#13 – The Research Results Are In!

25 02 2009

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Please click to download the Communications Survey Results.

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It took me nine months, 100+ hours traveling on rough dirt roads (not including changing flat tires), four amazing volunteers, one great coordinator from the head Tabora office – thanks Craig, 50 or so staff to help conduct the survey, 626 farmers to participate in the survey, and too many hair-pulling hot hours in Africa to mention manually logging in the answers into my overheating laptop…but finally the long awaited for results are in.

KEY FINDINGS:

  • 0% of farmers have electricity
  • 0% of farmers have internet access within a 10 km radius
  • Only 3% of farmers can read and speak English
  • Only 2% own a computer
  • 75% of farmers have cell phone coverage
  • Cell phones are the prefered method of communication

Thanks again to everyone who has helped out and supported this project!





#10 – Holly on the road

17 09 2008

Salama,

Steve and Holly slaving away in the Alliance One office.

Steve and Holly slaving away in the Alliance One office.

Slowly but steady we are making progress on our research and education projects here in Tabora. On the research we are still working on getting the overall picture but we are getting very close to actually going out into field to gather data with Holly already taking first dibs by meeting with the Leaf Technicians. As Steve already announced last week, we also had a very nice visit to St. Francis primary school as a next step in the education part of the project.

Let’s start with St. Francis. St. Francis is a primary school just outside Tabora that already has some computers and has just started computer classes for some of the kids which would make it an excellent candidate for collaboration. Last Wednesday we had the privilege of getting a grand tour of the school and the facilities. I think if I speak for all three of us if I say we were in awe of what we saw. The school looks very well run, even by western standards. It might seem a bit strange to say something like that as if a well run school in Africa automatically doesn’t live up to Western standards, but after what I’ve seen in more rural schools in Malawi it is very exciting and hopeful to see a school like this. The school is not only a primary school but they also run a boys orphanage, a preschool and a pottery. It is them that make the clay filters that we have in our kitchen for filtering the water we drink. And the school is still expanding with a girls orphanage and a secondary school on the way.

One of the main issues when it comes to the computer classes at St. Francis is that there is not really anyone there to teach except for a volunteer which is excellent for now but hardly sustainable. The kids just love sitting behind a computer and learning how to work with this exciting machine. And this is where we come in, or should I say Steve. Because Steve has been working very hard on developing a curriculum (see also the previous blog entries) that could benefit St. Francis or any primary school or institute for that matter in teaching basic computer skills to kids.

We continued our visit to St. Francis on Sunday evening with a visit to Jay and Leen’s house for drinks and a very nice dinner at the boy’s orphanage with father Sami, the principal of St. Francis and the volunteers at St. Francis. We talked about what OTS is, what we can do but mainly we just had a good time. And we managed to get ourselves invited by Jay and father Sami to go to Igombe Dam by bike. Let’s hope we have more success in getting to the dam than the previous volunteers, seeing as the previous volunteer team miserably failed. Undoubtedly an update on that next week!

Holly has been quit busy joining meetings with the Leaf Technicians (LT’s) to get our ideas out there and create some good will amongst the LT’s since we will need them when we go out in to the field to talk to the farmers. Who better to tell what happened that Holly herself so here she goes:

In the past two weeks I have had the opportunity to attend meetings for area Leaf Technicians. These are the guys (and a few gals!) who meet regularly with the 22,000+ farmers in the Tabora region on a regular basis so these are the people who can really help OTS in connecting us with the people we’re trying to help.

Two weeks back, I went to the Tabora & Nzega meeting in Tabora Town and listened to a rather interesting seminar about best practices for fertilizer usage in the seeding stage of the tobacco season. Best part: it was mainly in English. After the two and half hour meeting I introduced the organization and our goals which seemed to be met warmly. At least everyone wanted a shiny new OTS Rural Research brochure.

And last Friday the traveling trio – me plus the two old men conducting the fertilizer seminars - hit the road for Sikonge, a two-hour, bumpy dirt road ride from Tabora Town OR a one-hour high speed, car-spinning-in-sand, road-block hazard dash. I experienced the latter. After we arrived in Sikonge town with one car-sick passenger barely recovered, a procession of red motorcycles (company-issues to all LTs) led us to a government building where the same fertilizer presentation was given, this time in Swahili. I’ve been warned that the further outside of the metropolis of Tabora Town the more important it would be to speak and understand Swahili…okay okay I get it. I barely kept up!

