Training transfer for sustainable agricultural intensification in Tanzania: critical considerations for scaling - up

Sustainable Intensification (SI) in agriculture is fronted as a promising approach to increase agricultural production in Sub-Saharan Africa countries. Technologies that can lead to realization of the SI goal are available but one of the key challenges is the low reach among smallholder farmers due...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sseguya, H., Bekunda, Mateete A., Muthoni, F., Flavain, F., Masigo, J.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/93380
_version_ 1855519849755705344
author Sseguya, H.
Bekunda, Mateete A.
Muthoni, F.
Flavain, F.
Masigo, J.
author_browse Bekunda, Mateete A.
Flavain, F.
Masigo, J.
Muthoni, F.
Sseguya, H.
author_facet Sseguya, H.
Bekunda, Mateete A.
Muthoni, F.
Flavain, F.
Masigo, J.
author_sort Sseguya, H.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Sustainable Intensification (SI) in agriculture is fronted as a promising approach to increase agricultural production in Sub-Saharan Africa countries. Technologies that can lead to realization of the SI goal are available but one of the key challenges is the low reach among smallholder farmers due to, among others, ineffective training and co-learning. In this study, a survey methodology was used to obtain data from 145 trainees in a sustainable intensification intervention in Kongwa and Mvomero districts, Tanzania, to analyze the drivers of training transfer. Hierarchical linear regression revealed that motivation of trainees, training design and delivery, and work environment (peer, extension and local institutional support) had positive effects on transfer of the training. For successful transfer of training, recommendations given were a deliberate focus on selection of suitable trainees and ensuring their motivation to learn; use of appropriate documentation, extension and training methods; strengthening farmers’ networks for peer learning; and strengthening collaborations with local institutions.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace93380
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2018
publishDateRange 2018
publishDateSort 2018
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace933802025-11-12T06:50:28Z Training transfer for sustainable agricultural intensification in Tanzania: critical considerations for scaling - up Sseguya, H. Bekunda, Mateete A. Muthoni, F. Flavain, F. Masigo, J. agricultural development learning training inputs sustainable intensification smallholders Sustainable Intensification (SI) in agriculture is fronted as a promising approach to increase agricultural production in Sub-Saharan Africa countries. Technologies that can lead to realization of the SI goal are available but one of the key challenges is the low reach among smallholder farmers due to, among others, ineffective training and co-learning. In this study, a survey methodology was used to obtain data from 145 trainees in a sustainable intensification intervention in Kongwa and Mvomero districts, Tanzania, to analyze the drivers of training transfer. Hierarchical linear regression revealed that motivation of trainees, training design and delivery, and work environment (peer, extension and local institutional support) had positive effects on transfer of the training. For successful transfer of training, recommendations given were a deliberate focus on selection of suitable trainees and ensuring their motivation to learn; use of appropriate documentation, extension and training methods; strengthening farmers’ networks for peer learning; and strengthening collaborations with local institutions. 2018 2018-06-19T10:04:00Z 2018-06-19T10:04:00Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/93380 en Open Access application/pdf Sseguya, H., Bekunda, M., Muthoni, F., Flavian, F. & Masigo, J. (2018). Training transfer for sustainable agricultural intensification in Tanzania: critical considerations for scaling-up. Journal of Agricultural Science and Technology, 20, 661-671.
spellingShingle agricultural development
learning
training
inputs
sustainable intensification
smallholders
Sseguya, H.
Bekunda, Mateete A.
Muthoni, F.
Flavain, F.
Masigo, J.
Training transfer for sustainable agricultural intensification in Tanzania: critical considerations for scaling - up
title Training transfer for sustainable agricultural intensification in Tanzania: critical considerations for scaling - up
title_full Training transfer for sustainable agricultural intensification in Tanzania: critical considerations for scaling - up
title_fullStr Training transfer for sustainable agricultural intensification in Tanzania: critical considerations for scaling - up
title_full_unstemmed Training transfer for sustainable agricultural intensification in Tanzania: critical considerations for scaling - up
title_short Training transfer for sustainable agricultural intensification in Tanzania: critical considerations for scaling - up
title_sort training transfer for sustainable agricultural intensification in tanzania critical considerations for scaling up
topic agricultural development
learning
training
inputs
sustainable intensification
smallholders
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/93380
work_keys_str_mv AT sseguyah trainingtransferforsustainableagriculturalintensificationintanzaniacriticalconsiderationsforscalingup
AT bekundamateetea trainingtransferforsustainableagriculturalintensificationintanzaniacriticalconsiderationsforscalingup
AT muthonif trainingtransferforsustainableagriculturalintensificationintanzaniacriticalconsiderationsforscalingup
AT flavainf trainingtransferforsustainableagriculturalintensificationintanzaniacriticalconsiderationsforscalingup
AT masigoj trainingtransferforsustainableagriculturalintensificationintanzaniacriticalconsiderationsforscalingup