Elevate the feeder and waterer in the brooder to keep the bedding out.
X 2 - also, chicks and chickens will learn to drink from a rabbit-type water bottle very easily. Keeps the water clean and bedding dry.
Here is my list for new to chickens:
Chickens are chickens, they don't care how cute or nice looking your brooder or coop is or how expensive anything is (do it for you, not for them). They need food (good quality protein, scratch is NOT food), water, shelter and safety from predators. Everything else is just gravy.
Heat is a lot worse for chickens than cold, especially adults. Don't keep the brooder too hot, the cooler it is (within reason), the better chicks feather out for being outside. Give them lots of room to get away from the lamp.
If you bring in chicks that have been raised somewhere else, keep them separate! Quarantine your birds! All of my chicks ended up with cocci from a few BCM chicks I got from a farm.
Be prepared to face coccidiosis with chicks...all birds have it and stress brings it out. If you catch it early, it's not a big deal. Get some Corid or Sulmet ahead of time. Keep a good chicken medicine kit on hand.
Feed store employees often don't know as much as you think. Use BYC as a resource!
DON'T brood chicks in the house - way too much dust - use a garage, basement or even a separate part of the coop. You can move them to an outside brooder with a lamp at 3-4 weeks old depending on time of year and location.
Use craigslist to save money on supplies, etc. It is possible to get almost everything you need used (see #1, chickens don't care).
The best way to prevent picking or bullying is to provide plenty of room. There is no substitute for space.
Unless you are very disciplined you will end up with more chickens than you thought you would have. Chicken math does not discriminate.
Build your coop and run bigger than what you 'think' you'll need.
You don't need a heat lamp in the coop for adults unless you're above the arctic circle (or at least the 50th parallel
). How were chickens raised before electricity?
Get the right breeds for your climate! It will make your life a LOT easier.
The bigger the feeder and waterer, the less often you'll have to refill it.
I strongly recommend that you read the old timers thread in the Managing Your Flock section for ideas to share...they have some of the best advice newbies (and oldies) can get! I have learned so much from them!
Good luck with your class!