Agriculture 2191

Brazil Travel Abroad

3 Semester Hours

Spring Semester 2011

Instructor:

Leon G. Schumacher

Professor

Agricultural Systems Management

207 Agricultural Engineering

(573) 882-2126 (Office)

(573) 884-5650 (FAX)

And

Roy Robinson

International Programs Director

2-64 AgricultureBuilding

(573)-882-0087 (Office)

(573)-882-0388 (Fax)

Agriculture 2191

Course Description:

Three semester hours of humanities credit. This course is designed to provide students with an introduction regarding the agricultural/natural resources of a host country. The class will meet eachTuesdayduring the semester until departure onJanuary 2, 2011 and March 24, 2011 (two groups). The lecture activities will focus on how people live and work in Brazil. Brazilian agricultural practices will be compared to farming practices here in the USA.

Goal of Course:

In addition to immersing the students in Brazilian culture while traveling in Brazil, students will gain an understanding of Brazilian engineering, economics, political, and educational aspects from a classroom setting. The ultimate goal is for students to gain insight about the global dimension of US and Missouriagriculture.

Objectives of Course:

At the close of the course the students will have:

1. Developed an understanding of Brazilian history.

2. Developed skill in theBrazilian language such that students are able to greet, ask directions, and are knowledgeable about how Brazilians travel from one place to the next.

3. An understanding of how engineering is taught in Brazil as compared to the USA.

4. An understanding of the Brazilian educational system.

5. A very basic understanding of Brazilian business, economics, and politics.

Textbook:No Text Required

Supporting References:

The internet & other textbooks, magazines, periodicals as requested during each meeting.

Grading:93 - 100 = A

90 – 92 = A-

87 – 89 = B+

83 - 86 = B

80 – 82 = B-

77 - 79 = C+

73 – 76 = C

70 – 72 = C-

67 - 69 = D+

63 – 66 = D

60 – 62 = D-

0 - 59 = F

Materialssubmitted after the specified due date will be subject to a

minimum of a seven percent deduction.

Assignments

October 26 – What do I hope to gain from traveling in Brazil and how will this help me as I enter the workforce? (2-3 paragraphs – 1 page; due at the end of the class period)

November 2 – If I had a free weekend, what would I do/visit in Brazil and why? (2-3 paragraphs – 1 page, due at the end of the class period)

December 7th, & 14th – Class Presentations

Focus – “What can we expect to see and do in the cities we visit that relate to each topic?”

Brazilian food/culture/traditions/history

Agriculture

Brazilian Engineering

Brazilian Economics/Politics/Exports/Imports

Focus on Environmental Policies/Standards

January Trip:

February 1st– Journal (~8 ½ X 11 notebook)

February 1st – Final Paper – see list of potential topics on pages 7 & 8

3-5 page double spaced paper (using topics provided)

Double spaced, 1” margins: top, bottom & side

12 pt. font, Times Roman

Introduction, Body, Summary

2 references

March Trip:

April 19 – Journal (~8 ½ X 11 notebook)

April 19 – Final Paper – see list of potential topics on pages 7 & 8

3-5 page double spaced paper (using topics provided)

Double spaced, 1” margins: top, bottom & side

12 pt. font, Times Roman

Introduction, Body, Summary

2 references

Photos on website for parents.

Points for Assignments

Oct 26 – Why Brazil-1 page20 pts

Nov 2 – Free Weekend-1 page30 pts

December 7th, & 14th– Reports – Group project50 pts

-Presentation=10 pts

-Participation=10 pts

-Content=30 pts

Feb 1 or April 19 – Journal50 pts

Feb 1 or April 19– Paper – 3-5 pages50 pts

Participation while in Brazil – on time, etc.50 pts

Total250 pts

Instructors:Dr. Leon Schumacher

207 Agricultural Engineering Building

(573) 882-2126

Roy Robinson

2-64 AgricultureBuilding

(573)-882-0087

Academic Honesty:

Academic integrity is fundamental to the activities and principles of a university. All members of the academic community must be confident that each person's work has been responsibly and honorably acquired, developed, and presented. Any effort to gain an advantage not given to all students is dishonest whether or not the effort is successful. The academic community regards breaches of the academic integrity rules as extremely serious matters. Sanctions for such a breach may include academic sanctions from the instructor, including failing the course for any violation, to disciplinary sanctions ranging from probation to expulsion. When in doubt about plagiarism, paraphrasing, quoting, collaboration, or any other form of cheating, consult the course instructor.

Statement for Intellectual Pluralism:

The University community welcomes intellectual diversity and respects student rights. Students who have questions concerning the quality of instruction in this class may address concerns to either the Departmental Chair or Divisional leader or Director of the Office of Students Rights and Responsibilities < ( All students will have the opportunity to submit an anonymous evaluation of the instructor(s) at the end of the course.

