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What Lessons Do Egg-Hatching Projects Teach?

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WOODSTOCK, N.Y. -- Egg-hatching lessons, which are used as part of classes on life cycles, are one of the most popular science projects in elementary schools across the country. But Animal Welfare Groups call them irresponsible and inhumane.

“They (the children) get to see the whole real thing and I think it’s the best way to teach it. I’m always amazed by it myself,” said Pat Torpie, a fourth grade teacher at Columbus Elementary School in Thornwood, N.Y.

Matt Curran also utilizes the egg-hatching project to teach his fifth graders at Kensico School in Valhalla, N.Y. “It’s a pretty neat project. It starts (in the) morning, picking up eggs. We bring them back to the classroom, (where) we have incubators that are set up already, and basically for three weeks, the kids observe the eggs as they develop over 21 days.”

Both teachers collected eggs for their students through the Westchester County 4-H Incubation and Embryology Project, which is part of the Cornell Cooperative Extension. During the spring of 2007, the projected hatched about 1,300 chicks in classrooms throughout Westchester County, as well as the Bronx, Brooklyn and Manhattan.

This year, almost 200 dozen fertilized eggs are again heading to classrooms around the county. If all goes well, in about three to four weeks, the same number of healthy chicks will be born. But the incubator is no match for a mother hen.

According to Jenny Brown, founder of Woodstock Farm Animal Sanctuary, “the egg hatching projects do not mimic what happens in nature with a mother and her babies. She turns them more frequently (and) can regulate their temperature.

“Oftentimes (the eggs) are neglected and starved. They are not given water or the attention they need, and so they suffer.”

The teachers, however, say their success rate – the number of chicks born healthy – is about 75 percent.

“Unfortunately we have had chicks that hatched, but were not formed properly,” says Curran. “It could be that the egg didn’t turn properly (or) maybe the temperature wasn’t as warm as necessary.”

Since there is no veterinary budget, these birds are discarded at the school, but what about healthy ones? A few months ago, rescue workers found a box of abandoned baby chicks next to a garbage can in Manhattan.

“The problem is that it teaches kids to treat these animals like disposable objects,” said Brown.

Nancy Caswell, 4-H community educator, says that she keeps track of where the baby chicks go, and if she discovers they have ended up in a garbage can, 4-H won’t give out anymore eggs to the responsible parties.

Teachers, who participate in the Westchester County 4-H Incubation and Embryology Project, drop the birds at the Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture. Lucky for them, it’s a free-range farm, but not necessarily a long-lived life.

“We get calls on a regular basis during the school year from upset parents, (whose) children are devastated when they find out that their chicks are going to a farm, and often the teacher will tell them the truth – that they’re going to be killed for meat,” said Brown.

This tough lesson might come from an out-dated teaching method.

“There are many wonderful alternatives (to the egg-hatching projects) in this day and age.”

If your child’s school is planning egg-hatching lessons, you can encourage them to use alternative projects.

For more information, visit United Poultry Concerns' Web site, UPC-online.org or call 757-678-7875.

If the project has already started, support the teachers in treating the birds well and finding them humane placement.

Tell us what you think about “Egg-Hatching Projects Teach the Wrong Life Lesson” below, and be sure to watch this video at the top right of your page. Share your favorite videos by clicking on the ZootooTV tab. Send us your story ideas by e-mailing us at news@zootoo.com or by calling us at 877-777-4204.



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128 comments found.
 
chitown
chitown
8 months ago
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Just because chickens come out of a shell doesn't mean this project is any less cruel than if they were using a pregnant dog or cat delivering a doomed litter to show "the miracle of life." It's the 21st century -- use computer programs instead.
 
Ann P.
Ann P. (basadorheeler)
8 months ago
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Good way to learn about lifecycles.
 
Amy H.
Amy H. (catlover85)
8 months ago
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We had this in school. We live in such a rural town that students were able to take the chicks home and have them as pets. I wish more schools would choose this. If they cant find good homes for the chicks they should not hatch them in the first place.
 
Rhonda T.
Rhonda T. (MrsRLT)
8 months ago
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why not show the complete cycle by having a mother hen taking care of the eggs? Our fair shows the hatching of turkeys but then they destroy the babies. It is sad and I think they could be educational without killing.
 
