TY  - JOUR
T1  - Collaborating Students as Caretakers for Maintaining a University Farm for Teaching in Rabbit Farming
AU - Fernandez-Cabanas, V.M. AU - Delgado-Pertinez, M. AU - Castel, Y. Mena, J.M. AU - Caravaca, F.P. AU - Gonzalez-Redondo, P. 
JO  - Journal of Animal and Veterinary Advances
VL  - 9
IS  - 3
SP  - 508
EP  - 513
PY  - 2010
DA  - 2001/08/19
SN  - 1680-5593
DO  - javaa.2010.508.513
UR  - https://makhillpublications.co/view-article.php?doi=javaa.2010.508.513
KW  - animal sciences
KW  -teaching farm
KW  -caretaker
KW  -Education
KW  -students
KW  -rabbit
AB  - The viability of maintaining a farm for teaching in Rabbit Farming at the Faculty of Agriculture (University of Seville, Spain) using collaborating students and the collaborating students&#146; perception of the educational usefulness of the activity were analysed. The collaborating students, organised into groups of three, spent 1.55&plusmn;1.04 h day<SUP>-1</SUP> in cleaning, feeding and taking care of the rabbits. They regarded the activity as being quite easy (mean&plusmn;SD = 2.44&plusmn;2.50, where 10 = extremely difficult) and compatible (9.19&plusmn;1.10, where 10 = totally compatible) with their other academic activities. The coordination between the collaborating students within each group was high (8.53&plusmn;2.14 with 10 = totally coordinated). Most of them (85.3%) opined that a group of three people was an appropriate size for the working subgroups. The degree of the collaborating students&#146; independence with regard to the professors in undertaking their tasks was noteworthy (7.82&plusmn;2.14 where 10 = totally independent). The collaborating students regarded the activity as highly useful (7.57&plusmn;2.20 where 10 = very useful) for acquiring skills in animal production. Overall collaborating student satisfaction with the activity was high (9.18&plusmn;1.71, where 10 = completely satisfactory). Maintaining a teaching farm using collaborating students is viable since they perform their tasks efficiently and regarded the activity as highly useful for acquiring skills in animal science.
ER  - 