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Mooving Cows

Evidence Tier:DOCUMENTED

Published in academic literature

For:Researchers & AcademicsGeneral Public & EnthusiastsIndustry ProfessionalsKids & Youth

App Summary

Mooving Cows is an educational game designed for dairy farm staff, students, and veterinarians to practice safe and effective cow handling skills in a simulated environment. The app's design was informed by focus groups with dairy farming stakeholders (N=30), including farm staff and veterinarians, who provided qualitative feedback on a prototype. The associated research concludes that the game is an entertaining and useful training tool, especially for new hires, that could help staff remain current with animal care standards.

App Screenshots

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Detailed Description

Functionality & Mechanism Developed at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Mooving Cows is a digital simulation designed to deliver training on low-stress dairy cow handling. The game engine places the operator in simulated farm environments with the objective of moving cows to the milking parlor. The interface requires strategic use of avatar body language and position to guide animal behavior, directly linking operator actions to cow stress levels, safety outcomes, and productivity metrics. The entire simulation is available in English and Spanish.

Evidence & Research Context

  • The tool's design was refined through a formal qualitative evaluation involving focus groups with Wisconsin dairy farm staff and decision-makers (N=30).
  • Evaluation participants affirmed the game prototype was an engaging and relevant instrument for job training in the dairy industry.
  • Stakeholders specifically identified the tool's utility for training new employees with limited prior experience in handling large animals.
  • The associated research details a collaborative development process grounded in established principles of animal behavior and welfare to meet industry training needs.

Intended Use & Scope This application is designed as an educational tool for dairy farm personnel, veterinarians, researchers, and animal science students. Its primary utility is to provide foundational instruction and practice on appropriate cow handling techniques. The simulation supplements, but does not replace, the hands-on experience and direct supervision required for competent and safe animal management.

Studies & Publications

1 publication

Peer-reviewed research associated with this app.

Qualitative Study

Engaging dairy farming stakeholders in developing the Mooving Cows digital tool for practicing appropriate cow handling

Van Os et al. (2025) · Journal of Dairy Science

Dairy workers found the digital game helpful for learning appropriate cow handling techniques.
Appropriate handling of dairy cows improves animal welfare and milk production and reduces the risk of injury to cows and people. However, safely interacting with cows requires training to understand their natural behavior. Our objective was to develop, in collaboration with Wisconsin dairy farming stakeholders, an innovative tool for dairy farm staff to practice appropriate cow handling. We created and evaluated a prototype of Mooving Cows, a digital touchscreen game in which players practice moving cows in simulated dairy farm environments. The learning objectives were to understand how human actions affect safety and cow behavior, stress, and productivity. We conducted focus groups with dairy farm staff (3 groups in Spanish, n = 16; 2 groups in English, n = 4) and 3 English focus groups with decision-makers (n = 10) such as farm owners and managers, bilingual consultants, and veterinarians. First, the focus group participants completed questionnaires about their experiences with and perceptions of cow handling and professional training and then they played the game prototype individually. On average, participants indicated they felt fairly comfortable using mobile applications (scale: 1 = very comfortable, 5 = very uncomfortable; farm staff: 1.9 ± 1.2, mean ± SD, range = 1 to 5; decision-makers: 1.8 ± 1.0, range = 1 to 4). After playing the game prototype, participants engaged in recorded, facilitated discussions about their qualitative impressions of the game. The research team reviewed the transcriptions to identify action items for improving the final version of the game, then conducted an inductive codebook thematic analysis to summarize themes relating to the participants' impressions of the game. We incorporated participants' feedback into version 1.0 of the game and compiled their ideas for future versions of the game. Overall, participants indicated the game was entertaining and would be useful for job training, particularly for new hires with little cow-handling experience. The results from the qualitative evaluation of the game prototype by dairy farming stakeholders suggest that the game could be a relevant way for farm staff, especially new hires, to remain current with national standards and expectations for continuing education.
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In the Media

Mooving Cows: A gamechanger in education on cow handling

UW-Madison researchers developed Mooving Cows to provide better training options for dairy workers on proper cow handling, using an interactive video game format that simulates milking parlor, pasture, and freestall environments. The game was developed based on decades of research and input from over 60 people in the Wisconsin dairy community, including dairy farm owners, milkers, consultants and veterinarians. Players can complete the 30-minute game in English or Spanish and receive a certificate that serves as documentation for the FARM Animal Care Program.

