Senin, 31 Oktober 2011

A DEVELOPMENT PRACTITIONER'S PERCEPTION


FEEDBACK:A DEVELOPMENT PRACTITIONERS PERCEPTION 
This article was motivated by the question which you posed in your weekly column “livestock markets by Muhle M. Masuku”. The principal question which begged answers was why the numbers of livestock are dwindling in Matabeleland region while increasing in other provinces such as Masvingo. This is against the background that the region has always been the mainstay of livestock production in the country. This paper attempts to provide answers to this complex problem.
The decline in livestock numbers in Matabeleland region is a result of a matrix of factors working independently or in unison over a considerable period of time. The factors include:
1.      Collapse of livestock production support systems
Matabeleland region used to benefit immensely from institutions such as the Cold Storage Company (CSC) that used to support farmers with heifer loans which were instrumental in building farmers’ herds and contributing to the government restocking efforts. The dearth of CSC left farmers with no fallback support institution even after severe livestock losses due to drought and disease outbreaks. There is a general bias by agricultural support institutions to lean towards crop production more than livestock production. This is evidenced by schemes such as seed and fertilizer support for communal farmers.
2.      Blanket approach to agricultural support
Matabeleland region is a cattle ranching zone. However there is usually a surprising level of ignorance or indifference by powers that be when designing intervention programmes for this region. Instead of investing in livestock production inputs a lot of resources are spent buying maize seed and fertilizer for communal farmers. Expectedly, these invariably yield average to below average in this region. This “one size fits all approach” to agricultural intervention programmes have not helped Matabeleland region which is given the same prescription with wetter regions of this country. No wonder why some communal farmers got tractors under the mechanisation programme when all they have is 5 acres of arable land. The same vigour which is exhibited when supporting crop production needs to be applied when supporting livestock production.
3.      Collapse of extension services
The decline in the economic situation of the country coupled with massive exodus of skilled extension personnel left farmers severely exposed. AGRITEX and Veterinary Services department were left with inadequate numbers of inadequately trained staff. Instead of the usual 3 years training for AGRITEX extension officers, they were now trained in one and half years, producing extension officers with critical practical limitations. The Veterinary department was also left crippled with no capacity to deal with perennial problematic diseases such as foot and mouth, lumpy skin and black leg.

4.      Abuse of stray livestock
Sadly most Rural District Councils (RDC) have turned stray livestock into income generating projects with very little sympathy or regard for the farmer. Rather than tracing the owner of the stray livestock they would rather sell the animals as soon as the waiting period permits them. The information on stray animals is deliberately posted on national papers knowing pretty well that communal farmers are unlikely to read the papers. Many farmers have lost a lot of livestock to RDCs who are eagerly waiting for stray livestock.  Straying of livestock is further exacerbated by cutting down of boundary fences and destruction of grids after the land reform programme. This means animals now have large home ranges making them susceptible to straying and theft.
5.      Unscrupulous auctioneers and buyers
The mushrooming of unscrupulous buyers and auctioneers has also aggravated livestock losses especially from communal farmers. These buyers aided by auctioneers buy even 2 year old heifers when it is a general rule of the thumb that these belong to the breeding stock and thus should not be sold for slaughter. Also because these buyers purchase livestock at grossly suppressed prices, this makes farmers sell more livestock than they aught to for them to cover their expenses.
6.      Shrinking of grazing land
The proliferation of human settlements resulted in the decrease of the size of grazing land for communal farmers and thus reducing the carrying capacity of these areas. Also the emergency of alternative land use practices such as gold panning resulted in the shrinking of grazing land as these areas became unusable for grazing purpose.
7.      Poor veld management practices
Some beneficiaries of the land reform programme seem to be improperly equipped in so far as correct veld management practices are concerned. This is evidenced by perennial veld fires which destroy grazing lands leaving livestock vulnerable to starvation. Most farms either do not have fire guards or they have ill prepared fire guards.
8.      Stock theft
An analysis of crimes committed in Matabeleland will reveal that stock theft is among the most featuring crimes. A case in point being the Shanyaugwe case in Gwanda south where stock thieves are causing havoc within the community. This could be attributed to the commercial value of livestock in Matabeleland which is way above that of livestock in other regions of the country. Also corruption by the law enforcement agency does not help the situation as some stock theft suspects are left to go scot free.
9.      Poor crop yields
This causes farmers to sell their animals just to buy grain for their families. Communal farmers tend to live out of supermarkets instead of granaries like their counter parts in other regions do. In some instances livestock battered for grain by people who latter sell them for slaughter.
10.  Persistent droughts
Matabeleland region hardly gets two successive years with adequate rains. The region is dogged by droughts which have negative effects on both humans and livestock. Successive droughts result in poor grazing, forage and watering sources. This forces animals to travel long distances in search of water. Most watering sources are now affected by siltation causing them to dry out quickly. 
Conclusion
While some of the noted factors may also be experienced and applicable in other regions of the country, their impact is felt much more in this part of the country due to the fact that livestock production is the mainstay of agricultural activity in this region.
By Mhlupheki Dube
Livestock specialist and community development practitioner based kuTitji (Plumtree) town.
FEEDBACK:
Masuku: The essence of this column is to share information. Thank you Mhlupheki for your contribution. Don’t be a silent professor, share the knowledge.
Email:muhle.masuku@gmail.com or sms only to 0712 938 659. We now have another window to discuss these and other livestock issues on a continuous basis on; http://livestockfocus.blogspot.com/

