Investigating The Role of Radio and Tele
Investigating The Role of Radio and Tele
Investigating The Role of Radio and Tele
Farshad Parvizian
M.Sc., Eng., Department of Rural Development, Science and Research Branch
Islamic Azad University (IAU), Tehran, Iran
E-mail: Farshad48@yahoo.com
Farhad Lashgarara
PhD, Department of Rural Development, Science and Research Branch
Islamic Azad University (IAU), Tehran, Iran
E-mail: F.lashgarara@yahoo.com
Abstract
Experience with rural radio and television has shown the potential for agricultural
extension to benefit from both the reach and the relevance that local broadcasting can
achieve by using participatory communication approaches. The importance of sharing
information locally and opening up wider information networks for farmers is explored
with reference to the specific example of vernacular radio and television programs based on
research on soil and water conservation. This paper describes this specific experience in the
context of rural radio and television as a tool for agricultural extension and rural
development, with reference to the dramatically changing technology environment that is
currently influencing information and communication processes worldwide. The
implications for policy makers of harnessing rural radio and television to improve
agricultural extension are also discussed.
1. Introduction
The terms rural radio and television and community radio have come to be used interchangeably to
describe FM stations established to broadcast to a local and predominantly rural audience. The growth
of rural radio and television stations over the past few decades reflects both the improvements in
information technologies and the shifting development paradigm towards a more participatory style of
information and knowledge transfer. The ‘community’ aspect of local radio and television initiatives
combines a number of approaches. The most obvious is that a local radio or television station gives the
community a voice and by encouraging the active participation of the audience in the making and
scheduling of programs this voice can play an empowering and potentially uniting function. The
Investigating the Role of Radio and Television Programs on the
Improvement of Agricultural Extension 7
community focus can also serve another function: by employing members of the community both as
station staff, such as radio and television presenters, correspondents and program facilitators or
animators, and as intellectual resources, for example providing program material and content. This not
only reinforces the participatory nature of the development approach but ensures local ownership and a
greater chance of sustainability. Therefore, although the terms rural and community are used
interchangeably it is the community element which has been a deliberate focus of many initiatives to
ensure that the stations are run not only for the community but by the community. Rural radio and
television has other elements: a development focus and an elevated cost per listener compared with
urban stations which often make subsidy inevitable. Advertising, as opposed to public service
announcements, is often uneconomic. Rural radio and television is the focus of this paper because the
predominantly agricultural audiences of these stations can benefit from information to improve their
livelihoods. There are several approaches to using radio and television for development. Next Section
outlines some of those being used to harness radio and television for agricultural extension. Radio and
television initiatives as part of broader communication for development strategies have been used by
international organizations such as the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the United Nations
Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) and the Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO) of the United Nations since the late 1960s. Other media such as video, television,
the internet and information communication technologies (ICTs)1 are also the focus of an increasing
number of international organizations, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) and governments
investigating the role of communication in development. The impetus of the current revolution in
information technologies has led to a more acute recognition that, without a concerted effort to ensure
greater information equity, current information asymmetries could be accentuated. On a global scale,
this debate is manifested in the discussion of ‘digital opportunities’ or ‘digital divides’ (according to
optimistic or pessimistic views). Although the focus of this paper is on the agricultural content of rural
radio and television programs, some involvement in the digital debate is unavoidable. A satellite digital
radio and television network, World space, is already broadcasting over much of Asia and could reach
farmers in any locality if they had the necessary receiver; cost is presently the only barrier. Of more
immediate relevance is the increasing flexibility and interconnectivity of digital information
technologies. Well-established community radio and television stations are starting to harness ICTs,
e.g. Kothmale in East Asia, set up in 1989, which was connected to the internet in 1998 with funding
from UNESCO. In discussing approaches to rural radio and television, therefore, this backdrop of the
‘digital information revolution’ will also be addressed in this article to explore the current context of
agricultural extension radio and television programs and anticipate the implications for future
strategies.
