Followers

Sunday, April 15, 2018

PSU Block and Bridle's 101st Little International Livestock Show

I like cows. They are my favorite. So when I get the opportunity to show livestock, I choose cows. Unfortunately, beef heifer practices for the Little I show were Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday nights. I have shop from 4-7 on Tuesdays and Thursdays...kind of an important class. Needless to say, I would only be able to go on Wednesday nights and one night a week to break an Angus heifer is not enough. (There might be a little bias there as I am a Shorthorn breeder and have never had good luck with Angus-except Little I 2017.)



But I found out that lamb practices were Monday, Wednesday and Friday so I could do that! There's one catch...I hate sheep. Well, it's a love/hate relationship. They are okay but ask anyone and they will say sheep are stupid. That's why they are not my favorite. But I gotta do what I gotta do to get in that show ring. And we only have a month to work with them as the show was Saturday April 14th.




The picture to the left was taken after she was washed. Even though it was hot, the blanket had to go on so she would stay clean. There were several fans on the pen of Little I lambs.


All of the lambs are ewes (girls) and I named mine Eeyore. She was a fairly good girl right from the start. Within the first week of practice, we were doing great and we were working on fine tuning some little things. Meanwhile, almost everyone else was still working on setting their lamb up.


But...there was a slight bump in Eeyore and I's "Journey to Stardom." It was the Monday after St. Patrick's Day and we went about our way as normal except that Eeyore had an attitude problem. I joked that the students who lived at the barns partied with the animals over the weekend and that Eeyore was still feeling it. I got her to calm down and we were fine until practice was cancelled one day. It was about 5 days that she went without a practice and when we got back to it, she again had an attitude problem. She wasn't herself and I was really annoyed with her. We just need consistency in her attitude, then we will be okay.

 

On Wednesday, we put the lambs on the stands where we could start fitting them. Eeyore was fine for the first 15 or so minutes then started freaking out when I was about done. She was choking herself and falling off of the stand. She ended up rolling/falling off onto the floor. Eeyore got up and was fine that time. One of the superintendents of the sheep division was trimming hooves and we were trying to get Eeyore to stand still. Eventually, we decided to try to put her back on the stand. BAD. IDEA. She completely flipped out, was jumping like crazy and we couldn't get the head piece to lower quick enough or untie her quick enough. Finally (in a bad way), she rolled off, AGAIN, and was huffing and puffing when she decided to stand up. I got Eeyore to calm down and I even set her up several times then sat there and bonded with her.


Thursday was wash day. We got her on the stand where she behaved really well considering our previous stand experience. Everything was fine that day. I blew her dry, fluffed and clipped her leg wool.



















Flash forward to Saturday Show Day. WHAT. A. BRAT. These pictures explain how the day went. After I was done showing, I stayed around and watched the rest of the show. The outcome was not what I expected but that was okay.




















One thing I learned was patience. If you have some patience, you will get farther in life. Also, no matter how much you practice the animals' attitude can be completely different when you get to the show. Eeyore was an angel once I got her to calm down at every practice while it took until the last time in the show ring for her to calm down on Saturday.






Wednesday, April 4, 2018

Cooperating Center Advice

The Beginning

As we are looking for cooperating centers, we need all the advice we can get. So we were advised to contact one member from the #psuaged18, one from #psuaged17/#psuaged16 and one from #psuaged15/#psuaged14.

I chose to interview 3 lovely ladies; Cheyenne Myers from 2018, Sarabeth Royer from 2016 and Laura Metrick from 2015. I asked the following questions of all 3 fellow PSU Ag Ed members.



1. What was your biggest priority when selecting a cooperating center?
2. What advice would you give to juniors in the major as they are looking at cooperating centers and preparing to send their student teaching applications in?
3. What would you have done different if you could go through the selection of a cooperating center again? In other words, is there anything you wish you would have looked for in a cooperating center that you didn't before?
4. Is there anything else you would say or do in the entire process if you could do it over again (not just cooperating centers)?


