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LESSON: FARMING (America at Work
Series)
Lesson
Summary
On a visit to her cousin Nicks farm
in Ohio, Karin learns all about raising onions from spring planning to
harvesting. Then, when Nick travels to Nebraska to help on Karins
family farm, he learns all about raising beef, from birthing new calves to
the cattle drive to market. This book will teach students all the hard
work it takes for producers to produce the products consumers want.
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Concept: Producers
Definition: Producers are people who make goods
or provide services.
Comprehension
Questions
Do the producers in the story
produce good or services? Goods
Why was Nicks dad concerned about
thunderstorms? The rain and hail could damage onions left drying in
the field then no consumers will want to buy them. Nicks dad
would lose a lot of money!
Why do onion farmers plant onions
in greenhouses in the early spring? Its cold in Ohio, unlike
southern and some western states. The onions need a head start in
order to grow and get big enough for harvest.
Producers need capital resources to
produce goods. What are some of the capital resources that onion
farmers use? Greenhouses; tractors with cultivator attachment, disc
attachment, and roller attachment, hoes, windrower, onion harvester,
crates, plastic covering to protect from rain and hail, etc.
Where do producers typically get
the money to buy these capital resources? They get the money from
loans or from profits (earnings) saved from previous years. Some
producers issue stock to raise money.
What does Karins family
produce? Beef
What are some of the capital
resources used by the beef producers? Wheeled irrigation pipes, hay
baler, post driver, fencing materials, barns, windmill to pump water,
branding iron, etc.
The story says that ranchers work
hard all year to find the best price for their livestock. Why is
this important for ranchers? The higher the prices they get for
their livestock, the more money they will make. If they cant make a
profit over the long run, they will go out of business.
What is different and what
is the same about producing onions and
cattle? Different: use of different kinds of capital
resources; producing animals vs. vegetables, different human capital (i.e.
skills) needed. Same: both produce goods as opposed to
services; natural, capital, and human resources are needed to produce
both, although the specific resource will differ; both need good prices
for their goods in order to stay in business in the long run, both take a
lot of hard work!
What natural resources do
all farmers need! Land, water, minerals, sunshine
What good or service do you
want to produce when you grow up? Answers will vary. Students
may wish to draw a picture of themselves producing a good or service and
write a short paragraph to accompany the picture. |