governments expressly for development purposes and it is therefore inherently a supplement where
other delivery systems are seen to be failing. The particular experience of agricultural extension
systems in many developing countries has led to a review of the approach and a shift to a more
advisory and facilitation-based approach (Roling, 1995). The corresponding shift towards more
participatory development approaches (Chambers, 1994; Brown et al., 2002) has meant that a greater
understanding of community perspectives is required to identify the local resources that can be built on
to address local priorities. Similarly, efforts to improve agricultural extension have focused on
innovations in communication to improve the points of interaction between research, extension and
farmer to encourage a greater sharing of information. This is intended to replace the top-down, one-
way technology transfer approach widely perceived to have failed to improve the prospects of most
farmers and their rural communities. This section identifies the way that agricultural extension and
rural radio and television have come together to tackle common community development goals.
principles of local ownership and control have been well established by CATS. In the case of South
West Asian countries, the transition has been made from a (CATS) to a fully fledged local radio and
television station and although ‘a transmitter makes a difference technology wise… the contents and
operational framework remain the same’ (Dagron, 2001). This experience is therefore more than
simply an experiment with narrowcasting technologies and has helped to develop the participatory
communication approaches that have been adopted by many rural radio and television stations. An
interesting variation of the approach is the village information centre established in the coastal village
of Veerampattinam in Southern India which provides weather bulletins to the fishermen via
loudspeakers. The information centre has been equipped with two personal computers linked to email
via a spread spectrum mast installed alongside the loudspeakers. An information centre in the nearby
town of Vilanur collects information on a range of local issues and regularly updates the village
information centre by email, for example, with information on market prices and government schemes.
The villagers, in addition to receiving the information announced through the loudspeakers, are also
able to make specific requests at the centre which are then sent to the central ‘hub’ in Vilanur, staffed
by personnel trained to search the internet and maintain databases of local information (Chapman and
Slaymaker, 2002). The ‘hub’ and outlying village centers have been established with the help of a local
NGO, the M.S. Swaminathan Research Foundation, and support from the Canadian International
Donor Agency (IDRC). The FAO is now also investigating the possibility of connecting the network of
rural radio and television stations, such as those established during the 1990s in Asia, to the internet.
To many people it is the local focus and participatory communication approach of rural radio and
television that has the greatest potential to harness the internet and other information communication
technologies and provide the information intermediary necessary to bridge the ‘rural digital divide’
(Richardson, 1997; Ilboudo, 2001; Heeks, 1999).
Participation in constructing and financing the stations has been fundamental to their establishment,
and the staff and programming committee have all been selected locally by the community.
of languages, staffing of the station and even its location all became political issues (Grätz, 2000).
Effective legislation enshrining the decentralization of political authority and liberalization of the
media needs to correspond with a community management structure that avoids local radio and
television stations being constrained by local political disputes rather than fulfilling their intended role
as agents of democratic change. In many countries, such as India, rural radio and television stations are
not permitted to broadcast independently of the state broadcasting authorities.
