A Seminar Title On the History and Evolution of Agricultural Extension in the Ethiopia Country

Main Authors: Suleyman Abdureman Omer, Nuradin Abdi Hassen
Format: Article info application/pdf eArticle
Bahasa: eng
Terbitan: Research Parks Publishing LLC , 2020
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Online Access: https://journals.researchparks.org/index.php/IJIE/article/view/710
https://journals.researchparks.org/index.php/IJIE/article/view/710/667
ctrlnum article-710
fullrecord <?xml version="1.0"?> <dc schemaLocation="http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc/ http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc.xsd"><title lang="en-US">A Seminar Title On the History and Evolution of Agricultural Extension in the Ethiopia Country</title><creator>Suleyman Abdureman Omer</creator><creator>Nuradin Abdi Hassen</creator><subject lang="en-US">agricultural extension</subject><subject lang="en-US">service</subject><subject lang="en-US">Ethiopia</subject><subject lang="en-US">extension approach</subject><description lang="en-US">Agricultural extension service began work in Ethiopia since 1931, during the establishment of Ambo Agricultural School. But a formal Agricultural extension started since Alemaya Imperial College of Agriculture and Mechanical Arts (Haramaya) was constructed since 1953.The extension activities &amp;nbsp;of&amp;nbsp; Ethiopia during the last 50 years reveals that a range of extension approaches has been used. The approaches tended differ with each successive political regime. Different extension approaches in different political regimes, during the imperial regime the responsibility for national extension administration to the Ministry of Agriculture, extension service became one of the departments in the Ministry. And during the military regime the land reform proclamation banned the private ownership of rural lands and declared that land would be distributed to the tillers without compensation to former owners. Because of the political instability and major structural changes in the rural areas, including the formation of peasant associations and producers' cooperatives as well as the implementation of the land reform, it was not possible to carry out this plan. There was not much organized and coordinated extension work in the country until the beginning of the 1980. At the current Extension service of Ethiopia in 1991 the T &amp;amp; V extension approach was adopted as a national extension system with major government financing until its replacement by the Participatory Demonstration and Training Extension System in 1995. The latter was adopted from the SaSakawa Global 2000 (SG 2000) extension strategy. Agricultural extension service in Ethiopia can be given by different mandatory level such as at federal level by ministry of Agriculture, At Regional level Bureau of Agriculture, At Woreda level Agricultural and Natural Resource office, and at&amp;nbsp; Farmer Training center level&amp;nbsp; Development agent and different stockholders have responsibility of giving extension especially agriculture related extension to need holders. In Ethiopia there are different extension approaches model such as Chilalo agricultural development model (CADU), minimum package project I and II, Peasant Agricultural Development program, participatory demonstration and training extension system, farmers field school, Farmers training center and Agricultural technical and Vocational Education training (ATVET) these are the different extension approaches in Ethiopia starting from the begging up to current extension service respectively.</description><publisher lang="en-US">Research Parks Publishing LLC</publisher><date>2020-10-15</date><type>Journal:Article</type><type>Other:info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion</type><type>Journal:Article</type><type>File:application/pdf</type><identifier>https://journals.researchparks.org/index.php/IJIE/article/view/710</identifier><identifier>10.31149/ijie.v3i10.710</identifier><source lang="en-US">International Journal on Integrated Education; Vol. 3 No. 10 (2020): IJIE; 163-176</source><source>2620-3502</source><source>2615-3785</source><source>10.31149/ijie.v3i10</source><language>eng</language><relation>https://journals.researchparks.org/index.php/IJIE/article/view/710/667</relation><rights lang="en-US">Copyright (c) 2020 Suleyman Abdureman Omer, Nuradin Abdi Hassen</rights><rights lang="en-US">https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0</rights><recordID>article-710</recordID></dc>
language eng
format Journal:Article
Journal
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Other
File:application/pdf
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Journal:eArticle
author Suleyman Abdureman Omer
Nuradin Abdi Hassen
title A Seminar Title On the History and Evolution of Agricultural Extension in the Ethiopia Country
publisher Research Parks Publishing LLC
publishDate 2020
topic agricultural extension
service
Ethiopia
extension approach
url https://journals.researchparks.org/index.php/IJIE/article/view/710
https://journals.researchparks.org/index.php/IJIE/article/view/710/667
contents Agricultural extension service began work in Ethiopia since 1931, during the establishment of Ambo Agricultural School. But a formal Agricultural extension started since Alemaya Imperial College of Agriculture and Mechanical Arts (Haramaya) was constructed since 1953.The extension activities &nbsp;of&nbsp; Ethiopia during the last 50 years reveals that a range of extension approaches has been used. The approaches tended differ with each successive political regime. Different extension approaches in different political regimes, during the imperial regime the responsibility for national extension administration to the Ministry of Agriculture, extension service became one of the departments in the Ministry. And during the military regime the land reform proclamation banned the private ownership of rural lands and declared that land would be distributed to the tillers without compensation to former owners. Because of the political instability and major structural changes in the rural areas, including the formation of peasant associations and producers' cooperatives as well as the implementation of the land reform, it was not possible to carry out this plan. There was not much organized and coordinated extension work in the country until the beginning of the 1980. At the current Extension service of Ethiopia in 1991 the T &amp; V extension approach was adopted as a national extension system with major government financing until its replacement by the Participatory Demonstration and Training Extension System in 1995. The latter was adopted from the SaSakawa Global 2000 (SG 2000) extension strategy. Agricultural extension service in Ethiopia can be given by different mandatory level such as at federal level by ministry of Agriculture, At Regional level Bureau of Agriculture, At Woreda level Agricultural and Natural Resource office, and at&nbsp; Farmer Training center level&nbsp; Development agent and different stockholders have responsibility of giving extension especially agriculture related extension to need holders. In Ethiopia there are different extension approaches model such as Chilalo agricultural development model (CADU), minimum package project I and II, Peasant Agricultural Development program, participatory demonstration and training extension system, farmers field school, Farmers training center and Agricultural technical and Vocational Education training (ATVET) these are the different extension approaches in Ethiopia starting from the begging up to current extension service respectively.
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