University student-centered outreach for rural innovations and community transformation in northern Uganda
View/ Open
Publication Date
2014-07-25Author
SW Kalule, B Mugonola, W Odongo, D Ongeng
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract/ Overview
In Uganda, while Universities are considered centers of knowledge creation and dissemination,
their explicit role in economic development is largely less developed. Gulu University, at its
inception sought to respond to this concern and positioned itself for community engagement
as summarized in its motto of “For Community Transformation”. As such, at its Faculty of
Agriculture and Environment, curricular designs have been emphatic of Student-Centered
Outreach services. In one of the existing programs, the Bachelor of Agriculture, the curriculum
provides for attachment of students to smallholder farmers in the radius of 10 km from the
University campus to which they regularly visit and interact for the whole of their final year
of study. Recently, the faculty sought to restructure the management of student field
attachment and in the new design supported by Regional Universities Forum for Capacity
Building in Agriculture (RUFORUM), field attachment will be starting right from year one
of study. However, little is known on the design of Gulu University’s Student-Centered
Outreach model and how it is impacting on the farming community, the students and other
university stakeholders. Therefore, this study set out to shed light on the design of this
outreach model, provide a description of the institutional environment in which Gulu University
attaches students. Preliminary findings from a synthesis of case studies reveal that the
approach used in the model is not only attractive to farmers as evidenced by a growing
demand for student attachment, but also enables the students to get real world experience in
agriculture. It is recommended that Universities integrate ICT for extension in their community
engagement efforts to enhance the efficiency in the student practical training and community
transformation processes.