Minggu, 30 Oktober 2011

HTML and Fireworks Exam

Snowtober
Here is your marking period exam.  This is worth 20% of your grade and is due by the end of class.

Please prepare an HTML website using notepad about the October Snowfall.  I am looking to see that you can use your new Fireworks talents to enhance your website.  The site should include:


1. Create a website using HTML that demonstrates the following:

  • That you can use proper HTML codes.  
  • You can create links that work, are effective, and efficient.
  • You demonstrate attention to those with vision issues by including alt text for all images.
  • A modern, usable design.
2. You must include a table or other device that shows how this snowfall ranks all-time. Cite where you obtain your data.
3. You must include an image or animation that has been manipulated using Fireworks. This image must be obtained using Creative Commons (Flickr,wikicommons, etc...). You may create the image yourself if you choose.  Save the link, you'll need it later.
4. A summary paragraph.  You must include at least one link to valuable information about the storm.
5. Your audience is 5th graders in Seymour.
6. Your website must be free of bias and be highly usable.



How to save your project:
1. Rename your folder in the WDrive. Name it first initial-last name-test (bschneidertest).
2. Copy folder.
3. Find class folder in UDrive. (Udrive-WebSchneider-Class-TEST)
4. Paste folder into UDrive.
5. HAVE NEIGHBOUR TEST WORK TO MAKE SURE EVERYTHING WORKS!! Format the links correctly!

6. Saving correctly is one of our standards.  I will not grade your test if I can't find it!


Blog Post:
1. Where did you get the image?  Include link.  If you created it yourself then please state that.
2. What aspects of coding or image manipulation have you gotten better at?
3. How did you manipulate your image in Fireworks?
4. What do you need to improve on?


Website 80%, Blog Reflection 20%


Rubric


You have two things due.  This exam due today, Veterans Day assignment due Thursday.

Jumat, 28 Oktober 2011

Optimize Engagement using AddThis and ShareThis with Analytics

Increasingly users are discovering great content, products and links through social referrals such as +1 button endorsements, comments, likes, and shares. Earlier this year we introduced Social Plugin Analytics to help you analyze how users engage with any social plugin installed on your site - after all, what can be measured can also be improved and optimized!

MilkADeal started using Google Analytics earlier this year. It is a company in Malaysia that has benefited greatly from using Social Plugin Analytics. By using these new reports, they are able to uncover insights and create significant business process improvements. As reported in the New Straits Times, "In particular, the newly introduced social interaction tracking tool...We've been using it only in the last couple of weeks but we have seen an increase of almost 60% in social interaction visitors to our site," said Wilson Quah, founder of MilkADeal."

