Authors
T Gwandu, F Mtambanengwe, P Mapfumo, TC Mashavave, R Chikowo, H Nezomba
Publication date
2014/1/1
Journal
The Journal of Agricultural Education and Extension
Volume
20
Issue
1
Pages
79-93
Publisher
Routledge
Description
Abstract
Purpose: The study evaluated how farmer acquisition, sharing and use patterns of information and knowledge interact with different socioeconomic factors to influence integrated soil fertility management (ISFM) technology uptake.
Design/methodology/approach: The study was conducted as part of an evaluation of field-based farmer learning approaches introduced by SOFECSA in Zimbabwe. Building on emerging farmer interactive platforms, data were collected using farmer participatory research approaches.
Findings: Over 90% of the farmers identified the national extension agents as the farmers' most preferred and reliable sources of information on ISFM, with farmer-to-farmer interactions ranking second. Non-governmental organisations and the print media emerged as the least trusted sources of agricultural technical information. Field-based learning centres, which enabled interactive evaluation of …
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