Learning to think for ourselves: knowledge improvement and social benefits among farmer field school participants in Cameroon

A case study of farmers who attended cocoa integrated crop and pest management (ICPM) farmer field schools in Cameroon and non-participating farmers provides empirical results on areas where there are gaps and mixed results in the FFS literature. FFS provided farmers with new skills and knowledge on...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: David, S.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92566
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author David, S.
author_browse David, S.
author_facet David, S.
author_sort David, S.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description A case study of farmers who attended cocoa integrated crop and pest management (ICPM) farmer field schools in Cameroon and non-participating farmers provides empirical results on areas where there are gaps and mixed results in the FFS literature. FFS provided farmers with new skills and knowledge on cocoa ICPM and FFS graduates demonstrated superior knowledge on cocoa ICPM generally compared to non-FFS farmers. However, the tendency of FFS participants to retain and diffuse new skills and practices more than concepts and principles suggests the need to review aspects of the training. Forty-nine FFS graduates spontaneously provided hands-on informal training to 193 other farmers on key ICPM practices, demonstrating the contribution of farmer-to-farmer diffusion to scaling up farmer training. The case study suggests that FFS can be a starting point for farmer empowerment, but points out that social and technical outcomes can only be sustained if the appropriate local and national level institutions, support systems and policies related to agricultural extension and research are developed. The paper also highlights methodological issues related to measuring the social impacts of FFS.
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spelling CGSpace925662023-06-12T20:03:37Z Learning to think for ourselves: knowledge improvement and social benefits among farmer field school participants in Cameroon David, S. cocoa (plant) diffusion farmer field schools crops integrated pest management social impact A case study of farmers who attended cocoa integrated crop and pest management (ICPM) farmer field schools in Cameroon and non-participating farmers provides empirical results on areas where there are gaps and mixed results in the FFS literature. FFS provided farmers with new skills and knowledge on cocoa ICPM and FFS graduates demonstrated superior knowledge on cocoa ICPM generally compared to non-FFS farmers. However, the tendency of FFS participants to retain and diffuse new skills and practices more than concepts and principles suggests the need to review aspects of the training. Forty-nine FFS graduates spontaneously provided hands-on informal training to 193 other farmers on key ICPM practices, demonstrating the contribution of farmer-to-farmer diffusion to scaling up farmer training. The case study suggests that FFS can be a starting point for farmer empowerment, but points out that social and technical outcomes can only be sustained if the appropriate local and national level institutions, support systems and policies related to agricultural extension and research are developed. The paper also highlights methodological issues related to measuring the social impacts of FFS. 2007 2018-05-15T15:04:50Z 2018-05-15T15:04:50Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92566 en Limited Access David, S. (2007). Learning to think for ourselves: knowledge improvement and social benefits among farmer field school participants in Cameroon. Journal of International Agricultural Extension and Education, 14(2), 35-49.
spellingShingle cocoa (plant)
diffusion
farmer field schools
crops
integrated pest management
social impact
David, S.
Learning to think for ourselves: knowledge improvement and social benefits among farmer field school participants in Cameroon
title Learning to think for ourselves: knowledge improvement and social benefits among farmer field school participants in Cameroon
title_full Learning to think for ourselves: knowledge improvement and social benefits among farmer field school participants in Cameroon
title_fullStr Learning to think for ourselves: knowledge improvement and social benefits among farmer field school participants in Cameroon
title_full_unstemmed Learning to think for ourselves: knowledge improvement and social benefits among farmer field school participants in Cameroon
title_short Learning to think for ourselves: knowledge improvement and social benefits among farmer field school participants in Cameroon
title_sort learning to think for ourselves knowledge improvement and social benefits among farmer field school participants in cameroon
topic cocoa (plant)
diffusion
farmer field schools
crops
integrated pest management
social impact
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92566
work_keys_str_mv AT davids learningtothinkforourselvesknowledgeimprovementandsocialbenefitsamongfarmerfieldschoolparticipantsincameroon