By optimizing the instrumentation of a few buttons on their site, MilkADeal is able to achieve better engagement, a big boost in number of high quality referrals, and better outcomes! Today, we are happy to announce that our partners, AddThis and ShareThis, are making this social plugin analysis even easier. Just as the +1 button is automatically instrumented for you by the Google+ team, publishers using AddThis and ShareThis will now have first class integrations with Social Plugin Analytics!

“Providing real-time analytics to 10 million domains each month, we see what big data can do every day. Integrating AddThis social signals into Google Analytics is a big win for publishers. We’re excited to contribute social sharing insight where it can be viewed in context of the GA interface.”

Will Meyer, VP of Publisher Products, Clearspring

“At ShareThis, we work to provide our publisher network of one million+ websites with actionable analytics on their social activity. It's great to see Google paving the way for the entire industry to derive meaningful insights from the social Web and we're incredibly pleased to be a launch partner."

Kurt Abrahamson, CEO, ShareThis

To enable the integration for all of your AddThis buttons, you are now just one line of code away, and ShareThis users don’t have to do a thing. If you have Google Analytics installed, and you are using a ShareThis widget, simply login into Google Analytics and check out your new social reports!


Kamis, 27 Oktober 2011

Veterans Day

Veterans DayThe armistice treaty ending the "Great War" was signed on November 11, 1918. It is said that throughout the world nobody had seen so much rejoicing. The world had just experienced unimaginable turmoil, suffering, and pain.
The following year Armistice Day was established on November 11. President Woodrow Wilson said:

To us in America, the reflections of Armistice Day will be filled with solemn pride in the heroism of those who died in the country's service and with gratitude for the victory, both because of the thing from which it has freed us and because of the opportunity it has given America to show her sympathy with peace and justice in the councils of the nation.

It was a tradition for many years that at 11am on Armistice Day that all traffic would stop, conversations cease, and all focus be made on remembering those who had sacrificed.

In 1953, in Kansas, a town observed "Veterans Day". They felt this paid tribute to the veterans who had served in World War II and the Korean War. While there was much optimism in the country at the time there was also an incredible need to remember those who had served and sacrificed. Vast amounts of men had not come home from these wars.

Congress thought this was a great idea and in 1954 made Veterans Day a national holiday.

Many of you have friends, brothers, sister, fathers, or mothers who have served. If you have a story about them you want to tell please do so today.

Here is the Fireworks contest. All classes are eligible for this contest. Winner will be posted on this blog on November 11. Examples from our contests are seen here.

Your assignment is to make a poster about Veterans Day.

Be sure you understand the purpose of Veterans Day before tackling this assignment.

Your assignment is to design an image that could be posted in schools. You will use Fireworks and choose the appropriate tool or tools for your image.

Assignment parameters:

1. You set up the image size when you create a new document: Height=300 pixels, Width =600 pixels.

2. Your images MUST be non-copyrighted. I will publish this!!

3. You must be able to defend your choice of a tool in your blog post.

4. You must include "Veterans Day" somewhere in your image. You might decide to include additional text (date, slogan, etc..).

5. You must finish by the end of the period on Monday November 7.

6. Save in Udrive class folder when done (bschneider) as a .jpg file. All students will save in the same folder so be sure you name it correctly in the WDrive BEFORE you copy it to the UDrive. Be sure to test your work in the UDrive.
7. Hint: Interpolation allows you to blend images. Tutorial 1 Tutorial 2

Good luck!  Before you start PRACTICE YOUR SKILLS!


Fireworks:
1. List of tutorials (choose one or all)
2. Another list (choose one or all)

3. More tutorials (have fun!)


ShowMe

We tried the ShowMe app in music theory yesterday.  These were done quickly.  Its a pretty cool app.  Play around with it.


Rabu, 26 Oktober 2011

Non-Interaction Events! Wait... What?

Hey event tracking friends, we are really excited to announce a new feature to the Analytics event tracking landscape: non-interaction events. “But wait!” you ask, “How can an event—which measures user interaction—be non-interactive? And why would I want that anyway?”

