Final presentation of the dairy unit of Lakeland College's Student-Managed Farm (SMF) powered by New Holland.
The student-managed course in animal science technology sees 2nd year students work in one of the livestock unit.
Each team reports on marketing, production and other parts of their unit's business.
Mid-term and final presentations are done in Alumni Hall on the Vermilion campus.
Dairy Farm Management Software. Online Solution for Dairy Farmers to monitor production and reproduction, to make their dairy profitable.
https://web.facebook.com/DairyCareSoftware/
Final presentation of the sheep unit of Lakeland College's Student-managed Farm (SMF) powered by New Holland.
The student-managed course in animal science technology sees 2nd year students work in one of the livestock unit.
Each team reports on marketing, production and other parts of their unit's business.
Mid-term and final presentations are done in Alumni Hall on the Vermilion campus.
As part of an ongoing collaboration on Climate-Smart Agriculture between UC Davis, Wageningen University, the California Department of Food and Agriculture and the California Air Resources Board, this webinar focused on the challenges and opportunities for dairy farming as it relates to a changing climate.
Precision Pastoral Management Tools. Cattle & pasture performance data withou...Ninti_One
Leigo S and Driver T (2014). Precision Pastoral Management Tools Project – Cattle & pasture performance data without the sweat! Presentation to the Pastoral Beef Industry Profit Drivers & Innovation Field Day. 28 October 2014. Marree.
Final presentation of the dairy unit of Lakeland College's Student-Managed Farm (SMF) powered by New Holland.
The student-managed course in animal science technology sees 2nd year students work in one of the livestock unit.
Each team reports on marketing, production and other parts of their unit's business.
Mid-term and final presentations are done in Alumni Hall on the Vermilion campus.
Dairy Farm Management Software. Online Solution for Dairy Farmers to monitor production and reproduction, to make their dairy profitable.
https://web.facebook.com/DairyCareSoftware/
Final presentation of the sheep unit of Lakeland College's Student-managed Farm (SMF) powered by New Holland.
The student-managed course in animal science technology sees 2nd year students work in one of the livestock unit.
Each team reports on marketing, production and other parts of their unit's business.
Mid-term and final presentations are done in Alumni Hall on the Vermilion campus.
As part of an ongoing collaboration on Climate-Smart Agriculture between UC Davis, Wageningen University, the California Department of Food and Agriculture and the California Air Resources Board, this webinar focused on the challenges and opportunities for dairy farming as it relates to a changing climate.
Precision Pastoral Management Tools. Cattle & pasture performance data withou...Ninti_One
Leigo S and Driver T (2014). Precision Pastoral Management Tools Project – Cattle & pasture performance data without the sweat! Presentation to the Pastoral Beef Industry Profit Drivers & Innovation Field Day. 28 October 2014. Marree.
LIVES dairy value chain development: Distinguishing between fluid milk and bu...ILRI
Presented by Dirk Hoekstra, Azage Tegegne, Berhanu Gebremedhin, Aklilu Bogale and Yasin Getahun at the 21st Annual Conference of Ethiopian Society of Animal Production (ESAP), Addis Ababa, 28-30 August 2013
Technology transfer and utilization to increase productivity of Nepalese agri...Purna Kandel, PhD
Two third of Nepal's population depends on agriculture but struggles to produce adequate food for its people and imports around NPR 200 billion worth of food products each year. Inefficient production practices mainly because of lack of technologies resulting into negative margin for majority of the producers. Many farmers, particularly the young farmers are interested to adapt new technologies to reduce drudgery and production cost, to enhance input-use-efficiency and to generate more profit. In addition, due to a higher rate of male out-migration, we should be focused on a series of technology focused programs and projects.
Some already tested and proven technologies for examples use of genomic selection to enhance plant and livestock productivity, use of remote sensing data to uniform distribution of fertilizers and other farm chemicals, use of sexed semen to produce female calves for higher milk production, precision nutrient and water management technologies, use of scale-appropriate mechanization, disease resistance varieties of plant and animal species are common practices in developed world. As many of these technologies are already tested and proven elsewhere, a small investment and optimization to custom in Nepalese context can bring a big return to Nepalese agriculture. For export, Nepal has a huge potential to produce premium and organic agri-products along with some optimized indigenous technology to export in international markets.