Anonymous
Anonymous
8 months ago
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shellguy
shellguy
8 months ago
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I would think that a teacher should have a plan in place for what happens after hatching before they embark on the whole process. That would be the responsible thing to do.
 
buckking
buckking
8 months ago
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As a farm boy we did this on a regular basis and we knew what happened when the chicks grew up, reality is reality, things happen, we did stop a large turkey farm from hatchng poults at the fair because they then would have to destroy the chicks after hatch because of disease, throwing the chicks away is not right, I really dont think this needs to be done in school unless it is a agricultural class there are great transparenciey books that show step by step
 
Christy M.
Christy M. (mallingc)
8 months ago
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I'm surprised the 4H club isn't taking the chics back. Sounds like they might just be making money selling the eggs. The should be more responsible along with the schools.
 
parcookie
parcookie
8 months ago
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I think it is done in innocence and if people understand that it isn't such a good idea, I think they would agree with not doing it! I never thought about it before but this article made me see the wrong side of it and thanks.
 
Robyn
Robyn (robyn101)
7 months ago
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I agree.
 
BHOLTZ
BHOLTZ
8 months ago
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I cannot see any valuable lessons learned from this in a classroom. You can vist zoos to see egss hatching.
 
Ethan W.
Ethan W. (wooday0691)
8 months ago
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There's better ways to teach life cycles.
 
Dorothy D.
Dorothy D. (ABusyLady)
8 months ago
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like what?
 
Anonymous
Anonymous
9 months ago
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Geoff L.
Geoff L. (glcats)
9 months ago
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I would think lessons on humane and respectful attitudes toward animals would be much more beneficial.
 
sunnysdad
sunnysdad
9 months ago
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Where do people think most chickens end up? I agree this classroom project is no longer relevant but I do think people have their heads in the sand when it comes to how animals are treated when raised for meat. These people need to learn about factory farming before protesting this.
 
bonzosmom
bonzosmom
9 months ago
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The hatched chicks should not be tossed in the garbage but sending them to a farm where they will end up as meat is a lesson in reality. I think people need to understand how their food is raised and how it is slaughtered.
 
dstrykr
dstrykr
9 months ago
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This is one of those stories that takes the credibility away from all Humane organizations out there. These organizations need to pick their battles better.

The 4H women says she monitors all the eggs and chicks hatched, and I believe her.

I have also raised chicks myself, both in an incubator and with a mother hen. Guess what? A lot of the babies by the mother die. I have, on MANY occasion, gone out and removed the mother from a hatched nest to find dead bodies under her. That is just a fact of life.

There are many people, companies and organizations, that use incubators to hatch eggs. So if you want to close down the school program, then close down all incubator sales.

If the "egg hatching projects do not mimic what happens in nature," then neither does some slide show, book or movie.

Our children are spoiled these days. They need to learn where our food source comes.

But in answer to the question "What Lessons Do Egg-Hatching Projects Teach?"
our children need to learn about death just as much as they learn about life. Both are equal. We live, we die. We do more damage when we try to protect them from that fact.
 
kyla a.
kyla a. (arizona860)
10 months ago
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there really is no true lesson that is learned by this project.. i remember a teacher doing this when i was in gradeschool and i just remember the incubator being neglected, sometimes power went out, etc.. a farm visit or video is just as good.. there are enough animals born with little hope for a future!
 
DEREKDEMANE
DEREKDEMANE
9 months ago
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I agree.
 
NFSAW S.
NFSAW S. (nfsaw)
10 months ago
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I used to teach myself and I agree most times there is not a happy ending for the chicks. A video or trip to a farm is just as good and more humane.
 
Ralph M.
Ralph M. (Ralph1)
10 months ago
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All this is teaching kids is that animals are disposable.Bad lesson.
 
Marisa M.
Marisa M. (meatandbones)
11 months ago
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Being a teacher myself, I feel like I am allowed to say that I DESPISE when teachers do this. Showing kids a video of a chick hatching is just as good--I'm sorry, the kids do NOT need the real thing!
 
Susan R.
Susan R. (Welela)
11 months ago
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I think the kids should just see a video of an egg hatching and learn that way. I'm sure the chicks are manhandled because the kids are so excited and the chicks are so cute.
 
Andy K.
Andy K. (Krochalk)
11 months ago
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If the kids eat meat, they should learn where it comes from. Harsh lesson for the really young so maybe they shouldn't be involved. But older kids, why not. Meat doesn't come from A&P or Safeway, it comes from animals that we raise and then butcher.
 