The answer is simple: sometimes you want to track passive events on your pages, like images from an automatic slide show. In this case, you want such events to be excluded from bounce rate calculations because they don’t track visitor interaction. Now, you can mark these events as non-interaction events, so that they don’t affect the bounce rate for the page.

Let’s illustrate. Suppose your home page has an image slide show that automatically serves up 5 images in rotating order. Like so:



You want to apply an event tracking call with each movement of the slider, so that you know which images are being seen most by visitors to your home page. However, there isn’t really any interaction required on the visitors’ behalf to engage with this slider. You know that in the past, event tracking for this slider would make the bounce rate for your home page drop dramatically. Better to exclude these events from bounce rate calculation, so that the bounce rate for your home page is calculated only from pageviews for the page and not events.

How do you use it? Add our new non-interactive parameter with the _trackEvent() method like this:

_gaq.push(['_trackEvent', 'ImageSlider', 'Home', 'Image1', 1, true]);

To read the details, check out our Event Tracking Guide or our Reference doc on the _trackEvent() method.

In the past, you had to trade off bounce rate signals for event tracking in some situations. Now, with the ability to designate an event as either interactive or not, you can have your events and bounces too.

We hope you think this features is as nifty as we do. Tell us some of your great applications and uses below!


Selasa, 25 Oktober 2011

Wednesday

If you are in E block do todays lesson.

If you are in H block scroll down to the previous lesson.

Today....

Choose one subject to write about.  Include links!!
1. Read this article about halloween.   Are some costumes choices inappropriate?  Why or why not?
2. What are we doing to our kids?  Do parents and kids have too much screen time?

Choose something to experiment with:
1. Check out the ShowMe app.  Play around with it.
2.  Try to create a song with the Voice Jam app.
3. Have fun making a Puppet Movie with PuppetPals.

Other ideas:
1. Start a iPad Hockey tournament.  Make a website to keep score.
2. Try to draw something on the iPad and then on MS Paint.  Compare the two software programs.
3. Write about any picture in the Guardian Eyewitness App. You can google it to embed picture in a blog post.

Write about what you did today on your blog.  Have fun!







more to come....

BCIT increases visitor satisfaction with 4Q Suite and the Google Analytics API

One of the great aspects of being part of the Developer Relations team for Google Analytics is that I get to work with a lot of awesome partners that build cool and successful apps using the Google Analytics API. We've decided to share these successes as a series of mini case studies highlighting a variety of Google Analytics Apps. And to start off with we have iPerceptions’ 4Q Suite.

Objective: Improve the visitor experience
British Columbia Institute of Technology wanted their website to be both functional and satisfying. But, behavioral data alone wasn’t telling them what key audiences thought about the site. BCIT knew what visitors were doing on the site but wanted to learn more about why they behave the way they do. The overall objective for BCIT was to gain a better understanding of which content and processes were most effective for various audiences.

The Solution: 4Q Suite and the Google Analytics API
To meet this objective, BCIT chose 4Q Suite, an online survey tool built by iPerceptions. 4Q uses the Google Analytics API to link 4Q Suite survey responses with the corresponding Google Analytics session data. An analyst can then use this data to answer questions related to visitor intention and satisfaction. 4Q tracks six “Voice of Customer” events within Google Analytics. These events are related to survey completion, task completion, purpose of visit, and overall satisfaction. With 4Q survey data available in Google Analytics, marketers can better prioritize site enhancements, monitor the effectiveness of ad campaigns and marketing events more closely, and quickly identify changes in conversion. The Google Analytics API also makes it possible for 4Q to export GA data into the 4Q Suite dashboard, enabling analysis of the integrated dataset and open-ended feedback. And, users can view or receive automated alerts of significant changes based on the combination of 4Q Suite and Google Analytics data.





