During our group reflection on Monday
evening, Shelby, Thomas, and Nisa asked us the question, “Why do we teach?”
Members of our group quickly responded with the following phrases:
- · “Pass on knowledge to students”
- · “Give every student the chance to succeed”
- · “Inspire students to find their passion”
This question resonated with the
group as we had just finished our last teaching episode at Dato Lela Maharaja Vocational
College. Our 3 teaching experiences scaffolded from teaching Form 2 students
(14 years old), then hosting an Agriculture Day for 60 secondary students, to
finally teaching students (16-19 years old) at a Vocational Agricultural College. At Dato Lela Maharaja, students are part of a
specific agricultural program (Agronomy, Poultry Agro-Industry, Ruminant Agro-Industry,
Agro-Mechanization, Aquaculture, Ornamental Horticulture, Architectural
Landscape, or Agriculture Food Processing).
Our 6 teaching teams each chose a content area and were tasked with
preparing a 90-minute lesson for a group of students. During our planning, we
needed to consider that students may have advanced content knowledge, have
strong English communication skills, or may have covered the topic of our
lesson previously in their studies. Nonetheless, our teaching teams collaborated
and utilized teaching strategies centered around student engagement, inquiry,
and project-based learning.
Drawing upon past teaching
experience, two teachers decided to utilize an activity they implement in their
secondary Agricultural Science programs in the United States. Melissa Grant, Indiana
AgriScience Teacher, and Darla Romberger, Pennsylvania AgriScience Teacher, are
both Curriculum for Agricultural Science Education (CASE)-certified in the Agricultural
Science—Animal course. Melissa’s group consisting of Manny Catala (@MCatala35),
Azira, and Ain provided instruction to the Poultry Agro-Industry group while Darla’s
group of Mikaella Koster (@MikaellaKoster) and Fatin instructed the Ruminant
Agro-Industry class. Knowing that both lessons needed to be challenging, engaging,
and somewhat flexible, the CASE-certified teachers decided to utilize inquiry-based
lessons from the CASE curriculum and implement them in a Malaysian classroom.
The poultry instructional team led
a class of Form 4 students (ages 15-16) and focused their lesson on internal
anatomy and physiology of poultry animals. After briefly introducing the function
and appearance of internal organs, students created digestion murals of a broiler
chicken (Project. 5.1.4.) utilizing assorted craft supplies. Before creating
the mural, students needed to justify how each craft item accurately represented
each organ. Melissa noted, “It was awesome to see students in a different
country enjoying the same activity that my students do in Indiana.” The
students loved being out of their seats collaborating and creating a poster
that they could display to other students in the Poultry program.
The ruminant instructional team
led a class of 19-year-old students (that would graduate with a Vocational
College diploma at the end of the year) and concentrated on the topic of
biosecurity and the effectiveness of various biosecurity practices. After a brief introduction about the various
control points in a biosecurity plan, students replicated various scenarios on
a farm to evaluate the effectiveness of biosecurity practices (Activity 3.3.2.
Biosecurity: Managing Risk). The class had already discussed the concept of
biosecurity, but our group was confident in the problem-based activity we had
planned. The instructional team explained the purpose of a nutrient agar petri dish
and gave instruction how to label, swab, and seal a petri dish with parafilm—all
new concepts for this group of students. Students then predicted which
biosecurity scenario would result in the least bacterial growth and therefore
be the most effective practice to reduce the spread of disease. “It was rewarding
to see project-based learning and inquiry strategies come to life in a
Malaysian classroom and hope that I inspired these students to ask questions
and become more engaged in Animal Science content,” Darla reflected.
After teaching in Malaysia and
the United States, I’ve realized that teachers across the globe teach for the
same reasons—to inspire, motivate, and share knowledge with students,
regardless of what country we teach in. When tasked with teaching a class of
Malaysian students, I instantly thought of all the barriers we would have while
teaching (language, content, etc). However, I quickly remembered why I enjoy
teaching—sharing my passion about animal agriculture with future generations of
students and turned my focus on this thought while planning and teaching our
lesson. This motivation will continue as we enter our classrooms next fall and
continue to motivate, inspire, and share knowledge about global agriculture and
our second home—Malaysia.
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