Elementary School Students Learn About Life on Farm at MTSU

A record 870 youngsters, including nearly 300 elementary schoolchildren in the first session, attended the Middle Tennessee State University School of Agriculture Ag Education Spring Fling Tuesday, April 11, in the Tennessee Livestock Center on campus. John Deere tractors, live animals, crafts, honey and beekeeping and more kept the youngsters busy for nearly two hours before they headed back to their respective schools throughout the day. (MTSU photo by J. Intintoli)

Random and unexpected, 7-year-old Zoe Beard turned around in the spacious Tennessee Livestock Center main arena at Middle Tennessee State University and gave a total stranger a hug.

MTSU student Olivia Key was the recipient of the kind gesture by the Christiana Elementary School first grader, who was overjoyed by all the fun, excitement, sights and sounds of experiencing farm life under one roof.

“She wanted to give me a hug and told me she loved me,” said Key, 21, a senior integrated studies major and agriculture minor from Murfreesboro, Tennessee, who is about to graduate. “She was so sweet. That made it all worth it.”

Nivea Gilchrist, 18, center, a Middle Tennessee State University freshman animal science major from Nashville, Tenn., helps youngsters attending the annual MTSU School of Agriculture Ag Education Spring Fling get started on craft sheet puppets with materials an agritourism class provided for them. Six different schools brought nearly 900 students by bus to the event, held in the Tennessee Livestock Center on campus. (MTSU photo by J. Intintoli)

Key and her MTSU School of Agriculture agritourism classmates were on the receiving end of lots of smiles, questions and more from nearly 900 elementary school children attending the annual Agriculture Education Spring Fling Tuesday, April 11.

The agritourism students take the lead in putting together the spring fling — a series of activities in the main and a side arena that becomes a Barnyard Playground for the nearly hundreds of youngsters from Middle Tennessee Christian, Thurman Francis, Kittrell, Eagleville and Reeves Rogers attending the event.

Class instructor Alanna Vaught receives community support that brings live animals including extremely popular baby chicks, a rabbit, dairy and beef cows, a miniature horse, a lamb and a multiple world grand champion Tennessee walking horse, IB Smokin Joe, brought by 14-year-old twin brothers Tanner and Tucker Johnson from Stonewall Farm in Shelbyville, Tennessee.

Abigail Blythe, right, a senior Middle Tennessee State University animal science major from Murfreesboro, Tenn., who will graduate in May, helps Carter Milton, left, 7, and Elizabeth Aldridge, 8, both from Murfreesboro, touch the baby chicks on display Tuesday, April 11, during the annual Ag Education Spring Fling in the Tennessee Livestock Center on campus. Milton and Aldridge are second graders at Kittrell Elementary School. (MTSU photo by J. Intintoli)

“Our students and volunteers help change the lives of 870 children,” Vaught said. “We met the day before to talk about the event. I told them how gratifying it was going to be by the end of the day.”

Tractors, honey and beekeeping, the Little Acres section and cold chocolate milk from the MTSU Creamery were other farm tour stops before they had lunch and headed back to their respective schools.

The Rutherford County Farm Bureau, Rutherford County Farmers Co-Op, Hutchinson Farms and MTSU Block and Bridle club provided support.

Annabelle Wood, 7, a first grader at Christiana Elementary School, holds a cup of MTSU Creamery chocolate milk while being enamored by a dairy cow during the annual Middle Tennessee State University School of Agriculture Ag Education Spring Fling Tuesday, April 11, in the Tennessee Livestock Center on campus. (MTSU photo by J. Intintoli)

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