This course explains the general principles of chicken behaviour and welfare, and the behavioural and physiological indicators that can be used to assess welfare in chickens kept in hobby flocks through to commercial farms. The focus is primarily on laying hens and meat chickens (broilers) although many of the principles are relevant to other types of poultry. The course is likely to be of interest to people who own chickens as pets or keep a small hobby flock, commercial egg and chicken meat producers, veterinarians and vet nurses.
This brief module will tell you all the things you need to know to begin, including the syllabus of the course, who we are, how to engage with one another.
What's included
2 videos1 reading
Show info about module content
2 videos•Total 8 minutes
Chicken Behaviour & Welfare Promo Video•1 minute
Rules of engagement (from Animal Behaviour & Welfare course)•6 minutes
1 reading•Total 10 minutes
Finding more information•10 minutes
Introduction to Animal Behaviour: Domestication, Behaviour Development and Learning, the Senses
Module 2•2 hours to complete
Module details
Welcome to the first week of the Chicken Behaviour and Welfare Course. If you haven't seen it - watch the video which introduces you to the course: you can find it under "Getting Started; Welcome!" During this lesson, we will consider what makes a domestic animal, how behaviour develops in the chicken from before hatching and beyond, different types of learning and the senses - vision, hearing, taste, smell and touch.
What's included
13 videos5 readings1 assignment
Show info about module content
13 videos•Total 28 minutes
What is behaviour?•1 minute
What is a chicken?•1 minute
Domestication•1 minute
Prehatch and hatching•2 minutes
Imprinting•2 minutes
Other types of learning•3 minutes
Hormones and Behaviour•1 minute
Motivation•4 minutes
Vision•3 minutes
Hearing•2 minutes
Taste•1 minute
Smell and Touch•2 minutes
Interview with Sarah Brocklehurst•4 minutes
5 readings•Total 50 minutes
What is a chicken? Some images•10 minutes
Smithsonian's How the chicken conquered the world.•10 minutes
Learning who is your mother•10 minutes
Exercise: how operant conditioning works•10 minutes
Article on vision•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Domestication, Development and Learning, the Senses•30 minutes
Behaviour Patterns of Chickens, Part 1
Module 3•2 hours to complete
Module details
During this week, we will consider some of the major behaviour patterns of chickens, such as maintenance behaviours of chickens, and social behaviours. Maintenance behaviours means feeding, drinking, and comfort activities. Comfort activities include preening, dustbathing, and perching (among others). Social behaviours include communication, dominance, aggression, and spacing. This week will be a combination of video lectures, in-video quizzes and an interview with a backyard producer.
Distinction between preening, and oiling + preening•10 minutes
Aggression between males•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Behaviour part 1•30 minutes
Behaviour Patterns of Chickens, Part 2
Module 4•2 hours to complete
Module details
Welcome back everyone! During this week, we will consider the reproduction process in chickens, from courtship to brooding and hatching of eggs. We will then look at some abnormal behaviours that you might see in chickens. This week will be a combination of video lectures, in-video quizzes, video clips from outside sources, and a downloadable poster on eggshell abnormality.