Sarah  W.
Sarah W. (Roxymimi)
11 months ago
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This is no good. Wish they'd stop doing that in school like that.
 
oldmaidcatwoman
oldmaidcatwoman
11 months ago
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I am relieved to report that they don't have egg-hatching projects in our local schools. We have a museum that has an egg-hatching exhibit and the kids go to see the exhibit (as well as the rest of the museum). I am afraid I don't know what the museum does with the hatched chicks, but I take some comfort in knowing that at least a smaller number of chicks are involved--every local school doesn't have their own project.
 
Kate H.
Kate H. (dixiepets)
1 year ago
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I agree its a bad idea. I know if I had this kind of project when I went to school, I would have been the kind of person that would have bought the deformed babies home to take care of them. Some kids can accept that they are taken back to the farm to be food, but many can not, and is why I'm a vegetarian now.
 
beverly y.
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bad idea
 
Jennifer G.
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I guess none of the commenters that this is a good idea actually do any animal rescue. We get many calls from schools with chicks and ducsk they hatch. Many of them are deformed and the school wants to provide NO CARE for them. I cant tell you how many times we have to pay vet bills for school hatchign projects.

Half the time they just dump them out somewhere and again the animals become the burden of the rescues. Why dont teachers teach kids responsibility and that when they bring an animal into this world they should plan to care for it its entire life. This teaches us that animals are here for our enjoyment and they are easily discarded afterwards.

If they were birthing puppies and dropping them at animal control afterwards to become animal food everyone would be up in arms. To some of us "animal lovers" all animals are worthy of the same care! Not just dogs and cats.
 
lori
lori (paawsproject)
1 year ago
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I totally agree with you!
 
Sydney  S.
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Both sides have interesting points of views. Though I do think that the egg hatching is a good way to learn about the development of a baby, it is cruel to the chicks if that is how they end up...
 
WANSTREET
WANSTREET
1 year ago
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All students learn differently and sometimes hands on is the best way. The project needs to be done by a responsible teacher and the babies need to have a destination before the project is started. What a great field trip to go to the farm where the babies are and continue learning about them and other aspects of farming.
 
5ineveryroom
5ineveryroom
1 year ago
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I agree. If done properly, this could be a great learning experience. And many children do learn best with hands on experiences. I also like the idea of a follow up field trip to see how thier chicks have grown!
 
Kathleen
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a better thing to do is raise butterflies. that way they can be set free and help the butterfly poplutaion grow. But the egg hatching was my favorite thing to do in school. my chick always hatched healthy.
 
kittypassion
kittypassion
1 year ago
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Needs to be more investigations into exactly what is happening to the chicks. Also, need to investigate these methods to make sure the unborn chicks aren't starved to death. I would think there would be a better way to teach children without the suffering of animals.
 
Amy R.
Amy R. (herplace)
1 year ago
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it's terible that the chicks are discarded in that manner. I think it is great for children to see however if there is a problem with homes for the chicks maybe they should just record it and play the tape every year...
 
Audrey T.
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We donated an egg to a classroom hatching project. It was a turkey egg that they hatched with several chicken eggs. The students enjoyed seeing the difference between the chicks and eggs and in the end, the turkey came home to roost. The teachers already had a home set up for the chicks. I hope that people can learn from this publicity and make these type of projects work in a positive way. I am surprised that the 4H providing the eggs doesnt offer local places to take the chicks or some answer to the issue.
 
Sarah B.
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It would have been nice if the article stated what the "many wonderful alternatives (to the egg-hatching projects)" actually were. So people could than encourage their schools to take those options into consideration before starting the class project. I think the underlying learning is there for the students but eggs are a very hard thing to raise properly & have a high success rate. I would think that teachers could use a different type of animal that is on loan from a shelter for socialization & proper care teaching. The shelter would ultimately be responsible for the care & treatment of the animal till it's adopted. The animal would benefit by being socialized w/ children & different situations. It would also prevent kennel crazy. Young rabbits etc. It all comes down to if they will be treated well & end up in a loving forever home.
 
Lauren D.
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It shouldn't be hard to find adoptive homes for the chickens, even in the city, the green movement is prompting lots of urban dwellers to start community gardens, and communtiy chickens would fit right in. The eggs would benefit everybody and the kids would get to see the chickens give back after they've raised them.
 