New technology, market and risk management need to go together for better results. Government led risk management programs in big sectors like cereals, poultry, dairy and other commercial enterprises would greatly help in increasing efficiency of the sector and encourage new investments. There is also substantial outreach and investment required to smallholder subsistence farms for certifying the premium and organic products. However, the adoption of technologies generated in other countries have potential social, economic, human, animal, and ecosystem health impacts and slow adoption. Nevertheless, through training, investments and mobilization in technology uptake and commercialization may overcome these shortcomings. In conclusion, Nepal can adopt technologies and best practices from around the world to reduce food import while it can also export premium agri-products in international markets.
Dutch dairy sector and expectations from open datagodanSec
Frido Hamoen (CRV) presented at the 2nd International Workshop: Creating Impact with Open Data in Agriculture and Nutrition in The Hague, 10 September 2015.
Dr. Craig Morris - USDA International Standardization Organization – 34700 An...John Blue
USDA International Standardization Organization – 34700 Animal Welfare Assessment - Dr. Craig Morris, Deputy Administrator, USDA, from the 2017 NIAA Annual Conference, U.S. Animal Agriculture's Future Role In World Food Production - Obstacles & Opportunities, April 4 - 6, Columbus, OH, USA.
More presentations at http://www.trufflemedia.com/agmedia/conference/2017_niaa_us_animal_ag_future_role_world_food_production
ICRISAT Governing Board 2019 PC meeting: Modernising ICRISAT Crop Improvement...ICRISAT
Most public breeding programs in the developing world are 20-30 years behind state-of-art private sector programs due to: Lack of engineering support for mechanization and automation; Primitive data collection, management, and decision support systems; Obsolete and expensive genotyping capacity unsuited to forward breeding; Inadequate selection pressure for yield in multi-location trials; Breeders are not trained, incentivized, or supported to optimize pipelines; Reliance on visual selection; Lengthy breeding cycles, excessive backcrossing, No selection of parents for high breeding value; Obsolete dissemination models designed for the Green Revolution.
National Program for organic Production NPOP certification in India. NPOP is APEDA Monitored certification program in India. APEDA monitors the implementation of National Program for Organic Production in India
Dawn Robinson - Successes in Other CommoditiesJohn Blue
Successes in Other Commodities - Dawn Robinson, Regional Director, Latin America, Proforest, from the 2014 Global Roundtable for Sustainable Beef (GRSB), November 2 -5, 2014, São Paulo, Brazil.
More presentations at http://trufflemedia.com/agmedia/conference/2014-global-roundtable-sustainable-beef
Perspectives on outlook for Asia Research Program: Asia Regional Planning Mee...ICRISAT
India accounts for 67% and 80% of the global area of chickpea and pigeonpea, respectively. Varieties/hybrids developed from ICRISAT-bred materials account for 53% of the total indent of breeder seed for these crop in India. Developing and validating ICM packages using an on-farm approach, monitoring virulence spectrum and variability in pathogen/pest populations at phenotypic and genotypic levels. PQU facilitated export of 6479 seed samples and 5502 grain and plant material samples to 27 countries, import of 3196 seed samples from 6 countries, and conservation of 6628 germplasm accessions in Genebank. Integrate the outputs from research across the whole value chain (soil and water management, improved cultivars and production technologies, climate smart production systems, post-harvest management and value addition, etc). Operation, maintenance and optimum utilization of power, water, air-conditioning and civil and engineering infrastructure, buildings, machinery, instruments and equipment.
Mr. Jim O'Toole - Ireland - Beef SustainabilityJohn Blue
Ireland - Beef Sustainability - Mr. Jim O'Toole, Director, Meat & Sustainability Development, Bord Bia, from the 2016 Global Roundtable for Sustainable Beef (GRSB), October 5 - 6, 2016, Banff, Alberta, Canada.
More presentations at http://trufflemedia.com/agmedia/conference/2016-global-roundtable-sustainable-beef
ICRISAT Global Planning Meeting 2019:Research Program - Innovation Systems fo...ICRISAT
The Global Planning Meeting 2019 focused on an innovation systems approach harnesses the conditions needed to create demand for technologies and creates the knowledge that may be used to bring about such changes…innovations most often emerge from a systems of actors collaborating, communicating and learning, methodologies and tools to create innovations, understand entry points/tradeoffs and leverage actors towards profitable resilient and sustainable agri-food systems at scale and work together to contribute to ICRISAT’s mission.