The FAO developed the Strategic Extension Campaign (SEC) methodology in many countries
of Asia and Latin America in order to support the local extension agents in their work whilst also
harnessing the multimedia tools available to encourage greater community participation. Various
media were employed including local radio and television, posters, local theatre, audiocassettes,
comics and silk-screened printed materials. The radio and television slots were used strategically to
advertise the key messages of the campaign and target particular listeners’ groups. For example, the
campaign in Malaysia, in collaboration with the FAO’s Inter-Country Program on Integrated Pest
Management in Rice in South and South-East Asia focused on rat control. Based on a survey of the
extent of the problem and focus group discussions on approaches being used to tackle the problem the
campaign began in 1985 with a series of training workshops for the core group responsible for the
management of the SEC. The multimedia materials were then designed and tested with specific
strategies and channels of delivery chosen to have the maximum impact. The radio and television in
this case was used to discourage the use of a particular poison, zinc phosphate, in preference to a safer
wax and dust poison, easier to use and more effective. This was followed up with a portable flip chart
and booklets used by trainers for physical control methods and group discussion, including religious
leaders’ sermons. A follow-up evaluation in 1987 showed that the number of farmers using zinc
phosphate fell from 83% to 51% and the number of farmers reporting total damage from rats fell from
27% to 18%. The use of the alternative poison dust and baits recommended by the campaign rose from
16% to 67% and 42% to 83% respectively. Although successful, the campaign was expensive at over
$155,000 (approximately $1100 per person) with over 55% being spent on multi-media materials and
the rest on training field personnel which involved 34 people in five workshops for a total of 32
working days (Adhikarya, 1994). This compares to the current perception that rural radio and
television can function as a low-cost educational tool. The World Health Organization (WHO)
estimated that HIV/AIDS educational programs in developing countries carried out through mass
media such as television and radio and television ranged in cost from only 0.032 to 0.08 US cents per
person (Bouhafa, 1997 in Myers, 2000). ‘Friendship’ radio and television operating in Northern Asian
was established with assistance from the Danish Community Development Program. The radio and
television broadcasts in Northern Asia have a range of approximately 75km. The station provides a mix
of entertainment – music, drama and news – and discussion programs on local issues aimed at tackling
community development problems. Its educational and extension role is well established through the
development of local schools where the teachers are trained to integrate specialist broadcasts into the
curriculum. Teachers also use recorded cassettes of programs for special classes to encourage the local
adult population, including farmers, to improve skills such as basic literacy. Agricultural extension
programs are prepared by trained community radio and television agricultural extension officers. Their
role is to visit farmers in the community, discuss their problems and priorities, then prepare a series of
discussions with local experts, a drama or a combination of techniques including interviews with
farmers in the field. The programs are felt to be far more accessible to local farmers if they can hear
themselves or their neighbors discussing the issues directly on the radio and television. Norrish (1998)
has observed that, ‘it is no longer considered good enough for media professionals to isolate
themselves from the audiences they are supposed to serve.’ In order to achieve a level of farmer
participation the radio and television extension officers have to spend at least 12 days a month
recording out in the villages, spending the rest of the time editing in the studio with the producer,
tracking down specialists from the district offices of the Ministry of Agriculture, regional universities
and local NGOs, and researching the program topics. The rural radio and television stations Radio and
12 Farshad Parvizian, Farhad Lashgarara and Gholamreza Haji Hossein Nejad
television Mampita and Radio and television Magneva in East Asia are credited locally with the
introduction of new agricultural techniques.
•
8. Research Findings
Rural radio and television can be used to improve the sharing of agricultural information by
remote rural farming communities.
Investigating the Role of Radio and Television Programs on the
Improvement of Agricultural Extension 13
•
listeners’ groups.
A format that combines a drama performed by local actors with corresponding thematic
discussions is popular amongst farmers listening to agricultural extension radio and television
•
programs.
Targeted audience research can help to determine program content, broadcast schedules and the
preferences of listeners regarding the mix of information and education in the format.
9. Conclusion
The respondents, in general, liked the radio and television program, and the parts that they enjoyed
most were the drama and the group discussion between the presenter, extension agents, NGO
representative and the invited farmers. Understanding of soil and water conservation practices, agro-
forestry and organic manuring seem to have improved after listening to the program. If similar
programs were to be transmitted regularly, they could be used as an educational tool, especially in the
area of agro-forestry, where farmers stated that there is a lack of information. Bush burning was
recognized as a negative practice by almost all the respondents, even before the program was
transmitted. The broadcast has, however, increased the farmers’ resolve to reduce this practice on their
own farms and in the immediate environment. It can be concluded that the radio and television
program was well received by the target audience, and the format in which it was presented was
popular and easily understood. The vernacular used in the broadcast was also very important; this
aspect made the program immediately acceptable. Drama, which formed a large part of the program,
also contributed to its popularity. Almost any type of information and advice can be prepared for radio
and television transmission. However, the timing, sustainability and continuity of these types of
programs must be taken into consideration for future work. The program would have had even more
effect if continued over several cultivation seasons. The broadcasts should be timed to coincide with
the start of the farming season and repeated at regular intervals, i.e., once or twice monthly, until
harvest time.
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