Attendance Policy:

An absence can be excused only if the instructor is notified BEFORE the class session that will be missed. Call 882-2126 or send an email to ailto:> to announce and explain any absence. Work due during an unexcused absence will NOT be accepted for credit.

Statement for ADA:

If you need accommodations because of a disability, if you have emergency medical information to share with me, or if you need special arrangements in case the building must be evacuated, please inform me immediately. Please see me privately after class, or at my office.

To request academic accommodations (for example, a note taker), students must also register with the Office of Disability Services, ( S5 Memorial Union, 882-4696. This is the campus office responsible for reviewing documentation provided by students requesting academic accommodations, and for accommodations planning in cooperation with students and instructors, as needed and consistent with course requirements. For other MU resources for students with disabilities, click on "Disability Resources" on the MU homepage.

Lecture Outline Overview

Agriculture 2191

Spring Semester, 2011

Thursday? – 6:30 – 8:30

DRAFT Brazil Meetings on Wednesday Nights

November 2th Overview of trip, history of Brazil, Brazilian wars, immigration to USA, etc

(History Professor, Also movie we might watch.) - Roy

November9thConversational Brazilian, “Thanks, no thanks, greetings, and counting”

Exchange Student – Roy

Nov 16th Conversational Brazilian, traveling, trains, buses, taxi, etc

Exchange Student – Roy

Nov30thOverview of itinerary as planned.Brazilianbusiness/economics/politics,Brazilianengineering and agriculture,Brazilian Education System

Dec 7th Class Presentations

______Class Presentations & What to pack, what NOT to pack-Roy

______Class Presentations & Final Trip Reminders

Exchange Student – Roy

______March Debriefing, Review of March Trip (Post-presentations)

Overview/ Final preparations for the Maytrip

Itinerary for Brazil 2010

December 31- January 12, 2010

University of São Paulo

Luiz de Queiroz College of Agriculture

Agricultural Systems Management (ASM) Faculty and Students Visit to Brazil

University of Missouri Faculty

Dr. Leon Schumacher

207 Agricultural Engineering Building

(573) 882-2126

Roy Robinson

2-64 AgricultureBuilding

(573)-882-0087

Program of Visit to ESALQ and Region

ESALQ Faculty

Dr. Ricardo SHIROTA

Department of Economics, Business and Sociology/ESALQ/University of São Paulo

Av. Pádua Dias, 11

Piracicaba, SP 13418-900

Brazil

Phone: +55 (19) 3429-4464

E-mail:

PROGRAM OF VISIT -

Week 1

December 31, Friday

11:00 a.m.Depart from Trowbridge Parking Lot on bus headed to airport

4:05 p.m. Depart from St. Louis on Airplane AA 1697

6:00 p.m.Arrive at Dallas Fort Worth Airport

7:30 p.m.Depart Dallas to São Paulo/Guarulhos AirportAA 963

January1, Saturday

9:40 a.m.Expected arrival at GRU - São Paulo’s International Airport in Guarulhos - clear immigration and customs.

(noon-ish) p.m.Lunch

(afternoon) p.m.Check intoHotel / Get settled in rooms

(afternoon) p.m.City Tour

(evening) p.m.Dinner

January2, Sunday

(early) a.m.Breakfast

(morning) a.m.“Hippie Market” (Souvenir Shop) (Sao Paulo)

(noon-ish) p.m.Lunch (Barbecue)

(afternoon) p.m.Museums

(evening) p.m.Shopping Center

(evening) p.m.Dinner

January3, Monday

(early) a.m.Breakfast

(morning) a.m.Port of Santo’s Port Authority; ADM grain terminal (Santos)

Must have long pants and leather shoes

(noon-ish) p.m.Lunch

(afternoon) p.m. Port tour by boat; beach if time is available (Santos)

(evening) p.m.Dinner

January4, Tuesday

(early) a.m.Breakfast

(morning) a.m.Visit a Tropical Rain Forest Natural Preserve;

BEACH for the rest of the day!

(noon-ish) p.m.Lunch

(afternoon) p.m.BEACH!

