Ontario is investing $300,000 in distance education programming to get more people trained as dairy farmers.
Province investing in training more dairy farmers
The Ridgetown Campus at the University of Guelph is developing a distance education program to train more people in dairy farming.University of Guelph photo

Guelph school creating distance education program to reach more students.

Ontario is investing $300,000 in distance education programming to get more people trained as dairy farmers.

In partnership with the Dairy Farmers of Ontario, the University of Guelph’s Ridgetown Campus is expanding its dairy herdsperson apprenticeship program to include a hybrid distance education option.

It’s aimed at students who are not able to study in person full-time or who are already working on a farm.

Participants will learn about animal health, routine herd maintenance and nutrition, and operating farm equipment, according to the province. They will complete 480 hours of classroom training, hearing directly from industry experts about milking, feeding, animal health, reproduction, and other dairy-related skills.

Students will also complete 5,520 hours of on-farm training as part of a paid work placement, where they will learn hands-on skills, including operating and maintaining farm machinery, working directly with animals and processing milk.

The new program is expected to be up and running in 2024.

The a2 Milk Company (a2MC) says securing more China label registrations and developing its own nutritional manufacturing capability are high on its agenda.

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