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About this lesson
grade level: 9-12
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curriculum standards:
6 8 13

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author: Phillip VanFossen
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posted on: November 4, 1999
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Teacher's Version

This lesson provides you with the resources that you will need to teach this lesson. We have also provided a link for your students to follow this lesson online. The link below contains only the information your students need:

http://econedlink.org/?a=122

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The Economics of the Family Farm

Key Economic Concepts:

Description:

Learn about the status of farming as a career, investigate the management of a family farm, and examine one recent farm crisis in this lesson.

You'll need the Adobe Acrobat Reader [1] to view some of the materials for this article.


Introduction:

Farming and agriculture have long been important parts of United States history.  Indeed, Thomas Jefferson believed that farmers were "the most valuable citizens. They are the most vigorous, the most independent, the most virtuous, and they are tied to their country and wedded to its liberty and interest by the most lasting bonds" (letter from Jefferson to John Jay, 1785).  Other comments by Jefferson about farmers and agriculture may be found here [2]

farmIn spite of this importance, however, farmers' agricultural prosperity has been threatened on numerous occasions throughout our history.  Think of the 'dustbowls' [3]   of the Great Depression-era 1930s.  This was a time when extreme weather conditions and falling crop and livestock prices drove farmers off the farms that had been in their families for generations. 

Today, many families engaged in agriculture also find themselves in trouble.  Weather conditions and falling agricultural prices threaten once again to force many families to sell off their land and take jobs elsewhere.  Evidence of the level of problems can be seen in the decade long efforts of groups like Farm Aid [4] to provide assistance to the family farm. 

The federal government [primarily through agencies such as the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA)] has also attempted to support farmers in times of crisis.  Recently, the House [5] and Senate [5] passed legislation to help farmers by passing a $7.4 billion farm relief bill.  Some of the relief for family farmers comes in the form of crop insurance against damaging weather; some comes in the form of subsidies for the crops and commodities that farmers produce.

After completing the following activities, you will develop a better understanding of the economics associated with the family farm.  In the first WebQuest activity you will prepare a report on the status of farming as a career.  In the second activity you will investigate the management of a family farm, including expenses and expected revenues.  Finally, you will examine one recent farm crisis--the tremendous drop in hog prices--in more detail. What caused the crisis?  What can be done about it?

 


Continue Economics of the Family Farm:

WebQuest: Farming as a Career?
The Economics of the Family Farm
The Market in Hogs: A Case Study

Resources:

Links Used:

1. ^ ^ "Adobe Acrobat Reader" - (www.adobe.com) Students can download Flash Player on this site.
2. ^ ^ "Thomas Jefferson on Politics and Government" - (etext.lib.virginia.edu) At this website, comments by Jefferson about farmers and agriculture may be found.
3. ^ ^ "Surviving the Dust Bowl" - (www.pbs.org) This site documents the U.S. Dust Bowl.
4. ^ ^ "Farm Aid" - (www.farmaid.org) This is the homepage for the group Farm Aid which has made efforts in providing assistance to the family farm.
5. ^ ^ ^ "Ag Observatory" - (www.agobservatory.org) This is the homepage for the IATP (Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy) which works locally and globally at the intersection of policy and practice to ensure fair and sustainable food, farm and trade systems and is a monitor for U.S. and world agriculture.


Teacher Reviews

June 7, 2009
As an educator of Agricultural Education, I am highly concerned that when this lesson references the House and Senate it is linked to an Agricultural Activist group that is deeply swayed to one point of view! This lesson has many good links that are non-biased. However I cannot believe an activist sight is linked to this lesson!

June 7, 2009
The Economics of the Family Farm is fundamentally a good lesson with the exception that when the house and senate links are clicked on they lead to an Agricultural activist web page. Many concepts on this web page are propaganda. On first glance the site seems legitimate however, deeper research for the site is The Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy (IATP) which was founded in 1986 with funds from
the Unitarian Universalist Church’s Veatch Foundation (which was, at the time, run by a former Greenpeace director). Its apparent mission is to criticize industrial agriculture in general and food technology in particular. I am highly concerned at the motivation behind this link.


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