Module 2. Extension and rural development programme
Lesson 7
INNOVATIONS IN FIELD EXTENSION
7.1 Introduction
Of late, a lot of
emphasis is being given on innovative extension approaches at the field level,
in order to ensure an effective implementation of the Transfer of Technology
(ToT) process. Many such new initiatives have been undertaken in India, the
details of which are as under:
7.2 ATMA
Agricultural Technology
Management Agency (ATMA) is a registered society of key stakeholders involved
in agricultural activities for sustainable agricultural development in the
district. It is a focal point for integrating research and extension activities
and decentralizing day-to-day management of Agricultural Extension System at
the field level.
7.2.1 Salient features
of ATMA
ATMA is established at district
level as an autonomous institution providing flexible working environment
involving all the stakeholders in planning and implementation of extension
activities. ATMA is a unique district level institution, which caters to
activities in agriculture and allied sectors adopting a farming systems
approach and convergence of programmes of related departments. Local research
and extension priorities are set through Strategic Research and Extension Plans
(SREPs), which are developed using participatory methodologies.
ATMA is registered under the Societies
Registration Act of 1860 that has considerable operational flexibility. It
operates under the guidance of a Governing Board (GB) that determines program
priorities and assesses program impact. The executive head of ATMA is known as
the Project Director (PD) and reports directly to the ATMA Governing Board.
One of the most important
activities undertaken by ATMA is to prepare Strategic Research and Extension
Plan (SREP), which consists of detailed information about agriculture and
allied sectors in the district. The purpose of preparation of SREP is to
identify research and extension needs of the district. This helps in
undertaking only those extension activities which are needed by farmers in the
district. SREP is prepared with full participation of farmers and their
representatives at different level. Technical officers of agriculture and
allied departments as well as from KVKs and other research institutions fully
participate in preparation of SREPs. Based on the research-extension strategies
given in the SREPs, block/district level plans are developed by ATMA
institutions. The State Extension Work Plan developed at state level is a
consolidated activity-wise plan incorporating all the district level plans and
the state level activities. In order to provide needed Human Resource
Development (HRD) support in the innovative areas of extension delivery, State
Agricultural Management and Extension Training Institute (SAMETI) has also been
established in each state.
7.3 Farmer Field Schools - A New Participatory
Approach
The farmer field school is a form
of adult education, which evolved from the concept that farmers learn optimally
from field observation & experimentation. FFS is a tool to build capacities
of farmer groups through participatory approach for promoting sustainable
agricultural development, managing crop eco system, to make them better
decision makers in sustainable use of resource at the cropping, farming &
watershed levels.
The term “Farmer Fields Schools” came
from the Indonesian expression Sekolah
Lapangan meaning just field school.
The first Farmer Field School was established in 1989 in Indonesia for control
of Brown Plant Hopper pest in rice through Integrated Pest Management (IPM).
Although
Farmer Field Schools were designed to promote IPM, empowerment has an essential
feature from the beginning. The curriculum of the FFS was built on the
assumption that farmers could only implement IPM once they had acquired the
ability to carry out their own analysis, make their own decisions and organise
their own activities. The empowerment process, rather than the adoption of
specific IPM techniques, is what produces many of the developmental benefits of
the FFS.
7.4 Participatory Extension Approaches
Participatory extension provides a
framework for extension staff to participate with village Communities in
facilitating development planning and activity implementation. This approach
ensures the extension response becomes community driven and assist village
communities implement their planned activities with routine monitoring and
evaluation of activities and development progress. Importantly, as the name
implies, the extension process is seeking maximum participation from women and
men from all groups within the target village communities. People’s
participation implies the active involvement in development of the rural
people, particularly disadvantaged groups that form the mass of the rural
population and have previously been excluded from the development process. FAO
experience has shown that through participatory programmes and activities it is
possible to mobilize local knowledge and resources for self-reliant development
and, in the process, reduce the cost to governments of providing development
assistance. People’s participation is also recognized as an essential element
in strategies for sustainable development of agriculture.
People’s participation should be
viewed as an active process in which people take initiatives and action that is
stimulated by their own thinking and deliberation and which they can
effectively Influence. Participation is therefore more than an instrument of
implementing government projects. It is a development approach which recognizes
the need to involve disadvantaged segments of the rural population in the
design and implementation of policies concerning their well-being. While
participatory approaches have been successful in many countries at stimulating
self--help activities at the local level, they can and should also be followed in
the design, implementation and evaluation of large scale projects.
7.4.1 Different participatory approaches
Participation aims at
bringing about change in people’s attitude which is critical on the part of the
people involved towards their environment and adoption of interventions for
agricultural development. In recent years, there has been a lot of
developments, in the use of participatory approaches. Some of these approaches
focus more on problem diagnosis, other are more oriented to community empowerment,
some concentrate on facilitating farmer-led research and extension, while
others are designed to get professionals in the field to listen to farmers. Some
of the these approaches are;
7.4.1.1 Rapid rural appraisal (RRA)
RRA is a social science approach that emerged
in the early 1980s for applications in development cooperation. In it, a
multidisciplinary team makes use of simple, nonstandard methods and the
knowledge of local people to quickly elicit, analyze and evaluate information
and hypotheses about rural life and rural resources that are of relevance for
taking action. RRA techniques are an attractive alternative to conventional
survey methods when the aim is not to systematically capture precise figures, a
typically time-consuming and cost-intensive undertaking, but rather speedy and
action-oriented assessment of local knowledge, needs and potentials with an aim
to elaborating strategies to resolve conflicts or investigate specific
problems. They are also suitable for shifting the focus of conventional surveys
onto essential aspects.
7.4.1.2 Participatory rural appraisal (PRA)
PRA
is a way of enabling local (rural and urban) people to analyze their living
conditions, to share the outcomes and to plan their activities. It’s a “handing
over the stick to the insider” in methods and action. The outsider’s role is
that of a catalyzer, a facilitator and convenor of processes within a
community, which is prepared to alter their situation.
7.4.1.3 Participatory learning approaches (PAL)
PLA is an approach for
learning and organizing participation of local communities and groups for
interacting with them, understanding them and learning from them. It helps in
initiating a participatory process, in sustaining it and in opening up vistas
of avenues for participation. It is a means of identifying and facilitating
intended groups and evoking their participation and also opening ways in which
such groups can participate in decision-making, project design, planning,
execution and monitoring.
7.4.1.4 Participatory learning methods (PALM)
PALM uses the key RRA concepts, but emphasizes
participation by village residents and the function of the externals as
catalysts and partners for self-determined development. The aim of PALM is to
go beyond “appraisal” and arrive at participatory analysis and a common
understanding of rural conditions. The focus is on learning from and with local
people. In order to avoid stimulating false expectations.
7.4.1.5 Agro-ecosystem analysis (AEA)
An agro ecosystem is
created by the combination and inter reaction of ecological and socioeconomic
processes. Analysis of the diagrams gives rise to a table of the most important
factors influencing the “system properties”. The system properties are: 1)
productivity (net output of an evaluated product), 2) stability of productivity
under normal conditions, 3) sustainability of productivity under stress, and 4)
equitable distribution of production and the resources and inputs required to
achieve it.
7.4.1.6 Participatory action research (PAR)
PAR is “learning-by-doing”
approach in which the investigator places his/her knowledge at the disposal of
local groups. The following is expected of an action researcher: awareness of
one’s own limitations and value orientation; willingness to empathize with and share
the problems and needs of local people; knowledge of their history and
political and economic situation. The action researcher then engages in a
dialog with the local groups, and works together with them in small discussion
groups to search for solutions to the their problems.