(evening) p.m.Dinner

January 5, Wednesday

(early) a.m.Breakfast

(morning) a.m.Orange Farm, and packing house

(noon-ish) p.m.Lunch

(afternoon) p.m.Travel to Ribeirao Preto

(evening) p.m.Dinner

January6, Thursday

(early) a.m.Breakfast

(morning) a.m.CAROL (large grain farmers’ coop)

(morning) a.m.Soy and corn farms

(morning) a.m.Soy processing plant (Orlandia)

(noon-ish) p.m.Lunch

(afternoon) p.m.AGROMEN (farm machinery museum; horse farm) (Orlandia)

Week 2

January7, Friday

(early) a.m.Breakfast

(morning) a.m.Cambuhy Farm (large coffee, rubber, and orange farm (Matao)

(noon-ish) p.m.Lunch

(afternoon) p.m.Marchesan/Tatu: Farm Machinery Manufacturer (Matao)

January8, Saturday

(early) a.m.Breakfast

(morning) a.m.COPLACANA (large sugar-cane farmers’ coop)

(morning) a.m.Dairy Processing Plant

(noon-ish) p.m.Lunch

(afternoon) p.m.Biodiesel plant

(evening) p.m.Dinner

January 9, Sunday

(early) a.m.Breakfast

(morning) a.m.

(noon-ish) p.m.Lunch

(afternoon) p.m.

(evening) p.m.Shopping Center; Dinner

January10, Monday

(early) a.m.Breakfast

(morning) a.m.Chicken Farm (Rio Claro)

(noon-ish) p.m.Lunch

(afternoon) p.m.EMBRAPA (National Ag. Research Corporation Beef Cattle Research Center (Sao Carlos)

(evening) p.m.Dinner

January 11, Tuesday

(early) a.m.Breakfast

(morning) a.m.Caterpillar

(noon-ish) p.m.Lunch

(afternoon) p.m.CNH (coffee and sugar-cane harvesters)

(evening) p.m.Dinner

January 12, Wednesday

(early) a.m.Breakfast

(morning) a.m.Depart Hotel to ESALQ: Welcome Ceremony w/ the Dean; presentations about the institution and BR’s agriculture

(noon-ish) p.m.Lunch

(afternoon) p.m.City tour; last minute shopping; Packing 

(evening) p.m.Dinner

(evening) p.m.Finish packing; check-out of hotel to depart to the airport

Flights home

11:55 p.m. Depart São Paulo Airport to Dallas Fort Worth AA 962

6:20 a.m.Arrive in Dallas Fort Worth

8:00 a.m. Depart Dallas Fort Worth to St. LouisAA 1056

9:35 a.m.Arrive in St. Louis

OR

1:10 a.m. Depart São Paulo Airport to Miami AA 998

6:20 a.m. Arrive in Miami

8:00 a.m. Depart Miami to St. LouisAA 457

10:50 a.m.Arrive in St. Louis

Leave St. Louis approximately 12 p.m. and arrive Columbia approximately 2:30 p.m.

On January 13

Brazil Assignments

As we discussed your final paper must be turned into Sandy Zaring, Room 207, Agricultural Engineering on February 1st (January) , 2011 and April 19th (March), 2011no later than 5:00 pm.

Papers will be assigned a point value by Roy Robinson and Leon Schumacher. If a paper is deemed to be of low quality by one of the above faculty members, a panel of students who traveled to Brazil with you will be selected by ASM faculty to pass judgment on your paper.

An email will be sent notifying you on your performance. If your paper is not satisfactory, you will be given one chance to re-submit your paper.

Potential Topics

  1. How did Brazildecide to use Portuguese as their national language? Why? Explain all the circumstances that led to this as almost all of the rest of South America speaks Spanish.
  1. How do Brazilian farmers make a living?
  1. What tillage equipment do Brazilian farmers use? What other equipment do they farm with? Is their agriculture more intense or less intense than farming in the USA?
  1. Pick a crop that is raised in Brazil, such as sugar cane, and explain how this crop is produced. This should include all phases of production: i.e. planting, harvesting, storage, and marketing.
  1. Brazilian culture- How is it different? Explain.
  1. Does the pace of life in Brazil seem faster or slower than in the USA? Explain.
  1. What are the educational differences for a student attending high school and college in the USA compared to students attending college in Brazil?
  1. John Deere tractor production in Brazil – vs. – John Deere tractors produced domestically; Safety in the factories we toured.
  1. How does John Deere produce equipment world-wide? For example, where do they produce engines that are installed in the tractors built in Brazil? How is this “parts production system” incorporated into their production plants world-wide? How are decisions made concerning “where” various items are made?
  1. John DeereBrazil – vs. – John Deere USA: Product differences?
  1. Tillage/Farming Practices – Tillage on slopes, No erosion.
  1. Compare the standards of living for farmers in Brazil to those in your community. If different, why?
  1. Tell how the production input cost such as fuel and labor are different from the US and how this affects the overall economy of a Brazilian farm.
  1. Other: topics can be approved which are not listed above. Simply email Roy Robinson or Dr. Schumacher for review.

Roy Robinson -

 Leon Schumacher -

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