Tle-Afa-Agri Crop Production: Quarter 1 - Module 5: Occupational Health and Safety Measures in The Workplace
Tle-Afa-Agri Crop Production: Quarter 1 - Module 5: Occupational Health and Safety Measures in The Workplace
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TLE-AFA-AGRI CROP
PRODUCTION
Quarter 1 – Module 6:
Procedures in Land Preparation
Introductory Message
For the facilitator:
This learning resource hopes to engage the learners into guided and
independent learning activities at their own pace and time. Furthermore,
this also aims to help learners acquire the needed 21st century skills while
taking into consideration their needs and circumstances.
In addition to the material in the main text, you will also see this box in the
body of the module:
As a facilitator, you are expected to orient the learners on how to use this
module. You also need to keep track of the learners' progress while allowing
them to manage their own learning. Furthermore, you are expected to
encourage and assist the learners as they do the tasks included in the
module.
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For the learner:
This module was designed to provide you with fun and meaningful
opportunities for guided and independent learning at your own pace and
time. You will be enabled to process the contents of the learning resource
while being an active learner.
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This is a task which aims to evaluate your
Assessment level of mastery in achieving the learning
competency.
In this portion, another activity will be given
Additional Activities to you to enrich your knowledge or skill of
the lesson learned.
1. Use the module with care. Do not put unnecessary mark/s on any
part of the module. Use a separate sheet of paper in answering the
exercises.
2. Don’t forget to answer What I Know before moving on to the other
activities included in the module.
3. Read the instruction carefully before doing each task.
4. Observe honesty and integrity in doing the tasks and checking your
answers.
5. Finish the task at hand before proceeding to the next.
6. Return this module to your teacher/facilitator once you are through
with it.
If you encounter any difficulty in answering the tasks in this module, do
not hesitate to consult your teacher or facilitator. Always bear in mind
that you are not alone.
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What I Need to Know
Content Standard
The learner demonstrates an understanding of concepts, underlying theories
and principles in the preparation of farm materials, tools and equipment
occupational health and safety operations in crop production.
Performance Standard
The learners use farm materials, tools, equipment and applies occupational
health and safety practices in crop production.
Learning Objectives
What I Know
Let us determine how much you already know about the personal protective
equipment. Take this test.
I. Multiple Choice. Choose the best answer. Write only the letter of your choice.
2. It is the likelihood that a hazard will cause injury or ill health to anyone at or
near
a workplace.
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a. Risk b. Exposure c. Hazard d. Chemicals
4. This includes floors, stairs, work platforms, steps, ladders, fire, falling objects
slippery surfaces, manual handling, (lifting , pushing, pulling), excessively loud
and prolonged noise, vibration, heat and cold, radiation, poor lighting,
ventilation, air quality.
a. Chemicals c. Psychosocial environment
b. Mechanical and/or electrical d. Physical
6. It includes chemical substances such as acids or poisons and those that could
lead to fire or explosion, like pesticides, herbicides, cleaning agents, dusts and
fumes from various processes such as welding.
a. Chemicals c. Mechanical and/or electrical
b. Psychosocial environment d. Biological
Note: If you get 100% correct in this pre- assessment, skip the lesson but if not and only get
50% to 99% correct, then proceed with the lesson.
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Lesson Occupational Health and
5 Safety Measures in the
Workplace
Many hazards are present in the farm. If the farmers are not aware of these
hazards these may cause injury to their body or may cause diseases and even
death. Farmers should always apply appropriate safety measures while working in
the farm. In this lesson the students with the guidance and supervision of their
teacher should identify farm works that involve the use of chemicals and hazardous
tools and equipment; determine the use of Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
and determine farm emergency procedures regarding safety working environment.
What’s In
What is PPE?
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What’s New
are we exposed to
2. How can prevent hazard and risk from recurring?
What is It
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Hazard is the potential for harm, or adverse effect on an employee's health.
Anything which may cause injury or ill health to anyone or a near a workplace is a
hazard.
Risk is the livelihood that a hazard will cause injury or ill health to anyone at or
near a workplace. The level of the risk increases with the severity to the hazard and
the duration and the frequency of exposure.
TYPES OF HAZARD
Hazards are classified into five different types. They are:
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1. Provide emergency facilities appropriate for the sorts of emergencies that might
occur on the farm (e. g. deluge showers, eye washes, firefighting equipment, first
aid kits).
2. Make sure that the correct equipment is available to contain and handle any
chemical or other dangerous materials spills that might happen.
3. To help minimize the risk of a personal injury or property damage in the event of
an emergency, people working on and visiting the farm need to know and
understand the emergency procedures and their responsibilities.
4. Instruct every one working on the farm in the emergency response procedures.
5. Everyone should know the location of the fire alarms, fire extinguishers and first
Aid kits; how and where to contact emergency services ; and where to safely
assemble in the event of an emergency.