WiscRead article

Mooving Cows: A gamechanger in education on cow handling

UW-Madison researchers developed Mooving Cows to provide better training options for dairy workers on proper cow handling, using an interactive video game format that simulates milking parlor, pasture, and freestall environments. The game was developed based on decades of research and input from over 60 people in the Wisconsin dairy community, including dairy farm owners, milkers, consultants and veterinarians. The free app is available in English and Spanish, takes around 30 minutes to complete, and provides certificates that can be used for FARM Animal Care Program documentation.

WiscRead article

Mooving Cows' video game offers continued learning

The University of Wisconsin-Madison developed Mooving Cows to teach effective cow handling skills to dairy farm workers, veterinarians, researchers, and students, using simulated scenarios that replace live animal interaction. The free educational game features tutorials, minimal text, and bilingual options in English and Spanish for accessibility across diverse users. Players can earn a certificate of completion for continuing education that aligns with programs like the Farmers Assuring Responsible Management (FARM) Animal Care.

SquarespaceRead article

A Video Game For Dairy Farmers You'll Want To Play

University of Wisconsin-Madison researchers Dr. Jennifer VanOss and Dr. Nigel Cook developed Mooving Cows after collaborating for more than five years to address the lack of engaging, hands-on training for livestock handling on dairy farms. VanOss explains that traditional employee training "mostly came from reading materials or videos" and "wasn't engaging," prompting the team to create an interactive solution that teaches cow behavior and handling skills while addressing language barriers among diverse farm employees. The educational game is available as a completely free download on Android and Apple devices through UW-Madison's School of Veterinary Medicine.

MidwestfarmreportRead article

CALS News

UW-Madison researchers developed Mooving Cows to provide better training options for dairy workers on proper cow handling, using an interactive video game format that allows players to practice routine cow movement in simulated environments. The game was developed based on decades of research and input from over 60 people in the Wisconsin dairy community, including dairy farm owners, milkers, consultants and veterinarians. Players who complete all levels receive a certificate that can be used for documentation in the FARM Animal Care Program's required annual continuing education.

WiscRead article

New UW-Madison app designed to make happier, healthier cows

UW-Madison researchers developed Mooving Cows to help dairy farmers better understand safe cow interactions, using a virtual pen game that includes feed bunks, salt blocks and sand beds where animals can lounge between milkings. The app creates a digital learning environment that simulates real farm conditions without requiring actual farmland. The game-based approach allows farmers to practice and learn proper cow handling techniques in a virtual setting.

WiscRead article

UW Develops 'Game' Changer In Cow Handling

UW-Madison Professor Jennifer Van Os developed Mooving Cows to train farm workers in proper dairy cattle handling using an interactive smartphone game that reduces animal stress and increases milk production. "My idea was to do something more interactive that could interest people and help them practice these techniques," Van Os says, noting that passive learning through reading or watching is not the most engaging method. The bilingual app launches in early 2024 and simulates real-life situations like moving cows through parlors and barns.

MidwestfarmreportRead article

UW Develops 'Game' Changer In Cow Handling

UW-Madison Professor Jennifer Van Os developed Mooving Cows to train farm workers in proper cattle handling techniques, using an interactive smartphone simulator that reduces animal stress and increases milk production. "My idea was to do something more interactive that could interest people and help them practice these techniques," Van Os says, noting that farmers specifically requested this type of training tool. The bilingual game launches in early 2024 and teaches concepts like flight zones through real-life scenarios in a low-cost, low-risk environment.

MidwestfarmreportRead article

Cows: The Video Game

UW-Madison researchers developed Mooving Cows to train dairy industry staff on proper cow handling, using an interactive digital game that simulates farm environments on tablets. "In a digital game setting, we can remove the risks of causing stress or injury to real cows or people," says UW assistant professor Jennifer Van Os. Within two months of its January release, the free app was downloaded nearly 7,000 times across 98 countries.

UwalumniRead article

Mooving Cows

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