Rotary.org: News - Vocational training teams aid Adopt-a-Village project in Uganda

 Vocational training teams aid Adopt-a-Village project in Uganda

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District 5340 VTT team member Charles DuVivier, of the Rotary Club of Encinitas, California, USA, discusses agriculture and irrigation techniques with a farmer in Nkondo, Uganda. Photo courtesy of District 5340

An Adopt-a-Village project being carried out by Rotarians in Uganda and California, USA, is helping to improve life significantly for people in Nkondo, Uganda.

The project involves four of Rotary’s areas of focus: water and sanitation, basic education and literacy, disease prevention and treatment, and economic and community development.

An important catalyst to the effort’s success is the vocational training team (VTT), a group of professionals that travels either to learn more about their vocation or to teach local professionals about a particular field.

“The main role has been to help kick-start the project,” says Past District Governor Philippe Lamoise, who led a team from District 5340 to District 9200 in Uganda in late 2010 and early 2011. “The training I conducted was about business strategies, savings, and investments as they apply to family-size farming businesses.”

Team results

Funded by a Rotary Foundation global grant, the team of four Rotarians and three other professionals also helped lay the groundwork for a clean water system, trained health clinic staff, and renovated a computer room at a school. The results of the team’s efforts were “a motivation to the local government to join in and provide some additional public funding at the school and clinic,” Lamoise says.

The VTT also paved the way for partnerships with one local nongovernmental organization to train community residents in microfinance and with another to manage the microcredit effort, with oversight by the Rotary Club of Kampala North. In addition, the VTT inspired a partnership with an NGO to train farmers to produce crops with high market values.

A five-member team from Kenya and Uganda visited District 5340 in October and November 2011, learning about best practices in agriculture and irrigation, including the use of appropriate technology. VTTs give efforts like the Adopt-a-Village project a strong boost toward sustainability, says Francis Tusubira, vice chair of the Foundation’s Cadre of Technical Advisers and past governor of District 9200.

“When we talk about sustainable development, we are talking about changing the mind-set of communities,” Tusubira says. “Having a vocational training team come in and start imparting the skills. Having microcredit, because once you give people skills, then they must have the means to start practicing on their land.”

VTTs, a component of Future Vision, mark a return to the original purpose of the Group Study Exchange (GSE) program: enabling team members to share their expertise and gain practical knowledge of how their vocations are practiced in another country.

Learning and doing

“The GSE experience was great to discover East Africa and establish new relationships with the Rotarians over there,” says Lamoise, who was part of a District 5340 team that traveled to that region in 2001. “One of the great benefits of the VTT program is that we are doing some good work over there, instead of just learning about the culture and establishing connections. So from the host [community’s] point of view, VTT has much more value.”

Lamoise adds, however, that GSEs have helped establish relationships between districts that have been the springboard to Foundation grant projects. Although the Foundation’s GSE program will end with full implementation of the new grant model effective 1 July 2013, districts will still be able to do traditional GSEs using district grants.

RI training leader Gregory Podd, past governor of District 5450 (Colorado, USA), echoes Lamoise’s assessment of VTTs and GSEs. Leading a GSE team to the Philippines in 2006 “was one of the best assignments I’ve ever had in Rotary,” he says.

While traveling in Africa this year, however, Podd met with a VTT in Tanzania focused on speech therapy. Witnessing the good the team was doing in the community, he says, convinced him of the VTT’s value as an improved model of professional exchange.

“It’s more focused, and it has measurable outcomes for exchanging professional skills. I just love it,” he says, adding that he would especially like to lead a VTT.