Result: Increased visitor satisfaction
Alan Etkin, Project and Web Analytics Manager at British Columbia Institute of Technology uses Google Analytics and 4Q Suite to segment site visitors by key audiences (students, prospective students, and faculty & staff), and see the differences in task completion and satisfaction. When BCIT redesigned their site with a strategic focus on prospective students, they saw a 15% increase in satisfaction among these visitors. Their behavioral analytics data also showed a 279% increase in a key conversion event for prospective students. From a strategic standpoint, 4Q Suite has given BCIT a clearer understanding of key audiences and has helped them report their results to the leadership team with easy to understand metrics. This, in turn, has helped them secure additional resources and the support to move forward with new projects.

About 4Q Suite and Google Analytics
4Q Suite was built by iPerceptions. According to Claude Guay, President & CEO, “The response has been tremendously positive. Many of our clients insist that the integration between 4Q Suite and Google Analytics is the most valuable feature that iPerceptions has to offer because it connects what visitors are doing on their website with why they are doing it and how satisfied they are. 4Q Suite has rounded out our Voice of Customer analytics offering. Now companies of all sizes can hear what their website visitors are saying, connect the what with the why, and react to the issues that affect satisfaction and conversion. In the space of a few weeks since launching, hundreds of 4Q Suite customers have already enabled Google Analytics integration.”

4Q Suite can be found through the Google Analytics App Gallery or directly from the 4Q Suite website.

If you’re interested in developing applications for the Google Analytics platform visit Google Analytics for Developers.

Senin, 24 Oktober 2011

COW COMFORT MEANS MORE MILK

COW COMFORT MEANS MORE MILK
PUBLISHED IN THE SUNDAY NEWS ‘LIVESTOCK MARKETS’ BY MUHLE M. MASUKU 23/10/11

A prominent local dairy farmer, Mr. Petros Malahleka’s concern about the cause of low milk production on a very healthy looking and highly regarded dairy herd affects many farmers. According to Rykie Visser of Agrinet (SA), the most comfortable milking system in the world cannot be efficient if the cows are not comfortable.

A cow gives signals all the time about her health and welfare. She does this with behaviour, attitude, body language, and body condition. The ‘cow signs’ can be used to optimize herd health, comfort and milk production results. Train yourself to observe, evaluate and quickly find solutions for your cows, then smile all the way to the bank. Questions to ask are; what do I see? What is causing this? And what does this mean?

Animal signs;
1)      Performance; an unbalanced walk or curved back could indicate lameness or indigestion problems.
2)      Condition; cow condition says a lot about the ratios the cow has been fed. Cows too thin or too fat will not produce to their full potential.
3)      Temperature; a cow should have a temperature of 38 to 39 degrees Celsius. Cold ears might indicate milk fever or blood circulation problems.
4)      Legs; heel erosion or skinned hills are mainly caused by problems with bedding materials, incorrectly adjusted shed equipment and/or hoof infection.
5)      Ruminating; a cow should ruminate for seven to ten hours per day, ruminating 40 to 70 times on a cud. Taking less time indicates inadequate rations.
6)      Dung; this should not be too thick or too thin, and should never have undigested particles in it.
7)      Alert; a healthy cow looks alert and powerful, with a glossy skin and a full stomach.
8)      Neck; a swollen neck is mainly caused by a fence being too low or incorrectly adjusted shed equipment.
9)      Hooves; healthy cows stand straight and still while eating. Tipping or walking with a lame gait are signs of poor hoof health. This can be caused by bad rations, poor floors or lack of hoof treatment. One should always look underneath hoofs during hoof trimming for extra signs.
10)  Udder; to assess udder health, one should look carefully at the teats after milking. Good teats are flexible and naturally coloured. Poor udder health can be caused by hygiene problems, poor milking equipment installation or inadequate feed rations.
11)  Rumen; rumen should be filled with feed. The left side of the stomach (seen from behind the cow) should protrude. If one presses a fist into the rumen it should contract firmly about 10 to 12 times in five minutes.
12)  Breathing; normal breathing ranges from 10 to 30 breaths a minute for a cow. Faster breathing indicates heat stress or pain and fever.    

