InTeGrate Modules and Courses >A Growing Concern > Student Materials > Unit 2a
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These materials are part of a collection of classroom-tested modules and courses developed by InTeGrate. The materials engage students in understanding the earth system as it intertwines with key societal issues. The collection is freely available and ready to be adapted by undergraduate educators across a range of courses including: general education or majors courses in Earth-focused disciplines such as geoscience or environmental science, social science, engineering, and other sciences, as well as courses for interdisciplinary programs.
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These student materials complement the A Growing Concern Instructor Materials. If you would like your students to have access to the student materials, we suggest you either point them at the Student Version which omits the framing pages with information designed for faculty (and this box). Or you can download these pages in several formats that you can include in your course website or local Learning Managment System. Learn more about using, modifying, and sharing InTeGrate teaching materials.
Initial Publication Date: October 16, 2014

Unit 2 Post-Activity Homework: Management to Minimize and Reduce Soil Compaction

You have spent time in this unit learning about soil – how it forms, its components, its critical functions, soil types, and about the very important properties of porosity and permeability. Now it is time to use what you have learned to educate others. You will act as an agricultural extension agent in Nebraska and provide advice to a farmer who would like to make the way she farms more sustainable. As an initial step in this move toward sustainability, she has been told by a neighboring farmer that she should start with soil management. She believes that reducing soil compaction will be a relatively easy and cost-effective way to start. To provide her with useful advice, please follow these steps:

  • Read the NebGuide: Management to Minimize and Reduce Soil Compaction (Acrobat (PDF) 801kB Aug3 14) and choose two of the seven soil management strategies that you think will save the farmer the most money. While you are reading, you may need to refer to the glossary below.
  • Briefly summarize the strategies you have chosen in your own words so that the farmer will understand your summaries, and be sure to define any technical terms used. Your summary of each strategy should include not only a brief description of the strategy, but the benefits provided to the soil by the strategy and how it will save the farmer money. Limit each summary to 3 to 5 sentences. If you use the last strategy – Deep Tillage – you only need to read the first two paragraphs (the remainder are a bit technical and not necessary for your summary), but make sure you look at all of the photographs.
  • Next, read the abstract at the beginning of the article by Nearing, et al, 2004 by navigating to this link: http://www.jswconline.org/content/59/1/43.abstract. How will the soil management strategies you are recommending assist your farmer deal with climate change?
  • Finally, provide a closing paragraph that informs the reader how following this soil management strategy will increase crop yields and decrease erosion, particularly in light of climate change and its potential impacts on agriculture. Include an explanation of why her soil management strategy can lead to a future of sustainable agriculture.
  • All technical terms should be defined correctly and should be conveyed in such a manner that a lay-person could understand them (since they are your audience.)
  • Make sure that your document is well organized, easy to read, and free of grammar and spelling errors. Use the grading rubric provided here as guide: Post-Activity Homework Grading Rubric (Acrobat (PDF) 12kB Aug3 14)

Glossary for Reading: Management to Minimize and Reduce Soil Compaction

  • Field Capacity: The maximum amount of water that a soil can hold
  • Microbial: Referring to microbes, microscopic bacteria and fungi that are the most abundant soil organisms and that help to cycle nutrients and support life
  • Perennial Crops: Crops that live a few years to many years, including such crops as alfalfa, clover, and grass; they require less work and can be used for grazing, protecting the soil in the process
  • Rotation (of crops): The successive planting of different crops on the same land; helps to protect soil from diseases and contributes to soil fertility
  • Till/Tillage (and No-Till): Tillage is the process of digging and/or overturning agricultural soil, which today is commonly done with heavy machinery; No-till farming is a method that does not use tilling
  • Yield (of crops): The output, or production, of a crop per unit area of farmed land

These materials are part of a collection of classroom-tested modules and courses developed by InTeGrate. The materials engage students in understanding the earth system as it intertwines with key societal issues. The collection is freely available and ready to be adapted by undergraduate educators across a range of courses including: general education or majors courses in Earth-focused disciplines such as geoscience or environmental science, social science, engineering, and other sciences, as well as courses for interdisciplinary programs.
Explore the Collection »