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Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Decision Making

You have a new job as a swine technician at a large pork production farm. You are currently assigned to the fostering area. This means that at the end of each day, you must divide the piglets up according to size.

The small ones (called the runts) are separated into one group, and given to a sow to nurse. The big ones are separated into another group and sent to another sow to nurse. This ensures that the runts will get enough to eat. If they are fed together with the big piglets, the big ones will crowd them out and the runts may starve.

You must keep careful records on a daily basis, and you must move the young piglets back and forth frequently. It is a time-consuming job and it means a lot of work.

It is a cold winter day and a storm is coming up. After your shift ends, you will have almost an hour to return to your home. For your own safety, you should leave as soon as possible so you can get home before the storm is too bad. However, you still have not fostered the baby piglets for the day.

The barn manager has offered to help you out in cases like this, since he understands that winter driving can be treacherous and that you have a long way to go. However, the piglets have been doing just fine all day. The runts seem to be managing to get enough to eat and would probably have no problems if you didn't foster them tonight.

What do you do?