If this scheme pleases you, click here to download.
WK | LSN | TOPIC | SUB-TOPIC | OBJECTIVES | T/L ACTIVITIES | T/L AIDS | REFERENCE | REMARKS |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 |
Opening and revision of last term exams |
|||||||
1 | 2 |
WEEDS AND WEED CONTROL
|
Weed Identification and Classification
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Define a weed and give examples. Identify common weeds using botanical and common names. Classify weeds based on growth cycle (annual, biennial, perennial). Classify weeds based on plant morphology (narrow-leaved, broad-leaved). |
Exposition of weed definition concepts. Discussion on weed identification methods. Drawing and labeling common weeds. Brief discussion on classification systems.
|
Charts showing common weeds. Weed identification guides. Drawing materials for weed illustrations. Classification system charts.
|
KLB BK III Pgs 192-199
|
|
1 | 3 |
WEEDS AND WEED CONTROL
|
Common Weeds in East Africa
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Identify common weeds found in East Africa. State botanical and common names of major weeds. Describe characteristics of different weed species. Explain competitive ability of weeds. |
Brain storming on locally found weeds. Discussion on weed characteristics. Exposition of competitive ability factors. Question and answer on weed species.
|
Pictures of common East African weeds. Weed characteristic charts. Competitive ability factor guides. Local weed examples.
|
KLB BK III Pgs 200-202
|
|
1 | 4 |
WEEDS AND WEED CONTROL
|
Competitive Ability of Weeds
Harmful Effects of Weeds |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
State factors contributing to competitive ability of weeds. Explain weed propagation methods. Describe environmental adaptation of weeds. Discuss weed survival mechanisms. |
Discussion on weed competitive factors. Exposition of propagation methods. Brief discussion on environmental adaptation. Question and answer on survival mechanisms.
|
Weed propagation method charts. Environmental adaptation illustrations. Survival mechanism diagrams. Competitive factor identification guides.
Weed damage pictures. Crop quality comparison charts. Striga parasitism illustrations. Health effect information guides. |
KLB BK III Pgs 200-202
|
|
2 | 1 |
WEEDS AND WEED CONTROL
|
More Harmful Effects and Benefits of Weeds
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
State effects of weeds on irrigation and aquatic systems. Explain effects on pasture quality. Describe beneficial effects of weeds. Discuss weeds as sources of food and medicine. |
Discussion on aquatic weed problems. Exposition of pasture effects. Brief discussion on weed benefits. Question and answer on food and medicinal uses.
|
Aquatic weed pictures (water hyacinth). Pasture quality comparison charts. Beneficial weed examples. Food and medicine use illustrations.
|
KLB BK III Pgs 166-167
|
|
2 | 2 |
WEEDS AND WEED CONTROL
|
Chemical Weed Control - Introduction and Mode of Action
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Outline methods of weed control. Define herbicides and their uses. Explain different modes of action of herbicides. Describe how herbicides kill weeds. |
Brain storming on weed control methods. Discussion on herbicide concepts. Exposition of herbicide action modes. Brief discussion on weed killing mechanisms.
|
Weed control method charts. Herbicide action diagrams. Mode of action illustrations. Herbicide effect demonstrations.
|
KLB BK III Pgs 203-204
|
|
2 | 3 |
WEEDS AND WEED CONTROL
|
Classification of Herbicides - Formulation and Application Time
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Classify herbicides by formulation (liquids, wettable powders). Classify herbicides by time of application (pre-emergence, post-emergence). Explain advantages of different formulations. State when to apply different herbicide types. |
Discussion on herbicide formulations. Exposition of application timing. Brief discussion on formulation advantages. Question and answer on application timing.
|
Herbicide formulation examples. Application timing charts. Formulation advantage guides. Timing recommendation tables.
|
KLB BK III Pgs 205-206
|
|
2 | 4 |
WEEDS AND WEED CONTROL
|
Factors Affecting Selectivity and Effectiveness of Herbicides
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
State factors affecting selectivity of herbicides. Explain factors affecting effectiveness of herbicides. Describe plant characteristics influencing herbicide action. Discuss environmental factors affecting herbicides. |
Brain storming on selectivity factors. Discussion on effectiveness factors. Exposition of plant characteristic effects. Brief discussion on environmental influences.
