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an overhead irrigator moving across trays of plant seedlings
¶¶Òõapp¹ÙÍø students are using 360° images and video to take virtual tours of farms
3 November 2022

University of Queensland students are gaining unprecedented access to farms and other agricultural sites through self-navigated virtual tours.

The creative approach to teaching and learning is being led by from ¶¶Òõapp¹ÙÍø’s .

Mr Suresh said students scrolled their way around 360° images for invaluable insights into the agricultural corridor between Brisbane and Toowoomba.

“The project bypasses the logistical headaches that come with field trips, such as cost, class size, timetabling and safety,” Mr Suresh said.

“So far it covers the Lockyer Valley and Darling Downs regions which contain primary production that aligns to the concepts taught in the Bachelor of Agricultural Science course at ¶¶Òõapp¹ÙÍø.

“This includes horticulture, cropping, production animal management, natural grazing, feedlots in a range of agribusiness models.”

One site that students can visit is west of Toowoomba, a supplier of wholesale vegetable seedlings to the fresh produce industry and potted plants to the nursery and garden industry.

The plan is to add more sites to broaden student experiences and the ¶¶Òõapp¹ÙÍø team is seeking producers and organisations willing to be involved.

Mr Suresh said a virtual tour developed by Australian Pork Industries had recently been added and the team was in talks with two other locations.

“The great thing about this is that it’s simple to set up – you just need some nice quality 360° images of the site and you’re good to go,” Mr Suresh said.

“We hope this ease of use will allow us to keep populating the map so that anyone, not just agriculture students and teachers, can pick it up and use it.

“There are many educational applications for this format, it’s a really exciting opportunity.”

Third-year Bachelor of Agricultural Science student, Claire Cornel, has completed the Boomaroo tour and said she learned about the nursery, the different equipment on the site and how it benefited the nursery and environment.

“Lectures and practicals are good to demonstrate a concept, but the key to fully encompassed learning is to see those concepts in action,” Ms Cornel said.

“Virtual tours are able to harness key advantages of site visits such as the ability to witness real-world problems and solutions.”

The project is an example of the creative and innovative approaches being celebrated during through five days of events across the university’s campuses.

A team of academics has supported the project including , , and along with ¶¶Òõapp¹ÙÍø’s Science Blended Learning team and ).

Images above left: Screenshots of the virtual tour of Boomaroo Nurseries.

Media: Mr Suresh Krishnasamy, suresh.krishnasamy@uq.edu.au, +61 (0)422 986 140; Faculty of Science Media, science.media@uq.edu.au, +61 (0)438 162 687.