INTERPAKS, Examines the nature and extent of different extension services available to farmers in Punjab state (1974-5) as well as the impact of extension inputs on productivity in agriculture. The design of the study was multi-stage stratified random sampling with weights assigned to different items of extension input (mass media, visits by extension officers, visits to extension agencies, training). On the average, each farmer visited the extension agencies 5.8 times a year, was visited 9.42 times, only 22% of farmers received training, 28% purchased daily newspapers, 86% listened to radio programs for the rural population, and 68% visited the university. Production function analysis was conducted both with and without extension inputs. The regression coefficient of the extension input was found to be 0.18 which was significant at the 5% level.
Abbott, Eric A. (author / Iowa State University), John L. Woods (author / University of Illinois), and Abawi, George S. (author / Cornell University)
Format:
Proposal
Publication Date:
1987-04-20
Published:
Jordan
Location:
Agricultural Communications Documentation Center, Funk Library, University of Illinois Box: 151 Document Number: D09981
Notes:
From files of the Agricultural Communications Program, University of Illinois. Project implemented by the Communication for Technology Transfer in Agriculture (CTTA) Project in cooperation with the National Center for Agricultural Research and Technology Transfer, Highland Agricultural Development Project, and the U.S. Agency for International Development/Jordan.
Addressed the effectiveness of extension delivery methods used by the Department of Agriculture and Fisheries beef extension team in enabling change in producer practice. Findings were based on a survey of randomly selected producers who had engaged with the project from 2011 to 2015. "This analysis has shown the value in conducting a robust evaluation program both for demonstrating practice change and informing future extension programs."