Cheyenne Myers

1. She wanted a cooperating teacher who was organized and did not have a huge amount of shop classes as she was not comfortable with them. She wants to get the experience but wants something that she can easily manage.
  • I definitely relate to that as I never had a shop class until this semester of college. (Thanks Dr. Ewing for being patient with me!). Although, I do want a challenging class. I know it will be frustrating but I see student teaching as 2 parts (being okay with some classes then having some that you are uncomfortable with)

2. The advice that she would give to juniors is to make sure we are happy with our cooperating center. Cheyenne emphasized the importance of communication, asking questions and the fact that your cooperating teacher is "there to help you, it is what they signed up for."
  • I sometimes feel as if I ask too many questions even though most people in these situations don't care. I think it would've helped me to know more of what kind of questions to ask.

3. The only thing that she might have tried that was different was traveling and looking at more than 2 places.
  • I only went to two programs as I heard multiple great things about each and a ton of people said they'd be a good fit for me. And it turns out that I loved them both!

4. Other advice was to stay on top of things and plan ahead. You don't want to be staying late after school every day.
  • One of my major goals is to stay ahead so hopefully it will happen!



Laura Metrick

1. Laura did not come from FFA so she wanted a school with a strong FFA Chapter. She also wanted challenging subjects (ag mechanics).
  • I grew up showing livestock in the same county as Laura and I went to the neighboring school district which had FFA. I also want a strong FFA Chapter but I have the experience so that isn't my top priority. Again, ag mechanics is important to me too!

2. Laura says that we need to ask questions, and find a program that will strengthen your weaknesses. We should not let location stop us from choosing a cooperating center. And again, she reiterated that the committee knows what they are doing.
  • I know now that I just have to trust the process. Because I am conflicted, I am leaving it up to them.

Embrace the Butterflies | IT'S OK TO BE NERVOUS, FEELING NERVOUS IS THE BEST INDICATOR THAT WHAT YOU ARE DOING IS — IN SOME WAY — IMPORTANT TO YOU. | image tagged in hope,dream,fear,truth | made w/ Imgflip meme maker


3. If Laura could do it over again, she would go to a different part of the state to student teach. She loves where she did go (especially since she is now teaching there) but wishes she could have "broadened her horizons."
  • #WesternPAForLife is right! My heart is always at home too but I do like getting new/different experiences. Hence why I am going to the Eastern region to student teach. I heard so many good things about it, went and visited it myself and loved it!

4. Laura said, "Just make sure you always keep an open mind, embrace the whole experience and trust the process."
  • Yes, yes, yes. I really believe in all of that. I wanted to interview Laura because we are from the same county and I wanted someone that grew up with a similar experience to me.


Sarabeth Royer

1. A program with great community interaction, strong ag mech, and something that challenged her. She said her favorite quote is "If it doesn't challenge you it doesn't change you."
  • That really resonates with me. I never really thought about it that way but if you can handle a challenge while student teaching, then you can handle it when you are actually teaching. It is all to make you the best teacher that you can be (and that won't even happen in the first few years).

2. Be super honest when visiting programs; know your strengths and weaknesses. Everyone else "wants to make it fit just as much as you want it to."
  • My strengths are animal science (in regards to content I'm super comfortable with). Other things would be compromise, understanding, acceptance and flexibility. My weaknesses are ag mechanics, soils and bascially anything else. I'm not terrible at plant science and wildlife type classes but I prefer animal science. Other weaknesses would be authoritativeness, making sure I'm keeping the class under control and reaching all students.



3. She is teaching at Athens where she student taught, so she got super lucky.
  • This is why you shouldn't burn bridges. Be careful what you say and know how to ask the right questions. It might get you a job someday!

4. "Use your resources, ask for help, and write those lesson plans!...Done is better than perfect...create goals and stick to them."
  • Resources are great!!