The following factors may increase risk of injury or illnesses for farm workers
1. Age – injury rates are highest among children age 15 and under and
adults over 65.
2. Equipment and Machines – most farm accidents and fatalities involve
machinery,
proper machine guarding and doing equipment maintenance according to
manufacturer’s recommendations can help prevent accidents.
All hazards that are found in the workplace should be reported immediately
to a supervisor, the safety department or management. This is a standard practice
that should exist in any workplace and every employee should be made aware that
this is the appropriate action to take should they encounter any hazard or potential
hazard they discover. However, many employees may feel (justified or not) that the
hazards they encounter, sometimes on a daily basis, are just how things are and
reporting them is not necessary. Designing, setting up and communicating a
Hazard Reporting Program is a good idea for any business to help avoid this
potentially dangerous attitude. Implementing a Hazard Reporting Program will help
ensure that your workplace is safer for your employees and reduce costly incidents
or business interruptions.
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All employees should be trained in hazard recognition and avoidance.
Hazard Reporting is a critical part of this training so that employees know exactly
what to do when they encounter a hazard they can’t immediately correct. Don’t get
overwhelmed by the word “training” because you can design the training to be as
simple as you need for your specific team. Depending on the types of hazards your
employees might encounter, this training could be a mandatory all-day in-person
training session for high-hazard jobs, or on-the-job training led by a competent
supervisor, or even a 30-minute safety meeting. For low-hazard jobs, at least
consider an annual online training or email reminder so employees understand
hazard reporting is not only acceptable but also expected.
During hazard reporting training, the following points should be
emphasized:
What is an unsafe condition that should be reported? This is any circumstance
found in the workplace that could allow an incident to occur that might harm
people, equipment or property. Give examples specific to your workplace such as
rusted or broken tools, inadequate PPE provided, containers that are not labeled,
insufficient stairway lighting, broken machine guards, or a leaking refrigerator in
the break room.
What is an unsafe act that should be reported? This is any behavior that could lead
to an incident that might harm people, equipment or property. Unsafe acts might
not be intentional. Examples of unsafe acts might include using equipment in a
careless manner or not using PPE as required.
What should be done if an unsafe condition or act is witnessed in the
workplace? This depends on the hazard reporting procedure in your workplace so
be specific. Let employees know exactly what steps they should take which could
be filling out a form or verbally telling a supervisor.
When should a hazard be reported? Any unsafe condition or act should be
reported immediately, or at the next available safe opportunity that the employee
has to do so.
What should employees expect after a hazard is reported? Let employees
know what the expected time frame is for corrective and preventative measures that
are expected and how employees can follow-up on the corrections progress, if
needed.
Where can employees find a copy of the Hazard Reporting Procedure? Are hard
copies of procedures kept at headquarters, or is the Safety Manual found online on
the company’s intranet? It’s important that employees know how they can access
all company policies and procedures on their own.
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Here are some examples of what a hazard reporting program might look like,
simple to more complex. Design a program that works for your company and your
employees. Document the procedure in a step-by-step format that is easy to
understand and the communicate to your employees what the process is and where
they can find the procedure to reference at any time.
Example 1:
Example 2:
Example 3:
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Example 4:
Example 5:
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If employees are reluctant to report hazards in the workplace, here are some great
ways to improve the quality of hazard reporting in your safety program.
• Make reporting as easy as possible.
• Ensure there is no negative stigma and no punishment attached to hazard
reporting.
• Give recognition to those who submit hazard reports.
• Engage workers in the resolution of hazards to ensure the correction is
satisfactory for all involved and does not create additional hardships
inadvertently.
• Keep an open discussion about safety issues, perhaps following up on the
specific hazard reported at the next safety meeting.
• Never assign blame to an individual when it comes to hazards found. Rather,
attribute hazards to “systems” like insufficient budget assigned for tool
replacements, lack of training, or comprehensive process needed.
• Post signs or posters around the workplace that reinforces the message that
unsafe conditions and acts must be reported.
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verbally or by filling a simple form available at bulletin boards or other conspicuous
places. The following is an example of such a form.
Hazard Report Form - Example
Name: Date:
Location:
Equipment:
Description of the hazard:
Signature:
Supervisor's remarks:
Corrective action taken:
Signature of Supervisor: Date:
What’s More
IDENTIFICATION
Direction: Write the word/s that corresponds to the statements below.
Write the answers in your notebook.
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the prescribed Occupational Health Safety (OHS) standards and which allow the
workers to perform his or her job without or within acceptable exposure to
hazards.
10.______________the practices related to production and work process.