LIVES dairy value chain development: Distinguishing between fluid milk and bu...ILRI
Presented by Dirk Hoekstra, Azage Tegegne, Berhanu Gebremedhin, Aklilu Bogale and Yasin Getahun at the 21st Annual Conference of Ethiopian Society of Animal Production (ESAP), Addis Ababa, 28-30 August 2013
Technology transfer and utilization to increase productivity of Nepalese agri...Purna Kandel, PhD
Two third of Nepal's population depends on agriculture but struggles to produce adequate food for its people and imports around NPR 200 billion worth of food products each year. Inefficient production practices mainly because of lack of technologies resulting into negative margin for majority of the producers. Many farmers, particularly the young farmers are interested to adapt new technologies to reduce drudgery and production cost, to enhance input-use-efficiency and to generate more profit. In addition, due to a higher rate of male out-migration, we should be focused on a series of technology focused programs and projects.
Some already tested and proven technologies for examples use of genomic selection to enhance plant and livestock productivity, use of remote sensing data to uniform distribution of fertilizers and other farm chemicals, use of sexed semen to produce female calves for higher milk production, precision nutrient and water management technologies, use of scale-appropriate mechanization, disease resistance varieties of plant and animal species are common practices in developed world. As many of these technologies are already tested and proven elsewhere, a small investment and optimization to custom in Nepalese context can bring a big return to Nepalese agriculture. For export, Nepal has a huge potential to produce premium and organic agri-products along with some optimized indigenous technology to export in international markets.
New technology, market and risk management need to go together for better results. Government led risk management programs in big sectors like cereals, poultry, dairy and other commercial enterprises would greatly help in increasing efficiency of the sector and encourage new investments. There is also substantial outreach and investment required to smallholder subsistence farms for certifying the premium and organic products. However, the adoption of technologies generated in other countries have potential social, economic, human, animal, and ecosystem health impacts and slow adoption. Nevertheless, through training, investments and mobilization in technology uptake and commercialization may overcome these shortcomings. In conclusion, Nepal can adopt technologies and best practices from around the world to reduce food import while it can also export premium agri-products in international markets.
Dutch dairy sector and expectations from open datagodanSec
Frido Hamoen (CRV) presented at the 2nd International Workshop: Creating Impact with Open Data in Agriculture and Nutrition in The Hague, 10 September 2015.
Dr. Craig Morris - USDA International Standardization Organization – 34700 An...John Blue
USDA International Standardization Organization – 34700 Animal Welfare Assessment - Dr. Craig Morris, Deputy Administrator, USDA, from the 2017 NIAA Annual Conference, U.S. Animal Agriculture's Future Role In World Food Production - Obstacles & Opportunities, April 4 - 6, Columbus, OH, USA.
More presentations at http://www.trufflemedia.com/agmedia/conference/2017_niaa_us_animal_ag_future_role_world_food_production
ICRISAT Governing Board 2019 PC meeting: Modernising ICRISAT Crop Improvement...ICRISAT
Most public breeding programs in the developing world are 20-30 years behind state-of-art private sector programs due to: Lack of engineering support for mechanization and automation; Primitive data collection, management, and decision support systems; Obsolete and expensive genotyping capacity unsuited to forward breeding; Inadequate selection pressure for yield in multi-location trials; Breeders are not trained, incentivized, or supported to optimize pipelines; Reliance on visual selection; Lengthy breeding cycles, excessive backcrossing, No selection of parents for high breeding value; Obsolete dissemination models designed for the Green Revolution.
National Program for organic Production NPOP certification in India. NPOP is APEDA Monitored certification program in India. APEDA monitors the implementation of National Program for Organic Production in India
Dawn Robinson - Successes in Other CommoditiesJohn Blue
Successes in Other Commodities - Dawn Robinson, Regional Director, Latin America, Proforest, from the 2014 Global Roundtable for Sustainable Beef (GRSB), November 2 -5, 2014, São Paulo, Brazil.
More presentations at http://trufflemedia.com/agmedia/conference/2014-global-roundtable-sustainable-beef
Perspectives on outlook for Asia Research Program: Asia Regional Planning Mee...ICRISAT
India accounts for 67% and 80% of the global area of chickpea and pigeonpea, respectively. Varieties/hybrids developed from ICRISAT-bred materials account for 53% of the total indent of breeder seed for these crop in India. Developing and validating ICM packages using an on-farm approach, monitoring virulence spectrum and variability in pathogen/pest populations at phenotypic and genotypic levels. PQU facilitated export of 6479 seed samples and 5502 grain and plant material samples to 27 countries, import of 3196 seed samples from 6 countries, and conservation of 6628 germplasm accessions in Genebank. Integrate the outputs from research across the whole value chain (soil and water management, improved cultivars and production technologies, climate smart production systems, post-harvest management and value addition, etc). Operation, maintenance and optimum utilization of power, water, air-conditioning and civil and engineering infrastructure, buildings, machinery, instruments and equipment.