Social behaviour can impact feeding time, ruminating time and water intake. Dominant cows may inhibit submissive cows from eating at the bunk, drinking water or lying down. Recently moved cows and first calf-heifers are often the submissive cows. Larger or older cows are often dominant in a group. Social interactions are part of herd behaviour, but it is good to have good conditions in the shed, such as sufficient feeding area, space around water bowls or troughs and enough good cubicles for cows to rest.

Cows like to groom their bodies against a brush, lick and be licked by peers. Cow brushes improve animal welfare by increasing blood circulation while keeping the cow clean, busy and calm. If brushes are not there cows will groom against fences in and around the shed. This may be undesirable as cows can hurt themselves or damage shed equipment. The function of grooming is to remove dung, urine and parasites while maintaining the condition of skin and hair.   

FEEDBACK;
  • What has really gone wrong? The country has no proper constitution. Politicians have for a long time taken us for granted.(name withheld)
  • You need to say more to these politicians. I am from Ndwane village and the nearest dam is 16km away. How can one improve livestock farming when underground water is hard to get. Only one communal borehole, but we manage to raise that little. How can one say we are lazy?(name withheld)

Masuku: I wish I could do more, but again I am reminded that if wishes were horses, beggars would ride. 

Email; muhle.masuku@gmail.comor sms only to 0712 938 659

CRITICAL SHORTAGE OF INSTITUTIONAL MEMORY

CRITICAL SHORTAGE OF INSTITUTIONAL MEMORY
PUBLISHED IN THE SUNDAY NEWS ‘Livestock Markets’ by Muhle M. Masuku 02/10/11

Most institutions in the livestock industry are suffering from chronic amnesia, confirmed by a dichotomy that exists between the previous and current way of doing things. Indeed, organisational culture has been seriously eroded, itself being ‘the set of shared, taken for granted implicit assumptions that a group holds and that determines how it perceives, thinks about and reacts to its various environments’ (Schein, 1966)

I believe values, ethics, rituals, customs, ideology and norms collectively form an organisational conscience. Employees tape into this conscience to keep them in line with the organisational goals.    

The livestock industry was not spared; firstly, the post independence era saw scores of whites leave abruptly and secondly, the land redistribution exercise that had the same effect and thirdly, the recent economic down turn that saw massive brain drain to the diaspora.

A FAO text says, particularly in its early days, Zimbabwefaced some fairly serious problems, especially the loss of experienced staff between 1981 and 1985. As a result, both institutional memory and technical expertise in dealing with farmers were lost. This was compounded by the arrival of new staff who had limited practical knowledge of dealing with farmers and providing technical expert advice.
The problem resurfaced again in the last decade. In a recent interview, the Matebeleland North Provincial Agricultural and Extension Officer, Mr. Dumisani Nyoni mentioned what I feel resonates with all agricultural institutions that “Staff exodus due to economic meltdown and political instability robbed AGRITEX of its technical expertise and institutional memory. Agricultural colleges produce agricultural scientists largely equipped with biological sciences and not extension work. As students, they don’t learn the sociology, philosophy and psychology of the farming communities, subjects they only come across during in-service training.”
He reiterated that practice is the best teacher and that it takes four to five years to produce a mature Agricultural extension worker. Therefore it follows that millions of dollars are lost through paying unproductive personnel, largely due to inexperience and lack of mentorship at the workplace. I can confirm that some radarlessinstitutions are just perambulating without any set goals, operating like misguided missiles endangering the lives of internal and external publics, reminiscent of the Shakespearian ‘meteors of a troubled haven.’ There is a leadership crisis at various levels of agricultural institutions. Surely henceforth, we need definite institutional directions lest we continue in this disastrous course.
A large contingent of experienced managers, officers and even general hands were hoodwinked into believing that the grass is always greener across the borders, and today are scavenging and believe me, ready to catch the first flight, at the slightest hint of a job back home. The most effective speech is not a sermon but a witness, so take it from me because I have been there.

Our hats-off to the Ministry of Education that took back its very own, without a question and it doesn’t surprise me coming from the fountain of knowledge. I would love to see this ministry infect other ministries with this rare wisdom to save some institutions from imminent dearth.

