Rooster in the Classroom: Story Time Gets a Feathered Guest in Georgia

Georgia Grown Marketing Coordinator Happy Wyatt has spent the past 20 years teaching young students about agriculture and its connection to their everyday lives.

PERRY, GEORGIA (Farm Monitor) — In one elementary classroom, story time is getting a little extra help from a live animal. Georgia Grown Marketing Coordinator Happy Wyatt has spent the past 20 years teaching young students about agriculture and its connection to their everyday lives.

When she visits classrooms, she often brings one of her roosters along.

“Kindergartners love to read,” Wyatt explains. “They love to be read to, and anytime you incorporate an animal, it gets them so excited about reading.”

Wyatt says the idea came after she brought a rooster to her son’s class to show students the different colors eggs can be.

“I brought one of the roosters from the farm with me,” she said. “I saw the excitement on their faces when I pulled out this rooster. There’s such a big disconnect between agriculture and everyday life.”

Now, she travels to schools across the state, reading to students and helping them better understand where their food comes from. Programs like this are part of a larger effort to improve agricultural literacy.

The National Ag in the Classroom organization reaches nearly three million students, with more than 20,000 teachers trained to bring agriculture into their lessons.

Related Stories
According to surveys by the University of Georgia in 2015, feral hogs caused approximately $100 million in agricultural damage just in that state. They continue to be a costly problem for rural communities across the state, reports Damon Jones of Georgia Farm Monitor.

Knoxville native Neal Burnette-Irwin is a graduate from MTSU where he majored in Journalism and Entertainment Studies. He works as a digital content producer with RFD News and is represented by multiple talent agencies in Nashville and Chicago.


LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

Product targets nutrient loss while supporting plant growth
Campustown Showdown Founder Christian Calliham shared a sneak peek, explaining how the upcoming Iowa stock show evolved from its sister event, the Aggieville Showdown in Kansas.
After a challenging year, Georgia pecan growers are looking ahead with cautious optimism as costs and global tensions weigh on the future of the crop.
Shells from restaurants are collected, cleaned, and returned to the water, where they can support new growth.
Louisiana State University Professor Shelly Pate Kerns says a late freeze forced widespread replanting of some crops across the state.
Mobile unit supports first responders with equipment and hands-on training