Adopt a Cow, a year-long, interactive, education program of the dairy industry, will open August 1 for enrollment by Pennsylvania classrooms for the 2020-21 school year.
Zahncroft Dairy in Womelsdorf, Berks County, serves as a host farm during the Adopt a Cow program. Students “adopt” calves from their farm and receive virtual updates throughout the school year. (Contributed photo)

Offering students with inside looks at dairy farms in their communities, the program pairs each enrolled classroom with a calf on a dairy farm.

Teachers and students receive photos, video updates, and activity sheets throughout the school year that allow them to watch their calves grow.

Through immersive, hands-on learning activities and free curriculum provided by Discover Dairy, students gain an understanding of the dairy industry and where their food comes from.

Several of the lessons in the curriculum follow Common Core standards in math, reading, and science.

Discover Dairy is an educational series managed by the Center for Dairy Excellence Foundation of Pennsylvania in partnership with American Dairy Association North East, Dairy Farmers of Wisconsin, Midwest Dairy and The Dairy Alliance.

“As we approach the upcoming school year, we realize the learning environment looks very different for teachers and students across the nation. Whether your classroom will be in-person or virtual, or a mix of both, the Adopt a Cow program includes activities and curriculum that can be incorporated into every mode of instruction,” said Brittany Snyder, dairy education program manager at the Dairy Excellence Foundation.

“Through virtual chats, videos, photo updates, and more, the program is an exciting way for students to watch a calf grow throughout the year and learn how dairy farmers are impacting our communities.”

The Adopt a Cow program also offers live virtual chats and farm tours that allow students to talk directly with a dairy farmer, meet their calves, tour the farm, and ask questions about milk production.

More than 25,000 elementary and middle school students from across North American participated in the program last year.

Schools from both rural and urban areas can enroll, bringing dairy farming to life for students of all ages and demographics.

“It has been really nice having the lesson plans laid out and focused on vocabulary, so I can be sure I’m teaching students the correct terms to use when they’re speaking about farms and different animals,” said Becky Kleinfelter, an elementary teacher in Eastern Lebanon County School District.

During the live video chats, “the kids actually came up with some really good questions that I couldn’t always answer. It was nice to give them the chance to ask the farmer themselves.”

After registering for the Adopt a Cow program, teachers will receive an introductory kit in the fall with details about their calf.

Classrooms will receive bi-monthly updates, including suggestions on components of the Discover Dairy curriculum that teachers can incorporate into their virtual or in-person lesson plans.

Local cheese maker Rowan Cooke was devastated when he heard King Island Dairy would be shutting down.

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