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Breakfast on the Farm event is an effective learning activity and improves consumer perceptions of dairy production

Thursday, July 21, 2016: 2:15 PM
155 C (Salt Palace Convention Center)
Julia M. Smith , University of Vermont, Burlington, VT
Theodore A Ferris , Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI
Abstract Text:

Educational farm tours, such as Breakfast on the Farm, provide the public an opportunity to learn firsthand, ask questions of farmers and other professionals, and give feedback about modern food production. Vermont held its first Breakfast on the Farm event on a dairy farm in August 2015. Patterned after the Breakfast on the Farm events in Michigan, the event was designed to educate consumers on key areas of concern: animal care, environmental protection, and food safety. Educational stations, coordinated by UVM Extension, were placed along a walking tour of the farm facilities allowing visitors to see cow and calf housing, milking facilities, and how feed is produced and fed. An exit survey instrument consisting of pre-post questions evaluated what participants learned and their change in perceptions of several agricultural practices. Of 550 visitors, 227 who were at least 18 years old completed the questionnaire. Almost half of respondents had visited a working dairy farm fewer than 3 times before this event. On a 5-point scale from very little to very much, respondents indicated how much was learned about how cows are housed (4.08), what cows eat (3.91), how cows receive health care (3.38), how antibiotics are kept out of the food supply (2.87), how technology is used in dairy production (4.33), how farmers protect water quality (3.34), how calves are cared for (3.76), and how crops are grown and stored (3.60). First-time visitors gained the greatest knowledge about how technology is being used and how cows are being housed. On a 5-point scale where 1 is strongly disagree and 5 is strongly agree, first-time visitors had an average score increase of 0.56 between their before and after tour ratings of their agreement with statements that dairy farmers are treating animals humanely, protecting water quality, using pesticides responsibly, and using antibiotics responsibly. The greatest change in beliefs was about dairy farmers treating animals humanely with a mean increase of 0.74 and 0.51, respectively, among first-time visitors and all respondents. The percentage of first-time visitors agreeing or strongly agreeing that farmers treat animals humanely increased from 61% to 91% after touring the farm. Before and after differences were significant at P< 0.005 (paired t-test) for all questions. This event improved consumer knowledge and impressions about modern dairy farms and management practices.

Keywords: Educational farm tour, consumer perception, modern dairy production