KAIPPG conducts on-going trainings in nutrition, crop  planting and harvesting, marketing, and food production for consumption and sale. The trainings run concurrently at various project sites, facilitated by the KAIPPG field staff and partners. The trainings are done according to adult learning principles, and involve discussions, demonstrations, and lectures.

One of the objectives of the KAIPPG program is to develop affordable and cheaply adaptable technologies in addressing community problems. KAIPPG initiated training on planting crops in the sack (sack technology) and production of organic pest repellants using locally available materials.

Most of the trained resource persons have already initiated these technologies in their own groups. Families who do not have plots, or live in areas with unreliable rainfall, are now able to grow kitchen gardens through the sack technology.

KAIPPG News

GenARDIS Project [link]

Kenya: The Health and Agriculture Community Radio Network [link]

HIV/AIDS remains a major problem in Kenya, and it is often women and girls who bear the brunt of the pandemic. They have no rights to own property such as land, and are physiologically at greater risk of catching HIV/AIDS. They are generally less well educated and only a handful are employed, and so are socio-economically more vulnerable to HIV/AIDS infection. Many women also suffer from malnutrition.

To help address these problems, the Kenya AIDS Intervention Prevention Project Group (KAIPPG) has established community-based informal learning centres, called nutritional field schools, in six of its 28 project sites in western Kenya. Each field school involves 30 participants, giving priority to orphans, widows, low-income women, and older vulnerable children from HIV/AIDS-affected households. The participants are taught about nutrition, and receive training in relevant skills and techniques to enable them to care for people living with HIV/AIDS, to maximize crop yields and, generally to become economically and socially empowered.

marketUsing the GenARDIS grant, KAIPPG organized a health and agriculture community radio network for women who had completed the training. The participants were organized into six radio listening groups, and were trained in the use of audio and video recording equipment to enable them to exchange information — such as on farming techniques — and to raise public awareness about HIV/AIDS. The groups were also trained in photography and the use of drama and traditional oral storytelling as tools for learning, education and development. A radio cassette player and a mobile phone were distributed to each of the groups, and the participants were encouraged to communicate with national FM radio stations to respond to programmes, obtain information, and share their experiences with a wider audience.

Each group prepared and recorded on tape a presentation, song, poem, role-play or story on a relevant topic of their choice. One women's group, for example, performed a play about farming and the preparation of nutritious food for people living with HIV/AIDS. Another group sang traditional songs on planting, harvesting, and the preparation of sweet potatoes. The tapes were then exchanged among the groups so that each group was able to learn about the work of the others. Each group also set up an information kiosk stocked with the tapes they had produced and other information. KAIPPG hopes to translate the tapes into English and French, and to release the content also on diskettes and CD-ROM.

GenARDIS Follow-On Project: [click here]