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The Farmer Field School Methodology

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Title: The Farmer Field School Methodology


1
The Farmer Field SchoolMethodology
  • T.J. Ryan
  • June 6, 2008

2
Presentation
  • Introduction
  • Group exercise (groups of 5)
  • Farmer field school methodology
  • Preparation
  • methodology
  • Format
  • Conclusions
  • Lessons learned
  • Some results
  • Way forward

3
FFS A methodology for technology transfer
  • Farmer driven and scalable to large nbrs
  • Combines latest tech with extensive farmer
    knowledge
  • Highly adaptable
  • Ideal for large numbers of smallholder farmers
  • Can be used for staple and cash crops alike

4
Small group exercise
  • Directions
  • Objective every person at the table should end
    up with a square of the same size.
  • Each group of five must sit in a circle and
    must remain completely quiet.
  • You may not ask anyone else in your circle for
    a piece of his square.
  • You may not by yourself take a piece of a
    square from any other member of your circle.
  • You may not make a gesture (signal to another
    person with your hands or body or eyes) that you
    want a piece of a square from him or her.
  • You may not discard a piece of your square by
    just placing it in the middle of the table. You
    must give it to someone.
  • You are permitted to give pieces from your
    envelope to anyone else in your circle if you
    wish, but you may NOT help them assemble their
    square.
  • Each group member has pieces which form part of
    a square. You must make your pieces into a
    square right in front of you.
  • Policemen are to disqualify anyone who speaks
    or asks for a piece of a square, and policemen
    may not help anyone make their square.

5
Follow-up questions
  • How many thought they had the wrong pieces or
    that their pieces were not cut properly?
  • How many became impatient?
  • How many talked? How many gestured?
  • With whose square must everyone be concerned?
    His or her own?
  • Was there a time limit on solving the problem?
    Was this a contest to see who would finish first?
  • Does it matter if some people take longer than
    others to figure out how to solve a problem?
  • What is lost? What is gained?
  • Does a participant learn if another person solves
    a problem for him or her?
  • What are some problems with giving orders or
    instructions to adult learners?
  • What are some quiet ways to assist the learning
    of others?
  • Is it always necessary to tell someone the
    answer?
  • Is hearing the answer the same as discovering the
    answer yourself?

6
SUCCESS Alliance Ecuador
  • OBJECTIVES
  • Train 21,000 Smallholder producers using Farmer
    Field School methodology
  • Rehabilitate / renew cocoa orchards producing
    1,000,000 plants
  • Strengthen at least 10 smallholder associations
    and promote organization of new associations

7
Challenges Addressed - Ecuador
  • 400 years of exporting cocoa
  • Diseases Witchs Broom, Frosty Pod
  • Old trees low productivity, tall trees due to
    lack of pruning
  • Little cocoa orchard management Harvester
    mentality
  • Low Density (300-500 trees/ha.)
  • Lack of rural extension
  • Deforestation corn, rice, sugar cane on the
    rise
  • Entrepreneurial vision lacking in some cases
  • Economic pressure results in producers selling
    cocoa prematurely, without adequate post harvest
    treatment
  • Result Low yields and low returns

8
Preparation for FFS
  • Develop FFS curriculum
  • state of the art with broad input (farmers,
    researchers, cocoa industry)
  • Field test the curriculum - adapt to local
    setting
  • use adult education techniques (highly
    participatory, group work, practical exercises)

9
Preparation
  • Select FFS facilitators for TOT
  • Characteristics 14 dos and donts (work
    together, set example, dont lecture, ask
    questions, mutual inquiry, admit dont know)
  • Good facilitator dynamic, motivator, creative,
    prefers listening, punctual, time mgr, positive
  • TOT should be 3 weeks, 1st week - only
    communication skills
  • 2 weeks practicing the methodology and presenting
    the units.

10
FFS Curriculum Includes
  • Agro-eco system analysis (map)
  • Pruning techniques (rehab, maintenance,
    phyto-sanitary)
  • Grafting methods (side grafting, budwood)
  • Plantation renewal (decision tools)
  • Post harvest treatment
  • Disease identification and life cycles
  • Market overview

11
Communication is critical
  • The receiver is who decides whether the
    information is clear
  • Ask or find out why someone continues to do what
    they shouldnt
  • Successful communication with farmers is
    proportional to that which is put in practice

12
Methodology
  • Organize meetings w/ farmer leaders to identify
    participants
  • Groups of 25 are selected 1 farmer volunteers
    farm for the FFS (gt.5 ha)
  • FFS conduct practical exercises in groups of 5 to
    promote participation
  • 13 topics in 12 sessions meet every two weeks
    a 6 month period in total

13
Farmer field school
14
Format
  • Group decides what day and where to meet
  • The meeting takes place no matter what the
    weather is
  • Facilitators must be on time and prepared!
  • Everyone wears a name tag

15
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16
Format
  • 1st session introduces the methodology Typically
    farmers truly meet their neighbors for the first
    time
  • All sessions begin with intro of theme by
    facilitator 20 to 30 minutes
  • Followed by 2-3 hours of practical exercises
  • Not a traditional school explore everything!

17
3 principles of cocoa FFS
  • Grow a healthy crop plant nutrition, water, and
    disease control
  • Observe the crop weekly survey at least 10
    trees
  • Farmers become experts rather than depend on
    the extension agent

18
Real time results
  • Important for farmers to see results during FFS
  • Comparison of disease control for cocoa provides
    this
  • Learn basic statistics and research
  • See results within the 6 month FFS
  • Select intervention, control plots 64 trees
  • Cheap calculator, basic methodology

19
Comparative disease study
20
Results over 6 sessions
21
Some lessons learned
  • Target more isolated communities during the dry
    season
  • When farmers are treated well, they respond by
    applying what they learned
  • Must adapt the order of the curriculum to the
    weather cycle
  • You must do what you tell farmers youre going to
    do never overpromise
  • Choose the facilitators from the communities
    theyll work in
  • Any tool given to the farmer must be within their
    budget

22
Conclusion
  • Farmers are learning by doing
  • Large scale and relatively inexpensive
    (57/farmer)
  • Builds social capital
  • Credibility facilitates intro of related
    activities marketing, association devt.

23
ACDI/VOCA and FFS
  • 5 cocoa programs worldwide in Asia, Africa and
    Latin America
  • 90,000 farmer graduates of FFS in Indonesia,
    Philippines, Vietnam, Ecuador and Liberia
  • 60 adoption rates vs. traditional 20
  • Increase in farmer income, lower costs

24
What follows?
  • Build on farmer initiatives, access to other
    projects or private sector activities
  • Promote sustainable models of TA (farmers,
    associations, input suppliers, buyers)
  • Improved market linkages (direct buying
    contracts, certification options)

25
Thank you! Any questions?
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