Home » Comer launches new mobile science units to teach Kentucky kids about agriculture

Comer launches new mobile science units to teach Kentucky kids about agriculture

Units are booked for next three school years

FRANKFORT, Ky. (Aug. 19, 2013) — Kentucky students will use a dazzling array of high-tech instruments to learn about agriculture when the Kentucky Department of Agriculture’s two new Mobile Science Activity Centers (MSAC) hit the roads this fall.

Agriculture Commissioner James Comer, right, shakes hands with Tod Griffin, chairman of Kentucky Agriculture and Environment in the Classroom Inc., following the ribbon-cutting to officially launch the Kentucky Department of Agriculture’s new Mobile Science Activity Centers Aug. 15 in the Kentucky Exposition Center in Louisville. At left is Dan Flanagan, who represented Farm Credit Mid-America and the Kentucky Poultry Federation. (Kentucky Department of Agriculture photo by Chris Aldridge)
Agriculture Commissioner James Comer, right, shakes hands with Tod Griffin, chairman of Kentucky Agriculture and Environment in the Classroom Inc., following the ribbon-cutting to officially launch the Kentucky Department of Agriculture’s new Mobile Science Activity Centers Aug. 15 in the Kentucky Exposition Center in Louisville. At left is Dan Flanagan, who represented Farm Credit Mid-America and the Kentucky Poultry Federation. (Kentucky Department of Agriculture photo by Chris Aldridge)

Agriculture Commissioner James Comer officially launched the new units in a ceremony last week during the Kentucky State Fair at the Kentucky Exposition Center in Louisville.

“Most schoolchildren are two, three, or more generations removed from the farm,” Comer said. “The Mobile Science Activity Centers enable kids to learn about agriculture’s importance in our everyday lives. These new units will use the latest technology to capture the students’ attention and help them learn.”

The MSACs travel to schools throughout the commonwealth to give students the opportunity to conduct scientific experiments related to agriculture using current educational standards and core content. The new MSACs are 44-foot trailers that each contain 11 iPads, a 70-inch LED monitor, and an all-in-one touchscreen desktop computer. Students will interact with the teacher using the iPads through Insight360 software. The mobile units contain internal generators; heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) systems, and handicapped-accessible ramps.

The mobile units are administered by the Division of Agriculture Education and Outreach in the Kentucky Department of Agriculture’s Office of Marketing.

The new MSACs were purchased and outfitted with support from Kentucky Agriculture and Environment in the Classroom Inc.’s member partners: the AgriBusiness Association of Kentucky, Farm Credit Mid-America, the Kentucky Agricultural Development Fund, the Kentucky Beef Council, the Kentucky Cattlemen’s Association, the Kentucky Corn Growers Association, the Kentucky Dairy Development Council, the Kentucky Equine Education Project, Kentucky Farm Bureau, the Kentucky Goat Producers Association, the Kentucky Horse Council, the Kentucky Pork Producers Association, the Kentucky Poultry Federation, the Kentucky Retail Federation, the Kentucky Sheep and Wool Producers Association, the Kentucky Small Grain Growers’ Association, the Kentucky Soybean Board, and the Kentucky Veterinary Medical Association.

“This is a great example of a successful public-private sector partnership,” Comer said. “With the help of our private partners, we will teach Kentucky’s kids why agriculture matters to all of us.”

The MSACs are booked for the next three school years.