|
Selectivity factor charts. Effectiveness factor guides. Plant characteristic illustrations. Environmental factor diagrams.
|
KLB BK III Pgs 205-206
|
|
3 | 1 |
WEEDS AND WEED CONTROL
|
Herbicide Combinations and Safety Precautions
Advantages and Disadvantages of Chemical Control |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Give examples of herbicide combinations used in Kenya. State herbicide combinations for different crops. Highlight precautions when using herbicides. Explain safety measures for chemical handling. |
Discussion on herbicide combinations for different crops. Exposition of safety precautions. Brief discussion on protective measures. Question and answer on safe handling.
|
Herbicide combination charts for different crops. Safety precaution guides. Protective equipment illustrations. Safe handling procedure charts.
Advantage/disadvantage comparison charts. Method comparison tables. Environmental effect illustrations. Chemical control evaluation guides. |
KLB BK III Pgs 208-209
|
|
3 | 2 |
WEEDS AND WEED CONTROL
|
Mechanical Weed Control
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
State advantages of tillage as weed control method. Explain disadvantages of mechanical cultivation. Describe slashing and uprooting methods. Compare mechanical methods with chemical control. |
Discussion on tillage advantages and disadvantages. Exposition of mechanical methods. Brief discussion on method comparisons. Question and answer on mechanical techniques.
|
Mechanical control tool pictures. Tillage advantage/disadvantage charts. Method comparison tables. Mechanical technique illustrations.
|
KLB BK III Pgs 209-210
|
|
3 | 3 |
WEEDS AND WEED CONTROL
|
Cultural, Biological and Legislative Control
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Identify cultural methods of weed control. Define biological weed control and give examples. Explain legislative methods of weed control. Describe noxious weed laws in Kenya. |
Brain storming on cultural control methods. Discussion on biological control examples. Exposition of legislative control. Brief discussion on noxious weed laws.
|
Cultural control method charts. Biological control examples. Legislative control illustrations. Noxious weed law information.
|
KLB BK III Pgs 210-211
|
|
3 | 4 |
CROP PESTS AND DISEASES
|
Definition and classification of crop pests
Field insect pests - biting and chewing Field insect pests - piercing and sucking |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Define a crop pest. State harmful effects of crop pests on crops. Classify pests according to mode of feeding, crops attacked, and development stages. Distinguish between major and minor pests. |
Exposition of pest concepts. Discussion on pest effects and classification. Question and answer session on pest types.
|
Pictures of various crop pests, charts showing pest classification and damage
Pictures of locusts, army worms, cutworms, bollworms, diagrams of insect mouth parts Pictures of aphids, scales, thrips, mealy bugs, charts showing disease transmission table |
KLB BK III Pg 175-177
|
|
4 | 1 |
CROP PESTS AND DISEASES
|
Other field pests
Storage pests |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe characteristics of mites and nematodes as crop pests. Identify common rodent and bird pests affecting crops. Explain damage caused by these pests to field crops. Describe large animal pests including domestic and wild animals. |
Brain storming on microscopic and large pests. Discussion on rodent and bird identification. Examination of pictures showing various pest damage symptoms.
|
Pictures of mite damage, nematode galls, rodents, bird pests, large animals affecting crops
Storage pest specimens, damaged grain samples, pictures of various storage pests |
KLB BK III Pg 182-186
|
|
4 | 2 |
CROP PESTS AND DISEASES
|
Legislative and physical pest control methods
Cultural pest control methods |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Define legislative pest control methods and explain quarantine importance. Describe physical pest control methods including heat treatment, flooding, and suffocation. Explain use of electromagnetic radiation and physical barriers. State advantages of physical control methods. |
Exposition of legislative control importance. Discussion and demonstration of physical control principles. Brain storming on physical control applications.