Mr. Jim O'Toole - Ireland - Beef SustainabilityJohn Blue
Ireland - Beef Sustainability - Mr. Jim O'Toole, Director, Meat & Sustainability Development, Bord Bia, from the 2016 Global Roundtable for Sustainable Beef (GRSB), October 5 - 6, 2016, Banff, Alberta, Canada.
More presentations at http://trufflemedia.com/agmedia/conference/2016-global-roundtable-sustainable-beef
ICRISAT Global Planning Meeting 2019:Research Program - Innovation Systems fo...ICRISAT
The Global Planning Meeting 2019 focused on an innovation systems approach harnesses the conditions needed to create demand for technologies and creates the knowledge that may be used to bring about such changes…innovations most often emerge from a systems of actors collaborating, communicating and learning, methodologies and tools to create innovations, understand entry points/tradeoffs and leverage actors towards profitable resilient and sustainable agri-food systems at scale and work together to contribute to ICRISAT’s mission.
Presented by Issac Emery, Informed Sustainability Consulting, on 29 June 2021 at the second day of the Asian Development Bank (ADB) Webinar on Sustainable Protein Case Study: Outputs and Synthesis of Results.
Reducing food waste and spoilage through postharvest management activities an...africa-rising
Presentation by Christopher Mutungi about the activities and achievements of the post harvest management team in the Africa RISING - NAFAKA project during the 2017/18 season. This presentation was made at the the annual review and planning meeting for the Africa RISING - NAFAKA project on 26 - 27 June 2018.
David Paterson from Heineken PLC - Profiting from Sustainability Feedback Ses...Stevencann1
Presentation by David Paterson from HEINEKEN at the Profiting from Sustainability Feedback Session in York during April 2015 organised by Future Food Solutions Ltd
CLIMATE SERVICES NEEDS NIKAMPONG SPEU PROVINCE: WET AND DRY SEASON RICE CULTI...Soksophors yim
This report presents a summary of findings from a series of climate risk workshops (CRW) including the main cropping systems supporting rural livelihood in Kampong Speu province in Cambodia. tI is one of the pilot provinces of the project 'Applying seasonal climate forecasting and innovative insurance solutions to climate risk management for the agriculture sector in Southeast Asia' also known as 'DeRISK Southeast Asia'.
The national assessment on the demand for climate services is a major activity under the project. The project cooperates with Regional Integrated Ooo Multi-hazard Early Warning System (RIMES), Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (MAFF), General Directorate of Agriculture (GDA), and Provincial Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (PDAFF) at the national and provincial level, as well as local farmer organizations and farmer cooperatives to provide the climate information to end-users..
This technical step should support further actions towards a climate services strategy for MAFF and defining efficient mechanisms to reach Cambodian farmers with weather-based advisories and the stakeholders' network for sustained service delivery. DeRISK Southeast Asia, with support from RIMES, MAFF's GDA, and PDAFF, is implementing field-level pilots for climate services delivery. This initiative aims to build evidence and provide support to the scaling process through implementing a pilot Local Technical Agro Climate Committee (LTAC) in Kampong Speu.
CLIMATE SERVICES NEEDS NI BATTAMBANG PROVINCE: RICE CULTIVATION AND CASH CROP...Soksophors yim
This report presents a summary of findings from a series of climate risk workshops (CRW), including the cropping systems supporting rural livelihood in Battambang province in the north of Cambodia. It is one of the pilot provinces of the project 'Applying seasonal climate forecasting and innovative insurance solutions to climate risk management for the agriculture sector in Southeast Asia also known as 'DeRISK Southeast Asia'. The national assessment on the demand for climate services is a major activity under the project. The project cooperates with Regional Integrated Multi-hazard Early Warning System (RIMES), Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (MAFF), General Directorate of Agriculture (GDA), and Provincial Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (PDAFF) at the national and provincial level, as well as local farmer organizations and farmer cooperatives to provide the climate information to end-users.