What's included
12 videos6 readings1 assignment
Show info about module content
12 videos•Total 40 minutes
Introduction To Reproduction•2 minutes
Courtship•1 minute
Mating Behaviour•3 minutes
Nesting and Laying Behaviour•3 minutes
Brooding Behaviour•3 minutes
Problems With Nesting And Laying Behaviour•4 minutes
Interview With Johnny - Breeding And Preparing For The Show Ring•6 minutes
Interview With Derek - Small-scale Commercial Broiler Incubation And Hatching•10 minutes
Feather Pecking And Cannibalism•6 minutes
Stereotypic Behaviours•1 minute
Overdrinking (polydipsia)•2 minutes
Litter Eating•1 minute
6 readings•Total 60 minutes
Transcript for interview with Johnny - Breeding and preparing for the show ring•10 minutes
Hens that go broody•10 minutes
How to assess developing embryos in eggs•10 minutes
Egg shell abnormalities•10 minutes
Egg eating•10 minutes
Different types of feather pecking•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Behaviour part 2•30 minutes
What is chicken welfare? Defining "welfare", ethical obligations, and welfare standards
Module 5•2 hours to complete
Module details
During this week, we will consider what we mean by "animal welfare", and how a set of criteria known as the Five Freedoms can help you assess it. Dr Dorothy McKeegan from the University of Glasgow will discuss what the ethical obligations are of meeting an animal's welfare needs, and we will explore some of the various welfare standards that exist. Finally, we will look at welfare indicators, and Dr Barry Thorp from St David's Veterinary Team will discuss with Vicky what signs to look for in chicken flocks to make a welfare assessment. This week's Learning Outcomes: •Define 'welfare' and the Five Freedoms •What drives our ethical choices, including cost-benefit analysis •Describe some welfare standards available worldwide and how they differ •Explain ways to assess welfare, using behavioural and physiological indices
What's included
5 videos3 readings2 assignments
Show info about module content
5 videos•Total 16 minutes
Defining Welfare, and the Five Freedoms•3 minutes
Ethics and Poultry Production•5 minutes
Welfare Organisations and Accreditation Schemes•2 minutes
Effects of Stressors•1 minute
Assessing Welfare: Behavioural and Physiological Measures•5 minutes
3 readings•Total 30 minutes
Ruth Harrison•10 minutes
Article on a 'good life' for hens•10 minutes
Welfare accreditation schemes•10 minutes
2 assignments•Total 60 minutes
A Life Worth Living Exercise (just for fun)•30 minutes
Welfare, ethics, welfare standards•30 minutes
Effects of housing, transport and slaughter on bird welfare
Module 6•2 hours to complete
Module details
This is the last week of the Chicken Behaviour and Welfare course, you are almost at the finish line... During this week, we will consider the welfare of layer hens and broiler (meat) chickens, from hatch to slaughter, particularly in common commercial systems. This week's Learning Outcomes: •Compare the most common housing systems used in Europe for laying hens •Compare the most common housing systems used in Europe for broiler chickens •Discuss the pros and cons of free range housing •Describe methods of emergency killing •Discuss different transport requirements, depending on the scale •Describe some of the common methods of slaughtering poultry.
What's included
10 videos4 readings1 assignment
Show info about module content
10 videos•Total 66 minutes
Egg Production: Furnished Cages•17 minutes
Egg Production: Free Range•8 minutes
Chicken (Broiler) Production•8 minutes
Interview With Barry: Is Free Range Always Best?•11 minutes
Introduction To Killing Sick Or Injured Stock•2 minutes
Methods Of Culling Poultry•4 minutes
How Do You Know A Bird Is Dead?•2 minutes
Introduction To Transport•4 minutes
Depopulation, Transport, And Lairage•7 minutes
Stunning And Slaughter•3 minutes
4 readings•Total 40 minutes
Laying hens: supplement to the Code of Practice•10 minutes
Article on welfare problems in meat chickens•10 minutes
Pullet rearing, pullet welfare issues•10 minutes
Post-Course Survey•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Housing, transport and slaughter•30 minutes
Instructor
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4.8
1,212 reviews
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Showing 3 of 1212
A
AS
5·
Reviewed on Jun 8, 2016
I found this course to be very informative for those who are beginning to learn about chickens or would like to expand their knowledge to improve conditions for their backyard flock.
C
CL
5·
Reviewed on Oct 6, 2016
Fantastic course if you're just starting out in the world of chickens. I feel that I gained vital knowledge which has boosted my confidence in my abilities as a back garden hen keeper.
M
ML
4·
Reviewed on Aug 18, 2018
Informative. However sometimes it was hard to hear the lecture over the chicks. I would have also liked a bit more photos or videos of what was being talked about instead of a video of the lecturer
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