|
Government quarantine documents, thermometers, charts showing physical control methods
Charts showing crop rotation cycles, pictures of trap crops, resistant variety samples, clean seeds |
KLB BK III Pg 187-189
|
|
4 | 3 |
CROP PESTS AND DISEASES
|
Chemical pest control
Biological pest control and crop disease introduction |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Classify pesticides according to formulation, target pests, and mode of action. Explain factors affecting pesticide efficiency including concentration and timing. State advantages and disadvantages of chemical control. Define integrated pest management. |
Exposition of pesticide classification. Discussion on application factors. Brain storming on pesticide advantages and disadvantages.
|
Sample pesticide containers, charts showing pesticide classification, application equipment
Pictures of beneficial insects, predator-prey relationship charts, diseased plant samples |
KLB BK III Pg 192-195
|
|
4 | 4 |
CROP PESTS AND DISEASES
|
Fungal diseases
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe characteristics of fungi as disease-causing agents. Classify parasitic fungi into main groups. Explain late blight disease of potatoes and tomatoes. Describe rust and smut diseases of cereals. |
Exposition of fungal characteristics and classification. Discussion on major fungal diseases. Examination of infected plant specimens.
|
Pictures of fungal structures, infected potato leaves, rusted plants, smut-infected crops
|
KLB BK III Pg 197-201
|
|
5 | 1 |
CROP PESTS AND DISEASES
|
Coffee berry disease and other fungal diseases
Viral diseases |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Explain coffee berry disease symptoms, conditions favoring infection, and control methods. Identify other common fungal diseases including powdery mildew and fusarium wilt. Compare different fungal disease symptoms and control strategies. |
Case study of coffee berry disease. Discussion on disease conditions and control. Examination of infected coffee berries and other specimens.
|
Pictures of infected coffee berries, charts showing disease cycle, fungal disease specimens
Pictures of mosaic-infected plants, charts showing viral transmission, infected cassava and tobacco samples |
KLB BK III Pg 201-203
|
|
5 | 2 |
CROP PESTS AND DISEASES
|
Bacterial diseases and nutritional disorders
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe characteristics of bacteria as facultative parasites. Explain bacterial blight of coffee symptoms and control. Identify symptoms of nutritional disorders in crops. Distinguish between biotic and abiotic disease causes. |
Discussion on bacterial disease characteristics. Case study of bacterial blight. Brain storming on nutrient deficiency symptoms and other abiotic causes.
|
Pictures of bacterial-infected plants, nutrient-deficient plants, charts showing various disease symptoms
|
KLB BK III Pg 204-206
|
|
5 | 3 |
CROP PESTS AND DISEASES
|
Cultural control of crop diseases
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Identify cultural methods of disease control including field hygiene and clean planting materials. Explain proper spacing, heat treatment, and crop rotation for disease control. Describe use of disease-resistant varieties. State advantages of cultural disease control. |
Brain storming on cultural disease control methods. Discussion on hygiene importance and resistant varieties. Demonstration of proper spacing principles.
|
Charts showing cultural control methods, disease-resistant variety samples, clean farming tools
|
KLB BK III Pg 206-207
|
|
5 | 4 |
CROP PESTS AND DISEASES
CROP PRODUCTION VI (FIELD PRACTICES II) |
Chemical and legislative control of diseases
Maize - ecological requirements and varieties |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Explain chemical control methods including seed dressing, soil fumigation, and spraying. Describe legislative control methods for disease prevention. Discuss integrated disease management approaches. Evaluate effectiveness of different disease control methods. |
Discussion on chemical control applications. Exposition of legislative disease control measures. Brain storming on integrated disease management strategies.
|
Fungicide samples, spraying equipment, government regulation documents, integrated management charts
Charts showing ecological zones, maize variety samples, maps of Kenya showing maize growing areas |
KLB BK III Pg 207-208
|
|
6 | 1 |
CROP PRODUCTION VI (FIELD PRACTICES II)
|
Maize - land preparation and planting
Maize - field operations |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe land preparation methods for maize. Explain selection and preparation of planting materials. Outline planting procedures including spacing and depth. State factors affecting planting time and spacing. |
Discussion on land preparation importance. Demonstration of seed selection. Brain storming on planting factors.