This technical step should support further actions towards a climate services strategy for MAFF and defining efficient mechanisms to reach Cambodian farmers with weather-based advisories and the stakeholders' network for sustained service delivery. DeRISK Southeast Asia, with support from RIMES, MAFF's GDA, and PDAFF, is implementing field-level pilots for climate services delivery. This initiative aims to build evidence and provide support to the scaling process through implementing a pilot Local Technical Agro Climate Committee (LTAC) in Battambang
Local Technical Technical Agro-climatic Agro-climatic Committee (LTAC) Commit...Soksophors yim
This publication was prepared as an output for DeRISK SE Asia and is aligned with the
new CGIAR initiative on Asia Mega Deltas. It has not been peer reviewed. Any opinions
stated herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the policies or
opinions of DeRISK SE Asia and donor agencies.
This publication is under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 IGO license (CC BY 3.0
IGO).
This manual is based on the lessons learned from piloting LTACs in the two provinces
and is intended for the relevant departments and ministries, such as PDAFF, NGOs,
private sector, management committees of agricultural cooperatives, and other
stakeholders, as a practical guide in coordinating and implementing LTACs in the
country.
To provide guidance on the implementation of the LTAC approach in the context of
Cambodia through specific steps and tools.
This manual is the guide for implementing the LTAC, in which extension workers and
relevant development practitioners can produce locally specific agroclimatic bulletins
with seasonal climate information and agro-advisories to mitigate climatic risks.
Applying participatory climate risk and livelihoods mapping to define users’ ...Soksophors yim
Participatory climate risk and livelihoods mapping provides specific information that is required
to deliver more salient climate services (CS) for farmers within the context of farm decision-
making.
• Each major cropping and livelihood system has different CS requirements in terms of their
temporal and spatial scale.
• The identification of relevant actors to tailor CS and building partnerships at the local level is
crucial to better define mandate, roles, and types of support that each actor can provide.
• It is important to consider the anticipated future changes in peoples’ livelihoods and zones
since these have important implications for designing CS-related programs and integrating the
CS agenda into the national or provincial climate change adaptation planning.
Establishing a platform for dialogue among key Departments at the national an...Soksophors yim
Participatory platforms enable the co-production process of climate services (CS) and provide an
opportunity to strengthen the link between the DoM and technical departments of MAFF through
regular exchange of climate information and understanding of the CS demand from agriculture
sector to develop tailored agro-advisories for planning and decision-making.
•
Effective dissemination of agro-advisories to last-mile users requires a combination of approach
(LTAC), enhancement of decision-support tool (CDT + SESAME), and utilization of various
communication channels (printed posters, Telegram, face-to-face meetings) compounded with
multi-stakeholder cooperation including government, private sector, NGOs, relevant programs and
farmer organizations, among others.
•
Collaboration with national hydromet center is critical for timely access to official seasonal climate
and short-term weather forecasts for the translation into agro-advisory. However, this necessitates
improved capacity of hydromet to provide reliable and accurate downscaled climate information
which entails further technical and financial support from government, potential donors, and private
sector cooperation to deliver agro advisory that is most appropriate to farmers’ needs on the ground.
Progress of agricultural extension materials review in Cambodia Soksophors yim
The presentation slides were prepared for the meeting "IFAD mid term review mission of the ASPIRE programme" held on 18 September 2017 at Phnom Penh Hotel, in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
Report on water storage and use from tarpaulin lining pondSoksophors yim
This is the report on study of the water storage using tarpaulin lining pond for family fish raising. This project was implemented by SNV Cambodia in Svay Rieng province.
Presentation by Jared Jageler, David Adler, Noelia Duchovny, and Evan Herrnstadt, analysts in CBO’s Microeconomic Studies and Health Analysis Divisions, at the Association of Environmental and Resource Economists Summer Conference.
Understanding the Challenges of Street ChildrenSERUDS INDIA
By raising awareness, providing support, advocating for change, and offering assistance to children in need, individuals can play a crucial role in improving the lives of street children and helping them realize their full potential
Donate Us
https://serudsindia.org/how-individuals-can-support-street-children-in-india/
#donatefororphan, #donateforhomelesschildren, #childeducation, #ngochildeducation, #donateforeducation, #donationforchildeducation, #sponsorforpoorchild, #sponsororphanage #sponsororphanchild, #donation, #education, #charity, #educationforchild, #seruds, #kurnool, #joyhome
Russian anarchist and anti-war movement in the third year of full-scale warAntti Rautiainen
Anarchist group ANA Regensburg hosted my online-presentation on 16th of May 2024, in which I discussed tactics of anti-war activism in Russia, and reasons why the anti-war movement has not been able to make an impact to change the course of events yet. Cases of anarchists repressed for anti-war activities are presented, as well as strategies of support for political prisoners, and modest successes in supporting their struggles.
