Back to Leopold Letter Winter 2011
A statewide program designed to build a “Culture of Conservation” in Iowa will be working closely with the Leopold Center over the next three years.
The Leopold Center has strengthened its partnership with the Iowa Learning Farms (ILF), beginning in January and running through December 31, 2014. The Leopold Center is supporting development of educational materials for new audiences, including young people, and resources that can be used at ILF field days, workshops, classrooms and the Conservation Station, the ILF’s mobile learning center.
“The Iowa Learning Farms has been successful in capturing the attention of farmers and generating public awareness about practical ways that we all can improve our water and soil quality,” said Mark Honeyman, Leopold Center interim director. “This new aspect of our partnership will get Leopold Center research findings into the hands of farmers and increase the outreach and impact of the Leopold Center.”
The Iowa Learning Farms is an outreach and education program that brings together farmer and non-farmer conservationists, educators, and organization and agency personnel. Here’s a snapshot of their activities during the past year:
Among the new resources will be educational materials that look at prairies, wetlands, food systems and the Iowa landscape for the youth education program and the Conservation Station.
ILF began as a research and demonstration project in 2005, and was coordinated by Leopold Center Director Jerry DeWitt from 2007 until his retirement in mid-2010. The program is now led by Director Lois Wright Morton and Program Manager Jacqueline Comito, with the ISU Sociology Department; and Administrative Manager Matt Helmers, ISU professor of agricultural and biosystems engineering.
ILF funding partners are the Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship, Iowa State University Extension, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Iowa Department of Natural Resources (US EPA section 319) and the Leopold Center. Cooperating partners are the Conservation Districts of Iowa and the Iowa Farm Bureau.
Back to Leopold Letter Winter 2011