Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeNewsGame-based learning no child’s play for grower training project

Game-based learning no child’s play for grower training project

Australian grain growers are not commonly known as online gamers.

But, a new University of Southern Queensland (USQ) research project is attempting to use the hobby to help the broadacre cropping industry better prepare for – and manage – drought.

The university and the Queensland Department of Agriculture and Fisheries developed the online agricultural risk management platform ARMonline over a period of seven years.

Grain growers throughout Australia use it today.

ARMonline allows users to plan their crop production. It evaluates the season ahead by assessing cropping scenarios from the past 115 years using crop soil and weather models.

Now, with the help of a $1 million federal Government grant, USQ researchers will update the platform with game-based learning approaches to support decision making and improve business, social and environment drought resilience.

Lead researcher, Associate Professor Keith Pembleton, said the project would also be run in collaboration with colleagues from the Queensland Department of Agriculture and Fisheries, with the end goal to increase farm productivity, profitability, and adaptability.

“While dryland grain growing is well established in Australia, our climate is highly variable and many growers use gut feelings rather than taking an analytical, risk-balancing approach to farming decisions,” he said.

“Through the additional training elements and gamification of the platform, we’ll be able to further customise the ARMonline tool.

“That new training material will allow us to upskill growers from central Queensland to northern New South Wales, to identify and quantify key climate and drought risks to develop individual drought resilience strategies based on personal learnings.

“These efforts all help to reduce growers’ stress when making decisions – whether that’s short term decisions around what to do with a failed crop, through to long-term decisions around balancing risks coming into a dry period.”

For more information about the ARMonline suite of tools, visit www.armonline.com.au/#/

Grain growers and agronomists interested in participating in the project can contact Associate Professor Keith Pembleton via Keith.Pembleton@usq.edu.au

This project received funding from the Australian Government’s Future Drought Fund.

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Dog Trials return to CQ

Australia’s most prestigious working dog event will return to Central Queensland when the Ray White Livestock Rockhampton Working Dog Sale and Trial is held...
More News

Sale helps a good cause

The 2026 Beaudesert Santa Gertrudis Show and Sale is scheduled for 18 April at Beaudesert, featuring a showcase of Santa Gertrudis and Santa-infused cattle. The...

Regenerative gains ground

As the sun rose over rolling pastures at Hernani in northern NSW last month, hundreds of farmers, scientists and industry leaders gathered with a...

New date for bull sale

The 2026 Elders Outback Invitational Bull Sale in Longreach, Queensland, has been postponed to Wednesday 15 April, following widespread wet weather across much of...

Powder reinvents the nut

Kingaroy was re-established as the peanut capital of Australia with a nation-first production officially unveiled. Kingaroy’s Plenty Foods officially opened their nut powder facility...

A tribute to Ian Burnett

The entire Australian cotton family is heartbroken by the tragic loss of Ian Burnett and his much‑loved grandson. Ian was more than a respected cotton...

‘A leader and a mentor’: Industry pays tribute to Ian Burnett after fatal farm tragedy

The deaths of respected Central Queensland farmer Ian Burnett and his seven-year-old grandson have shocked Australia’s agricultural community. The 70-year-old primary producer and his grandson...

Funky Food wants imperfects

Funky Food is calling on farmers across Queensland and northern New South Wales to redirect surplus and cosmetically-imperfect fruit and vegetables to Australian households...

Friendship, tools and tea: The simple idea that strengthened Roma

For 20 years, Michael Reddan has watched a simple idea grow into one of Roma’s most valued community spaces. A place where conversation happens shoulder...

Biarra Valley frontline sale

Each year Biarra Valley Simmentals looks closely at the direction of our program and make considered decisions about the females we offer. This draft...

The ultimate weekend

Meatstock - Australia’s one-of-a-kind music and barbecue festival - is returning to Toowoomba Showgrounds bigger and better than ever on Friday 10 and Saturday...