|
Farm tools, certified maize seeds, measuring equipment, charts showing planting procedures
Fertilizer samples, calculators, charts showing application methods, herbicide containers |
KLB BK III Pg 200-201
|
|
6 | 2 |
CROP PRODUCTION VI (FIELD PRACTICES II)
|
Maize - pest and disease control
Finger millet production |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Identify major pests affecting maize including stalk borers and army worms. Describe damage caused by maize pests. Explain control methods for maize pests. State symptoms and control of maize diseases. |
Examination of pest-damaged maize specimens. Discussion on pest identification. Brain storming on control methods.
|
Pictures of maize pests, damaged maize plants, pest control chemicals
Finger millet samples, charts showing ecological requirements, pictures of finger millet fields |
KLB BK III Pg 202-204
|
|
6 | 3 |
CROP PRODUCTION VI (FIELD PRACTICES II)
|
Finger millet - field management and pest control
Bulrush millet and sorghum production Sorghum - pest and disease control |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe fertilizer application in finger millet. Explain weed control challenges in finger millet. Identify pests and diseases affecting finger millet. Outline harvesting and storage methods. |
Discussion on field management. Brain storming on pest control. Exposition of harvesting methods.
|
Fertilizer samples, finger millet storage containers, pictures of head blast disease
Bulrush millet and sorghum samples, charts comparing crop characteristics Pictures of quelea birds, damaged sorghum plants, sorghum harvesting tools |
KLB BK III Pg 206-207
|
|
6 | 4 |
CROP PRODUCTION VI (FIELD PRACTICES II)
|
Beans production
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Outline ecological requirements for beans production. Identify bean varieties including dry beans and French beans. Describe land preparation and planting methods for beans. Explain importance of beans as protein source. |
Exposition of bean growing conditions. Discussion on variety selection. Examination of different bean varieties.
|
Different bean variety samples, charts showing ecological requirements
|
KLB BK III Pg 211-212
|
|
7 | 1 |
CROP PRODUCTION VI (FIELD PRACTICES II)
|
Beans - field operations and pest control
Rice production |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe field operations in beans including weeding and irrigation. Identify pests and diseases affecting beans. Explain control methods for bean diseases including halo blight and anthracnose. Outline harvesting methods for dry and green beans. |
Discussion on field management. Case study of bean diseases. Brain storming on disease control.
|
Pictures of bean diseases, diseased bean specimens, irrigation equipment
Maps showing rice schemes, pictures of rice fields, water control equipment |
KLB BK III Pg 212-214
|
|
7 | 2 |
CROP PRODUCTION VI (FIELD PRACTICES II)
|
Harvesting of industrial crops - cotton and pyrethrum
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe harvesting methods and procedures for cotton. Explain grading of cotton during harvesting. Outline harvesting methods for pyrethrum flowers. State precautions during harvesting of these crops. |
Demonstration of cotton grading. Discussion on harvesting procedures. Brain storming on quality maintenance.
|
Cotton samples showing different grades, pyrethrum flowers, harvesting baskets
|
KLB BK III Pg 215-217
|
|
7 | 3 |
CROP PRODUCTION VI (FIELD PRACTICES II)
|
Harvesting of industrial crops - sugarcane and coffee
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe harvesting methods for sugarcane including maturation indicators. Explain procedures for coffee cherry harvesting. State quality factors in coffee harvesting. Outline precautions during harvesting of tree crops. |
Discussion on crop maturation signs. Examination of coffee cherries at different stages. Brain storming on quality maintenance.
|
Sugarcane samples, coffee cherries at different ripeness stages, harvesting tools
|
KLB BK III Pg 217-218
|
|
7 | 4 |
CROP PRODUCTION VI (FIELD PRACTICES II)
|
Harvesting of industrial crops - tea
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe tea harvesting methods and procedures. Explain factors affecting tea quality during harvesting. State the importance of proper plucking in tea. Outline precautions during tea harvesting and transportation. |
Demonstration of proper tea plucking. Discussion on quality factors. Brain storming on harvesting intervals.
|
Tea plucking stick, tea baskets, fresh tea specimens showing different plucking standards
|
KLB BK III Pg 218-219
|
|
8-9 |
END TERM EXAMS AND BREAKING FOR DECEMBER HOLIDAY |
Your Name Comes Here