Many institutions are set on rediscovering the wheel, committing millions of dollars to known errors. Everything is in our hands and it is up to us to take positive or negative choices. Like the Ministry of Education, we must swallow our pride and choose options that would diminish any shame to our beloved country. Surely a positive choice would bring joy and a constructive contribution to our society. By contrast, we have damned the positives and chosen the negative, thus steering this country to a palpable discomfiture.

We can not rid ourselves of this scourge unless we go back down memory lane to reconnect and only then, can we clear our foggy lenses for a better world view. We must avoid the temptation of underestimating the seriousness of problems in the livestock industry, even if they appear small today. Problems are like a pregnancy. They will grow till they are obvious to everyone; by then people will be completely disempowered and hungry. A hungry man is an angry man.   

There is no substitute for experience. Indeed, there is no way a house built on sand can withstand the test of time. Emuva kuphambili, kusasa kuyizolo (tomorrow is built today).
  
I am humbled by some messages that urge me on, thank you.



Minggu, 23 Oktober 2011

Fireworks Practice

Fireworks tasks:
  • Take this picture of Molly.  Change her outfit so its the same color as the girl in front of her.
  • Change the H to an S.
  • Change STOP to GO.  Make it green.
  • Use a text tool to make your name super cool.
  • Put President Obama in a crowd at a Yankee Game.
Some of those are hard.  Save all to your fireworks folder.


Next I want you to tackle this puzzle.  Why are there three water fountains in the upstairs hallway next to the guidance office?


PICT0053 


I would like you to write a blog post:


  • Embed the picture in the blog post.  If you go to the image and click share and then "Grab the HTML code".  Copy the code into a blog post.
  • Give me a good story or theory.  Creative writing is fine.  I have NO IDEA why we have three water fountains.
  • Be sure to include any links that are needed.
Claudia's Post
Samantha's Post

    Kamis, 20 Oktober 2011

    Are Extension And Advisory Services Meeting The Needs Of Farmers In Zimbabwe?