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What I Have Learned
I will apply…
___________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________
What I Can Do
IDENTIFYING HAZARDS
Materials
• 2 sheets bond paper
• 1 pc Pencil/Ball pen
INSTRUCTION:
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Find out by accomplishing the Scoring Rubric honestly and sincerely.
Remember it is your learning at stake!
CRITERIA SCORE
Potential hazards are properly identified 20 15 10 5
Report is properly made
Suggestions are made to reduce risk
Potential victims are properly identified
Use of proper PPE during the conduct of the survey
Used appropriate tools
Assessment
I. Multiple Choice. Choose the best answer. Write only the letter of your choice.
Use your notebook for your answer.
1. It is the potential for harm, or adverse effect on an employee's health. Anything
which may cause injury or ill health to anyone at or near a workplace.
a. Chemicals b. Exposure c. Risk d. Hazard
2. It is the likelihood that a hazard will cause injury or ill health to anyone at or
near
a workplace.
a. Risk b. Exposure c. Hazard d. Chemicals
3. This occurs when a person comes into contact with a hazard.
a. Risk b. Exposure c. Hazard d. Chemicals
4. This includes floors, stairs, work platforms, steps, ladders, fire, falling objects
slippery surfaces, manual handling, (lifting, pushing, pulling), excessively loud
and prolonged noise, vibration, heat and cold, radiation, poor lighting,
ventilation, air quality.
a. Chemicals c. Psychosocial environment
b. Mechanical and/or electrical d. Physical
5. It includes electricity, machinery, equipment, pressure vessels, dangerous goods,
fork lifts, cranes, hoists.
a. Mechanical and/or electrical c. Biological
b. Chemicals d. Psychosocial environment
6. It includes chemical substances such as acids or poisons and those that could
lead to fire or explosion, like pesticides, herbicides, cleaning agents, dusts and
fumes from various processes such as welding.
a. Chemicals c. Mechanical and/or electrical
b. Psychosocial environment d. Biological
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7. It includes bacteria, viruses, mold, mildew, insects, vermin, animals.
a. Biological c. Mechanical and/or electrical
b. Chemicals d. Psychosocial environment
8. It includes workplace stressors arising from a variety of sources.
a. Psychosocial environment c. Chemicals
b. Biological d. Mechanical and/or electrical
9. It is the physical or environmental conditions of work which comply with the
prescribed Occupational Health Safety (OHS) standards and which allow the
workers to perform his or her job without or within acceptable exposure to
hazards.
a. Safety c. Psychosocial environment
b. Biological d. Chemicals
10. It is the practice related to production and work process.
a. Occupational Safety c. Psychosocial environment
b. Safety d. Biological
Additional Activities
Write your answer in your activity notebook and submit it the next meeting.
Do this activity. Classify the following hazards:
1. falling objects
2. machinery
3. cleaning agents
4. bacteria
5. ladders
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Additional Activities ASSESSMENT WHAT I CAN DO
1. Physical (It will be graded using
I.
2. Mechanical and/or the rubric.)
1. D
Electrical
2. A
3. Chemical
3. B
4. Biological
4. D
5. Physical
5. A
6. A
7. A
8. A
9. A
10. A
What I Have Learned What’s More What I Know?
Answers may vary l. I.
1. Hazard 1. D
2. Risk 2. A
3. Exposure 3. B
4. Physical 4. D
5. Mechanical and/or 5. A
electrical 6. A
6. Chemicals 7. A
7. Biological 8. A
8. Psychosocial 9. A
environment 10. A
9. Safety
10. Occupational Safety ll.
Answers may vary.
III. What’s New?
1. hazard
2. Answer may vary
3. Answer may vary
Answer Key
References
Hazard Report
https://sitemate.com/us/resources/articles/safety/hazard-report-
example/#:~:text=A%20hazard%20report%20is%20the,formal%20record%20of%20t
hat%20hazard.
https://www.google.com/url?sa=i&url=https%3A%2F%2Fsummer-heart-0930.chufeiyun1688.workers.dev%3A443%2Fhttps%2Fblog.prochoi
ce.com.au%2Fworkplace-safety%2Fsafety-hazard-
reporting%2F&psig=AOvVaw2a-
cFClrL4d87GPryDTuLz&ust=1594711693419000&source=images&cd
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=isch&tbs=isz%3Al&hl=en-
US&ved=0CAEQpwVqFwoTCPjT6qrMyeoCFQAAAAAdAAAAABAO&biw=1349
&bih=608#imgrc=8cv6oVX2Qe0ecM&imgdii=1Iu5Zp3s4AwRDM
https://weeklysafety.com/blog/workplace-hazard-reporting
https://injuryfacts.nsc.org/work/work-overview/top-work-related-injury-
causes/#:~:text=Work%20Overview,-
Top%20Work%2DRelated&text=The%20top%20three%20leading%20causes,involvi
ng%20days%20away%20from%20work.
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