Thumbnail picture is by MediaZona, you may read their report on anti-war arson attacks in Russia here: https://en.zona.media/article/2022/10/13/burn-map
Links:
Autonomous Action
http://Avtonom.org
Anarchist Black Cross Moscow
http://Avtonom.org/abc
Solidarity Zone
https://t.me/solidarity_zone
Memorial
https://memopzk.org/, https://t.me/pzk_memorial
OVD-Info
https://en.ovdinfo.org/antiwar-ovd-info-guide
RosUznik
https://rosuznik.org/
Uznik Online
http://uznikonline.tilda.ws/
Russian Reader
https://therussianreader.com/
ABC Irkutsk
https://abc38.noblogs.org/
Send mail to prisoners from abroad:
http://Prisonmail.online
YouTube: https://youtu.be/c5nSOdU48O8
Spotify: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/libertarianlifecoach/episodes/Russian-anarchist-and-anti-war-movement-in-the-third-year-of-full-scale-war-e2k8ai4
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
A process server is a authorized person for delivering legal documents, such as summons, complaints, subpoenas, and other court papers, to peoples involved in legal proceedings.
This session provides a comprehensive overview of the latest updates to the Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Awards (commonly known as the Uniform Guidance) outlined in the 2 CFR 200.
With a focus on the 2024 revisions issued by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), participants will gain insight into the key changes affecting federal grant recipients. The session will delve into critical regulatory updates, providing attendees with the knowledge and tools necessary to navigate and comply with the evolving landscape of federal grant management.
Learning Objectives:
- Understand the rationale behind the 2024 updates to the Uniform Guidance outlined in 2 CFR 200, and their implications for federal grant recipients.
- Identify the key changes and revisions introduced by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) in the 2024 edition of 2 CFR 200.
- Gain proficiency in applying the updated regulations to ensure compliance with federal grant requirements and avoid potential audit findings.
- Develop strategies for effectively implementing the new guidelines within the grant management processes of their respective organizations, fostering efficiency and accountability in federal grant administration.
2. BACKGROUND
• # of materials collected: 1,284
• # of materials screened: 150
• # of materials reviewed: 82 (out of 150)
• # of materials selected: 76 (need approval for
web
portal)
3. CRITERIA FOR THE REVIEW:
Criteria Score
1 .Good design & appropriate for
smallholder farmers
20
2 .Inclusion 10
3 .Gender mainstreaming 10
4 .Climate smart agriculture (CSA) 20
5 .Hight profitability / Farm
Business
20
6. Food safety 20
Total 100
Scores Quality Selection
from > 80 to 100 Excellent
Selected
from 65 to 80 Good
from > 50 to < 65 Fair
Not
selected 50 Not good
Quality Rank:
5. Count of Thematic
areas
Animal health & production 1
Aquaculture 8
Bio-digester Plant 5
Business (business plan) 2
Cash-crop production 3
Climate Smart Agriculture 1
Forestry 3
Fruit tree production 6
Integrated Pest Management 8
Mushroom production 1
Poultry production 1
Rice production 4
Soil management 1
Vegetable growing 32
Grand Total 76
6. AVERAGE SCORES OF THE 76 REVIEWED
MATERIALS
Criteria
Max.
scores
Average scores given to
the 76 reviewed materials
Good design
20 17
Inclusion
10 10
Gender mainstreaming
10 7
Climate smart agriculture
20 14
Farm business
20 13
Food safety
20 13
Average of total score
100 73
7. Count of Authors
ASPIRE 2
Cambodia HARVEST 13
GDA/DAE 9
DCA/CA 1
East-West Seed 2
Food Facility Project 1
GIZ 3
MSME 1
NBP 5
PADEE 5
PDAFF-Kandal 4
People in Need (PIN) 1
TSSD/ TSTD 29
Grand Total 76
Count of Forms
Booklet 28
Newsletter 13
Leaflet 23
Poster 9
Video 3
Grand Total 76
Check existing cover has been used by the aspire program – it needs to be uniformed
GDA/DAE to collect more materials from MAFF and non MAFF agencies
The list of six main criteria with sub-criteria
Score for each criterion, and total score
classify by quality of the materials (good…)
Need to emphasize that selection is from 65 up
Form for the review
Category
Medium / form
Year of publication
Author
Score
Category
Medium / form
Year of publication
Author
Score
It is to note that these materials were produced from 2010 to 2016, however most of the materials published in 2012 & 2013. At the same time, there are also materials produced in 2015 -2016.
Check the vidieo