The Current and Future Roles of Small Farm Resource Centers in Extension and Advisory Services

Small Farm Resource Centers (SFRCs) coordinate trials on a central site as well as on fields of individual farmers. Any new ideas, techniques, or crops are first evaluated at the SFRC, and then often tested via on-farm trials in the community. The purpose of the SFRC is to evaluate, within the community, ideas that have been proven elsewhere and that show promise. The best of these ideas are adapted to become the backbone of the SFRC’s agricultural outreach and community development efforts, and are developed into a variety of educational and training formats, outreach projects and poverty alleviation initiatives. Thus, SFRCs have two distinct functions. First, the experimental component tests and adapts new ideas that have potential to aid in the development of the community. These adaptive experiments make sure that what has worked elsewhere (local or distant) can reliably be expected to work in a particular community with similar environmental conditions (e.g., climatic, topographic, soil) as the SFRC. Secondly, the demonstration and training component uses the center and on-farm trials as teaching tools. The demonstrations and trainings can be a base from which promising results are shown to extension staff of the sponsoring organization, interested government officials, development groups, or farmers in the community.

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Type of ALiSEA product None
Title The Current and Future Roles of Small Farm Resource Centers in Extension and Advisory Services
Description Small Farm Resource Centers (SFRCs) coordinate trials on a central site as well as on fields of individual farmers. Any new ideas, techniques, or crops are first evaluated at the SFRC, and then often tested via on-farm trials in the community. The purpose of the SFRC is to evaluate, within the community, ideas that have been proven elsewhere and that show promise. The best of these ideas are adapted to become the backbone of the SFRC’s agricultural outreach and community development efforts, and are developed into a variety of educational and training formats, outreach projects and poverty alleviation initiatives. Thus, SFRCs have two distinct functions. First, the experimental component tests and adapts new ideas that have potential to aid in the development of the community. These adaptive experiments make sure that what has worked elsewhere (local or distant) can reliably be expected to work in a particular community with similar environmental conditions (e.g., climatic, topographic, soil) as the SFRC. Secondly, the demonstration and training component uses the center and on-farm trials as teaching tools. The demonstrations and trainings can be a base from which promising results are shown to extension staff of the sponsoring organization, interested government officials, development groups, or farmers in the community.
Agroecology Category
  • Integrated systems
  • Seed management
  • Economy and income
  • Nutrition and diets
  • Sustainable food system
  • Biodiversity
  • Climate
  • Natural resources governance
  • Collaboration
  • Supportive policies
  • Knowledge and values
Agroecology Keyword
  • Agroforestry
  • Natural farming
  • Seed bank
  • Market access
  • Income
  • Nutrient
  • Food security
  • Biodiversity
  • Climate change
  • Renewable energy
  • Land rights
  • Cooperative
  • Extension system
  • Heritage
Contributing organisations Feed the Future
Author Abram J. Bicksler, Ricky Bates, Rick Burnette, Boonsong Thansrithong
Year 2014
Type of document Studies
Language English
Spatial Information
Country Asia
Administrative Level 1
Administrative Level 2
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