This document summarizes research on a gender-inclusive farming family team (FFT) approach used in Papua New Guinea. The research aimed to understand barriers and enablers for women's participation and the model's influence. It found that women learn more when their families are included and communicating roles clearly is important. Practicing concepts concretely on farms aids learning. Key barriers were limited land and climate challenges. Recommendations included continuing the structured FFT approach and using participatory adult learning methods.
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Learning to work as a farming family team: Farmer responses to a gender-inclusive approach to extension
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Learning to work as a farming family
team: Farmer responses to a gender-
inclusive approach to extension
Gloria Nema, CARE International in PNG,
Seeds of Change Conference
April 1 -4 2019, Canberra University, ACT, AUSTRALIA
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Background
⢠The FFT action research (evaluation) project in PNG commenced in
July 2016 and ended December 2018. Final research report was
published on the UC website in January 2019.
⢠A partnership project between the University of Canberra and
CARE PNG funded by ACIAR
⢠The FFT model is used by CARE PNG and UC as a means to achieve
equitable household and farms roles for women and improve their
economic empowerment within the family.
⢠CARE PNGâs Coffee Industry Support Project â Family Business
Management Training (FBMT): small-holder coffee farming families
(Eastern Highlands Province)
⢠UCâs Family Farm Teams Manual â 4 Modules delivered to food
crop and cocoa small- holder farmers by trained adult peer
educators called VCEs (East New Britain and Western Highlands
Provinces)
⢠Both respective trainings have many similarities in topics and
delivery methods.
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AIMS and Objectives
⢠The overall AIM of the project was to identify
what is required for the family teams model
to become a sustainable and scalable
approach to development in PNG.
⢠The research sought to understand;
â Barriers and enablers for women
â Why or why not concepts from the FFT
approach resonated with surrounding farming
families and how they were influenced
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Methodology
⢠Qualitative data collection methods
⢠Four research sites; Gazelle district in East New Britain Province, Mul-
Baiyer District in Western Highlands Province, Unggai-Bena and
Henganofi Districts in Eastern Highlands Province
⢠Respondents: young men and women, older men and women,
community leaders and other members of the community.
⢠In all sites, more than 70% of farmers involved in the FFT program
participated.
⢠Lead Questions:
â What language and concepts within the FFT model enable women
to negotiate more equitable farm and family roles?
â To what extent does the FFT model have a ripple effect in farming
communities?
⢠Content analysis was used for data analysis
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Major Themes
⢠Two major themes that emerged were;
⢠Working as a family team
â Family members understanding roles and
responsibilities, setting family/farm goals, ability to
communicate effectively as a family, inclusive
decision-making, budgeting income and time,
understanding difference between needs and wants.
⢠Practicing better farming
â Real learning happens after application, investing in
the family through savings, informal discussion
assists in understanding new concepts
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Discussion
⢠Women learn more effectively and the success rate
of practicing ideas increases when their husbands
or families are included in the learning process
⢠Clearly communicating roles and responsibilities to
farmers through contextual targeted training on
families rather than isolating genders
⢠Findings also demonstrated practicing better
farming is central to learning. This links to the adult
learning theory that learning a new idea happens
effectively when it is linked to something concrete
in the personâs life, in this case farming.
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Barriers & Challenges
⢠Two barriers predominated;
â Shortage and accessibility of land
â Climate change (2016 Drought)
⢠Challenges;
â Access to bigger/formal markets
â Performing gender roles
â Customary obligations
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Recommendations
⢠âManaging land and organizing farm activitiesâ had
not been done before the FFT interventions. The
FFT training enabled farmers apply a gender
inclusive and structural approach to their farm.
Farming families applied that structured learning to
their daily activities. Therefore, it is safe to say that
FFT has become as successful approach that can be
taken to scale.
⢠Applying the principles of adult learning and
participatory methods during facilitation enables
effective learning and is recommended for trainings
in the scope of gender equality or womenâs
empowerment.
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Reference
⢠Chazdon S, Emery M, Hansen D, Higgins L, Sero R. (2017). A Field Guide to Ripple Effect Mapping, Program
Evaluation Series, University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing
⢠Coffee Industry Support Project Summary Document, CARE International in Papua
⢠New Guinea
⢠Cooperrider, D., Whitney, D., & Stavros, J. M. (2003). Appreciative inquiry handbook. Bedford Heights, OH:
Lakeshore
⢠Emery, M., Higgins, L., Chazdon, S., & Hansen, D. (2015). Using ripple effect mapping to evaluate program
impact: choosing or combining the methods that work best for you. Journal of Extension. 53(2)
⢠Hansen Kollock, D. A., Flage, L., Chazdon, S., Paine, N., & Higgins, L. (2012). Ripple effect mapping: A "radiant
way to capture program impacts. Journal of Extension, 50(5)
⢠Kolb, D (1984) Experiential learning: experience as the source of learning and development (volume 1).
⢠Prentice-Hall: Englewood Cliffs, NJ. Knowles, M (1984), Andragogy in action, Jossey-Bass, San Francisco, CA
⢠Websites:
â https://www.researchgate.net/post/What_is_the_role_of_family_farming_in_agricultural_developmen
t
â http://www.ifpri.org/publication/womens-self-help-groups-decision-making-andimproved-agricultural-
practices-india
â https://www.ifpri.org/publication/best-practice-best-fit-framework-designing-andanalyzing-pluralistic-
agricultural
â http://www.fao.org/family-farming-2014/home/what-is-family-farming/en/
Hinweis der Redaktion
FGDs supplemented by one-to-one interviews, photo documentation through farm visits, Ripple Effect Mapping (REM) tool piloted. Purposeful sampling method was applied.
REM is a process that requires bringing a sufficient number of program participants together in a focus group setting and combines four distinct evaluation methods: one-to-one interviews, group interviewing, mind mapping, and qualitative data analysis (Hansen, et. al., 2012)
Give narrative examples of each theme
THEME 1
The implications of findings in this thematic area suggests that for women to be economically empowered and to achieve more balanced development, applying the family approach to learning is fundamental. Facilitators of development have to be aware that for women to fully realize and utilize their potential, the family is central and all need to understand their roles and responsibilities and work cohesively together.
It is clear in this research that women learn more effectively and the success rate of practising ideas increases when their husbands or family members are included. Clearly communicating roles and responsibilities to farmers through contextual targeted training on families rather than isolating genders is evidently essential for positive learning and change.
THEME 2
Findings also demonstrated practising better farming is central to learning.
Family farming includes all family-based agricultural activities, and it is linked to several areas of rural development. Approximately 60% of participants who were trained commented on actually âdoing or practisingâ the ideas and when seeing results they fully made sense of concepts in the FFT. Participants who were not trained (40%) initially stated âobservingâ positive changes in crops first before enquiring or applying the new techniques. A number of participants from the 40% also mentioned informal discussions on learnings from the training and saw then how they could be applied in their own families.
This links to the adult learning theory (Kolb, 1984) that learning of a new idea happens effectively when it is linked to something concrete in the personâs life, in this case farming.