) and health care/health insurance (mean: Before 2.38, After 4.25).
Additional data about the efficacy of the curriculum will be available in summer of 2025 after the Educators test the curriculum with farmers.