IL AITC Book Grants
Grow your classroom library with a book grant from Illinois Agriculture in the Classroom! Apply by Oct. 11 to receive up to $250 in books.
Check out the categories & titles below.
Grow your classroom library with a book grant from Illinois Agriculture in the Classroom! Apply by Oct. 11 to receive up to $250 in books.
Check out the categories & titles below.





Kindergarten through second grade classrooms can dive into learning about dairy with the St. Louis Dairy Council Adopt A Cow program!
The program allows classes to “adopt” a calf on an Illinois dairy farm, name it and receive monthly pictures and updates.
After signing up, the classroom will receive a printable birth certificate, which they can use to name the calf, and a poster to track the calf’s growth through the monthly photos that the teacher will receive via email.
To find out more & register by Sept. 13! Click here.
Fall 2019 Purple Plow Challenge – Growing Green
In this challenge, students will learn about energy in various forms and design as well as build and share a solution that diversifies energy consumption.
Students will research, students will design, test and demonstrate a solution to answer the question: How can we improve or diversify the way agriculture generates or consumes energy? Get all the resources here: https://www.purpleplow.org/challenges/
Challenge deadline Nov. 22!
At Kilgus Farmstead near Fairbury, sixty Normal West High School students had the chance to experience dairy from farm to fridge.
Kilgus Farmstead operates an on-farm creamery to bottle their own milk, allowing the students to see the entire process from dairy cows to gallons of milk.
“The field trip ties directly into our dairy unit,” says Family and Consumer Science teacher, Traci Verdery. “In class, the students made their own whipped cream, butter and mozzarella cheese.”
The farm tour gives them the chance to see where milk comes from, Verdery says.
The group of ninth through twelfth graders toured the barns, milking parlor and creamery plus enjoyed some ice cream from the on-farm store.
For the majority of the students, the field trip was the first time they visited a farm and had the chance to see dairy cows up close. Students learned about animal care, nutrition and food safety.
Funding for the dairy field trip was provided by an Ag Science Grant from McLean County Farm Bureau Foundation.