87Peace87
87Peace87
1 year ago
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This is terrible. Why give chicks-or anything-life, if you can't take care of it? If it starves or suffers, whats the point of bringing it into the world?
 
Cindy
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You don't eat meat... right??
 
Crystal
Crystal (crys9876)
1 year ago
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I remember watching videos in school, and I can honestly say I don't remember them and did not learn a thing from them, but I do remember the field trips and projects. Seeing something happen in person is way better than any video can show. Unfortunately these teachers have been doing this in an unethical manner. More care should be given to these developing eggs and a better life should be set up for these chickens than becoming food. I liked the previous post about sending classroom hatched ducks to a farm and then taking a field trip to see the ducks in their new home and learn about the workings of a farm.
 
rena n.
rena n. (renamn)
1 year ago
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I think it's good for the kids to work with the project doing it hands on but after they are hatched they should be sent o local farms where they will continue to be cared for. Doing things personally is alot better than watching a video or learning it form the pc.
 
Stephanie B.
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I am a teacher and we did a duck hatching project in our kindergarten classroom, the kids loved it and learned a ton, nothing a movie could have done for them. All the ducks turned out very healthy, had they not, I would have paid for vet bills out of pocket. Before the project, I had a farm set up for the ducks to go to upon maturation. The kids and I took a field trip to the farm to see where our ducks would live and to learn even more about the animals. If the teacher is responsible and respectful of the animals, this type of project is one where everybody wins; it can go bad with a reckless teacher though.
 
Cindy
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Exactly my thoughts- I'm glad a teacher said them!!
 
Janet V.
Janet V. (janeyv)
1 year ago
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I have to agree with movies instead of this.
 
sheri
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I not sure what to say on this one.I do agree with Elisa about wacthing a movie.
 
Elisa S.
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What's wrong with watching a movie?
 
Anonymous
Anonymous
1 year ago
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Anonymous
Anonymous
1 year ago
This comment has been removed.
 
Stephanie B.
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I am hoping you are vegetarian, otherwise you are a hypocrite. The same animals are being killed for humans' "need" to eat meat (not a true need at all). A chicken that spent part of its life in a classroom is better off than the chicken that is on your dinner plate tonight and definitely served more of a purpose in its life.
 
Suzanne P.
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I recall this "experiment" in 7th grade - not sure that I learned much from cracking open an egg every day to see what the inside of it looked like. Never mind the fact that we never wondered where the chicks went (if they were allowed to hatch.) Seems unnecessary to me. You could watch this on a film or something if you thought it was that important to see......same with dissecting animals frankly.
 
amanda e.
amanda e. (ae1191)
1 year ago
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We do a lot worse for the benefit of education.
 
Carly T.
Carly T. (Carly67)
1 year ago
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Maybe they should start being more concerned with the welfare of chickens on chicken farm and factories.
 
Stephanie B.
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Really! The majority of the animals are living wonderful lives compared to those that most of the negative people posting will be eating for dinner tonight!
 
Kat A.
Kat A. (kallen)
1 year ago
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I think this is horible. Those poor chickens!
 
Debbie L.
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How sad!! Project should be banned!
 
Stephanie B.
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The project should not be banned, it is an amazing experience for the children if controlled by a responsible teacher; I have carried numerous projects like this one through beautifully and the animals are doing well to this day. Bad teachers should be banned from doing the project is what you should be saying.
 
Cindy
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Why should this be banned? This is an experiment meant to teach our youth about the development of life forms. I think it's perfectly legit!! At the end of the experiment, the chicks produced should be placed in an appropriate farm or other location where they can live out their life, whether it be for food (yes, this does happen!) or for eggs. Any other disposal (such as the trash) is completely immoral and no respectable teacher would go that route!!!!
 
Cassie
Cassie (arcsis)
1 year ago
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We had an incubator in my high school Biology class. The eggs were a week or so from bring ready to hatch when the school had a spring break. The school underwent some construction, and the power was shut off for a majority of the week. All but 1 of the eggs didn't make it. Needless to say, it was so sad. The duck eggs were donated by a farmer, who then was going to take the ducklings back at the end of the year. Our class period named him Lucky (each period had it's own name).

Even with this incident, given proper care & supervision I think this is a useful tool. I certainly looked forward to class, if only to let the duckling swim in the lab sinks. (Which was a blast & absolutely adorable to watch!) Enjoying a class makes an immense difference in performance.
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