Yusuf Oketola
THE Vice-Chancellor, Osun State University (UNIOSUN), Prof. Clement Adebooye, has advised Nigerian farmers to embrace smart agricultural practices for high yield and greater productivity.
Adebooye gave the advice last weekend during a workshop on Scaling-up Lifelong Learning for Farmers (L3F) sponsored by the Commonwealth of Learning (COL), Canada, in conjunction with Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) and Agricultural and Rural Management Training Institute (ARMTI).
He said with the advent of modern technology, farming has gone beyond the era of hoes and cutlasses, urging farmers to upgrade their skills through lifelong learning.
“Smart agriculture needs to be prioritised by farmers through indirect learning so as to have greater productivity”, the university don.
Adebooye urged farmers to plan ahead for lifelong learning, just as he appealed to the organisers of the training to design modules for farmers to sustain lifelong learning.
Speaking at the workshop, the Director of ARMTI, Dr Olufemi Oladunni, said the training would ensure food security, agricultural production and support the attainment of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in Nigeria.
In the same vein, Prof. Victor Okowua of the Department of Agricultural Economics, University of Ibadan, spoke on: “Prioritising the value chain for the attainment of SDG of self-sufficiency”.
Okowua appealed to farmers to ensure that they choose particular value chain to concentrate on so as to achieve the SDGs.
He asked the farmers to prioritise value chain through acquisition of relevant knowledge.
Also speaking, Prof. Adeolu Ayanwale of the Department of Agricultural Economics, OAU, said that the knowledge gap among the farmers was discouraging youths from farming, resulting in lower productivity and welfare among farmers.
“But if lifelong learning persists, there would be a positive change among the prospective youth farmers” he said.
Earlier, Head of Department of Agricultural Economics, OAU, Prof Adebayo Akinola, said that the workshop was designed to bring together farmers, institutions of learning, banks and information and communication technology providers to facilitate learning.
According to him, the workshop would empower vulnerable farmers and their families to gain knowledge on skills development, increase their productivity, food security and would liberate agricultural communities from socio-economic constraints.
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