Anyway, at the end of Friday afternoon’s seminar I once again made my appeal for help from the LT’s in Sikonge and it rocked, if I must say so myself oh so humbly. I’ve watched and listened and learned that the key to getting folks to process information here is keeping it short and sweet and succinct (like anywhere else in the world). Therefore, I scrapped most of the niceties and simply smiled my way through my speech that touched on the four stages of the project:

  1. Gathering Inputs - The early stage where we learned about the farming industry, who’s who, what happens when etc.
  2. Growing Data Where we are today! This is the stage where we conduct our surveys, focus groups, and interviews of the farmers and stakeholders
  3. Harvest the Research Organize all of the information we find into categories that make it easy to see where they are problems/solutions
  4. Solutions to Market Finding the means to implement communication solutions that are sustainable (who will fix the technology when it breaks) and affordable (who will pay for the technology and on-going costs)

I passed out the now famous brochures to all the LT’s present and even chatted with a few afterwards who wanted to exchange numbers straight away. Looks like we’re going to get the cooperation we need! The only concern now is keeping up with all my new friends. My phone rang all weekend…this is a good problem to have. Yay.

All right Holly, you ask for a paragraph and you get a blog entry! ;) You won’t hear me complain!

Finally I would like to introduce you to our garden pet. This brightly colored fellow or girl has been hanging out with us quite a few times when we sit on the deck outside the volunteer house. Feel free to post any ideas for names!

Our garden pet. Does anyone have a suggestions for a name?

Our garden pet. Does anyone have a suggestions for a name?

Until next week!

Peter





#1 – Getting Started

19 06 2008

Holly’s been hard at work for the last several weeks networking and getting our facilities in shape, including fixing up the gorgeous volunteer house. Adil and I (Jordan) spent the last week in Dar, taking basic Swahili classes at KIU and getting some cultural immersion in the city (including being practically buried in Kiswahili while riding the local public transport system, the Daladala — quite a crowded, if cheap, mode of transport!).

Lots of practice with greetings (incredibly important to get anything done here), do’s and don’ts, and work with essential verbs and phrases. Our instructor, Nicholas, was an amazing help, devoting the better part of every day that week to teaching us and taking us out into the city.

Saturday morning brought our departure from Dar and flight to Tabora — quite a dramatic change. We left the hustle and bustle of the crowded port city and landed in quite the pastoral land of green. Holly met us at the airport, and we caught a ride with one of the Alliance One drivers to the house to drop off our bags before heading into town. (Still working on getting the keys copied…)

Things definitely move at a different pace here in Tabora. Mornings are very busy, with meetings with all of the various forces we’re trying to somehow tie together, including the mobile phone companies here, Alliance One, and the kind volunteers and staff at HAPO, a school for orphans of HIV/AIDS at which we’re spending some time teaching computer classes. Then, lunch and the heat-of-the-day afternoon siesta, when things slow down significantly. Evenings tend to be very laid back, with dinner and then social time with the volunteers and the locals.

Our research, all couple days of it, has been going remarkably well. Meeting with mobile phone companies will hopefully yield data on distribution, usage, and options for making mass communication more affordable. What we theorized is showing itself to be pretty much true — while computers are still more or less prohibitively expensive, mobile phones have become incredibly popular over the last couple of years here, with a remarkably high rate of usage. If we can get our hands on some more concrete data, we can match that up with data from Alliance One regarding their farmers, and really get things going.

Communication with farmers now is difficult at best. Most communication between the company and the farmers is done via cooperatives called primary societies, which handle the distribution of inputs (fertilizers, seeds, etc.), education, and the sale of the harvested and cured tobacco. To get information from the company, farmers must travel as much as 8 or 10 hours by bicycle or, if they’re lucky, vehicle, not even knowing if what they need will be there when they arrive. They spend the night there, then must spend another day traveling back, sometimes emptyhanded. To get payment for their crop, farmers or their representatives from primary societies must make what can sometimes be a several-day trip to the banks in Tabora to get the cash in a lump sum. Carrying this much money is extremely dangerous, even in a place as peaceful as Tabora, and so they either hide the money all over their bodies and make a mad dash back home, or, as occurs more often, spend it all on sundry things here in town and then return home, as broke as when they arrived.

Obviously, these problems are pretty big ones, and so we are just beginning to explore possible solutions. The expanded use of mobile phones, combined with mass messaging services to distribute information on pricing, payment, planting, or other essentials, is one promising option. Another idea from Alliance One, to solve the issues of payment, is encouraging investment in things like cattle or other livestock, so that the farmer, rather than spending his money on unnecessary things, can make a long-term investment that can serve as a safety net in the event of a bad year for tobacco. Alliance One is already undertaking a project like this called the Oxen Project, wherein investments are made into oxen and carts to allow for increased efficiency with work in the fields and easier transportation of inputs from and tobacco to the primary societies. More info about this project will be forthcoming, as we’ll be going to check out the demonstration areas in the next few days.

However, these options rely heavily on motivating the farmers and educating them, so we still have a lot of footwork to do, speaking directly with them and finding out their needs firsthand. In the next few weeks, we’ll be visiting farmers at the tobacco markets throughout the Tabora region, interviewing them and finding out what kinds of information and services they need and what would be absolutely useless to them. Throwing useless technology at a problem rarely does anything but create rust heaps, but careful research and the concentrated use of certain technologies could dramatically improve the lives of these farmers in this beautiful part of Tanzania.

–Jordan








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