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HomeRuralPlanting curiosity in the classroom

Planting curiosity in the classroom

Recently, a couple of Queensland primary schools trialled a fresh approach to teaching the story of sugarcane.

The pilot sessions drew on CANEGROWERS’ professionally developed One Plant, Many Products resources, which were designed to show how cane links to everyday life in ways most students – and plenty of adults – have never thought about.

What set these sessions apart is that they weren’t just lessons for kids.

They also doubled as training for teachers.

Educators from the Primary Industries Education Foundation of Australia (PIEFA) worked side-by-side with classroom teachers, showing how the resources could fit into different subjects.

It was professional development on the spot, with sugarcane helping to make science, geography, economics and sustainability lessons more engaging.

The kids loved it.

Many were surprised to discover that sugarcane is more than the sweet crystals in the kitchen cupboard. It can also be used to produce renewable electricity, ethanol and even bioplastics.

Those lightbulb moments are powerful.

They help young people see farming not as something distant and old-fashioned, but as an industry that is modern, innovative and connected to their lives.

While sparking curiosity in students is a big win, giving teachers the confidence and tools to keep building on these lessons is just as important.

If a few of those students grow up with a deeper appreciation for farming – or even go on to explore a career in agriculture – then this pilot will have been more than worth it.

And this is just the start. In the weeks ahead, CANEGROWERS will roll out a new suite of high school resources to build on the momentum.

And for the youngest learners, we’ve teamed up with Aussie favourite George the Farmer to record a fun, catchy song celebrating cane farming and rural life.

It’s a light-hearted way to spark interest in agriculture from the earliest years, and is sure to be a big hit when released in coming weeks.

These projects are about more than awareness.

They’re about planting curiosity and making sure sugarcane has a place in the minds of the next generation – not just as part of Queensland’s history, but as an industry with an exciting future.

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