18 Comments:
At 11:38AM on 21 January 2013, pree parumaul wrote: such good work. I particularly interested in providing a service to individuals with little or no functional speech and supporting infants with hearing loss and deafness. PLEASE CONTACT ME
At 9:21AM on 20 November 2012, Jane Claypool wrote: It is very inspirational to have our local Rotary in a program of this clarity and magnitude. You do wonderful work.
At 9:29AM on 12 November 2012, Yogananda RRFC Zone 5 wrote: VTT"s can help in Sustainability
At 9:55AM on 16 October 2012, Arunesh wrote: Great VTT's, Congrats, As I am the chairman, VT, I am very proud of you.
At 10:27AM on 6 August 2012, Florence wrote: The project is impressive, what's even more promising is the change of mindset and capacity built in the community - my club is looking forward to a similar project...
At 9:55AM on 12 July 2012, PDG Tikku wrote: Great Job ! Good to Emulate in India.
At 9:54AM on 12 July 2012, Geeta Manek wrote: I have personally visited Nkondo and there is great transformation of an entire community. Well done, Kampala North and D5340. I commend all your efforts in positively changing lives in Nkondo,Yet more needs to be done to help our communities all over our District. One community, one village at a time ! Thank you ...
At 9:54AM on 12 July 2012, Tusu Tusubira wrote: Community ownership is core to sustainability in this kind of project. Stage 1 was addressing community mindset (poverty starts in and is entrenched in the mind) that involved the VTT from D5340; ongoing skilling on bi-monthly provided by the local Rotarians of Kampala North; periodically by Ugandan NGOs volunteering time; and other local professional volunteers and groups (especially NKDU). The Community started off, after 6 months of training, with microcredit (managed by the community), to boost business skills and incomes as well as develop a savings culture. 100% repayment rate on the first cycle. They requested a mill for their products - they could not get it until they, though their group, contributed money and bought land, bricks and sand, labour to make the shelter, with Rotarians supporting the other needs. They wanted water - but had to donate the land for the borehole and agree to do any and all trenching. They got a computer room and library based on an agreement to impose a modest charge on all students for sustainability. They have received medical supplies and training especially in maternal and child health - the local government committed and started paying a nurse and providing a modest subvention for drugs. A user charge is being discussed by the community and will be implemented. Because the school gave up a classroom to house the small computer lab and library, the local government promised a new three classroom block and new pit latrines. Frankly, we did not believe them - and yet the new building was completed in six months, is in use, and the school now has decent pit-latrines; they have access to harvested water; and piped water from the borehole will follow soon. They are venturing, initially tentatively, into new crops, and micri-irrigation. There is now a full community governance structure, and their representatives comes for the monthly project meetings held by the Rotary Club of Kampala North. Too long a comment, but the project embodies the dreams of the Future Vision. Yes, there are ongoing challenges, but these are what make it even more exciting - working with the community to find solutions!
At 9:53AM on 12 July 2012, prakashchandra shetty wrote: its great, Congratulation to all members. give few ideas in vacational service area. P. Shetty Director, Vacational Service Rotary Club Kundapura
At 10:03AM on 11 July 2012, Natalie Kimbugwe wrote: VTT teams are always welcome, Nkondo is making a lot of progress that you would love to see. Glad to be part of Kampala North Nkondo Team.
At 11:53AM on 6 July 2012, Aziz Ahmad wrote: I am really proud of PDG Philipp Lamoise for great effort. This type of project in District 3280 also will be very much fruitful. Because lot of people in Bangladesh are living in below the poverty line.
At 12:49PM on 25 June 2012, RamanlallPatel wrote: My club is great and doing great all the time
At 12:49PM on 25 June 2012, Atwooki Katahoire wrote: Way to go PDG Lamoise and your team. This project provides opportunity for our people to lead a better life. I also thank the local team led by PDG FF Tusu.
At 12:44PM on 25 June 2012, Leonard KalfussMD wrote: I was fortunate to be the GSE team leader from D5330 to D9200 in '06, that resulted in adopting Oduro village in Uganda, as our districts multi-yr project, when my wife, Helene Kalfuss PhD., was the DG in'06-07 ., that was displayed at the RI convention covention in Montreal, and continues to be very successful . Leonard KalfussMD
At 12:44PM on 25 June 2012, SUNIL KUMAR JAIN wrote: More important is to win their hearts to be able to bring a sustainable change in their lives, which PDG Phillipe lamoise has well achieved. We need people like you in India too.
At 12:42PM on 25 June 2012, Dattta Deshmukh wrote: Adopting a villageand concentrating on education, water and Sanitation , helping villagers toaquire skills in tailoring /small business was done by us Near Nasik, RI dist 3030. Good results were seen. similar model is now used at other villages.
At 11:47AM on 20 June 2012, Rtn Rakesh Jain wrote: Well done! We in India do need such projects.
At 10:01AM on 20 June 2012, Vilas Jagtap wrote: Congratulations Past District Governor Philippe Lamoise. Well done. Working with locals & implementing similar ideas.

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