    Are Extension And Advisory Services Meeting The Needs Of Farmers In Zimbabwe? Published by VOP on 19/08/2011 17:49:00 Font size: By Muhle Masuku Bulawayo- A potentially explosive situation exists in the rural areas as extension and advisory service organisations struggle for recognition in Zimbabwe. A large number swamp the districts as diminishing returns set in. Mr Joy Khumalo a farmer from Nkayi District in Matabeleland North bemoans the existence of several organisations out-maneuvering each other at ward level: “Several committees are formed in one ward and power struggles ensue, eroding the spirit of togetherness that typify rural existence,” he said. The ward level has become a political battle front, further polarizing rural areas. Food is being used as a reward for supporting political parties as elections loom, thus shifting emphasis from food production to organising political meetings. The Ministry of Agriculture, Mechanisation and Irrigation Development provides agricultural extension and advisory services through the Departments of Veterinary Services (DVS), Livestock Production and development (LPD), Agricultural, Technical and Extension Services (AGRITEX). A number of organisations augment public agricultural extension and advisory services such as; public research-cum-extension organisations; donor-supported rural development programmes; international and private research centres; farmers' associations; Non Governmental Organisations (NGO) and bilateral donors; private agrochemical input suppliers; commodity processors and exporters. Mr Mandla Siwela, a small scale farmer in Bubi district said, “We are overwhelmed by the number of meetings we are expected to attend in one week. At times people are compelled to attend. That robs us of the time we are supposed to work in our plots. Lack of coordination between service providers at ward level is disrupting on-farm programs.” Suspicion and competition between government departments and NGOs should be eradicated. Civic society is viewed by ZANU(PF), the former sole ruling party as campaigning for the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC)through food handouts from its perceived enemies the European governments, in rural areas and advocating for regime change, he said. “Community relations and farmer knowledge levels have a bearing on the choice of capacity building approaches. We have not discarded what are perceived to be top-down approaches for new participatory ones for obvious reasons. The level of participation of a farmer is dependent on the level of appreciation of a particular topic and the environment. Different approaches are used for different levels of maturity of the farmer and the community,” said Dumisani Nyoni, the Chief Agricultural Extension Officer for Matebeleland North. The plurality of agricultural extension and advisory organisations, ineptitude and political volatility are inhibiting progress in the provision of extension services. “Staff exodus due to economic meltdown and political instability robbed AGRITEX of its technical expertise and institutional memory,” added Nyoni. The land reform programme also presented extension services with a new set of problems such as the integration of traditional farmers and urbanites, dubbed ‘cellphone’ or ‘freelance’ farmers, who were allocated pieces of land. The later brought a culture that is alien to the former further complicating community relations. Mr Edmore Chikowa, Bubi District LPD officer, said institutional development has began to address itself to the sustainability issue—not just the 'what works?’ but the 'what lasts?' question. Capacity development advances a more normative (i.e. people centred, participatory and responsive, sustainable and empowering) and less technique-oriented concept than institutional strengthening or institutional development. The creative initiative of people is regarded as a primary development resource, hence helping people believe in themselves is crucial to capacity building. In other words, participation is democratisation. Chikowa said models used in policy often have deeply embedded assumptions within them about how people do and want to live. Thus agricultural policy and extension recommendations that assume a particular ‘model’ farmer may be way off the mark. There is a need to cultivate bottom-up approaches to planning that will usher in pro-poor polices. People must be regarded as the ‘world’s leading authorities’ on matters concerning their areas. According to farmers, extension and advisory service multiplicity is disabling information dissemination and causing confusion, hindering farm growth that itself acts as a stimulant for the emergence of more diverse opportunities in the rural economy such as rural services, non-farm enterprises and growth points. Farmers grieve over lack of information alleging that it contributes to poor margins that kill backward and forward linkages. Some farmers moan over inefficient markets due to inadequate information. Mr Joe Sadza, a small scale farmer from Muzarabani District said, “We are victims of manipulation by middlemen who buy our produce at rock bottom prices because print or electronic media do not educate and inform us on price changes. Extension personnel are equally uninformed about price changes in urban markets. We desparately need community radio stations and newspapers to augment extension services. It is apparent that government favours politically visible city projects, while pure national rhetoric favours the rural areas,” he observed. On commodity markets, Nyoni, castigated discriminative procurement of farmers’ products by hoteliers, chain stores and government institutions as a result of a plethora of ‘isms’. As Grain Marketing Board falters on its mandate to buy all produce, he urged compatriots to desist from cashing in on farmers’ desperation through unfair barter deals that kill the farmer’s spirit. He envisions the penetration of our traditional crops into the large Diaspora market in Southern Africa, Australia and United Kingdom. There are bright sports illuminating the gloomy picture due to some collaboration initiatives that out lived the era of galloping inflation. According to AGRITEX, these tend to be geographic, sectoral or discipline-specific. Management branch collaborates more with NGOs that are involved in socio-economic issues, while the crop and livestock branches collaborate more with actors with whom they have common areas of interest, such companies as Seed-Co and Agri-foods. Both formal institutional linkages and informal networks are characterized by joint planning, joint implementation (including field visits), division of tasks, and sharing of information and resources. Through collaborations with International Crop Research Institute for Semi-Arid Regions (ICRISAT) Tsholotsho district now excels in small grains seed multiplication and has since become a reliable seed source. Njabulo Ncube, livestock marketing practitioner and founding member of a community based organisation (CBO) in Nkayi District said, “Political independence has not liberated people from colonialists’ psychological subjugation.” He posits that political calamities of post-independent Zimbabwe are symptoms of colonialism that have exacerbated the annihilation of a critical rural development resource called social capital; in the form of extended networks of mutual solidarity, shared beliefs, traditions and commitments to retain long standing practices of daily life.. Nyoni cited lack of extension courses at agricultural institutions as another cause of failure of most agricultural extension and advisory service organisations. All agricultural institutions in Zimbabwe offer agricultural sciences, thus producing a graduate deficient in the philosophical, sociological and psychological aptitude required to execute capacity development in rural areas. He castigated NGOs for failing to invest in in-service training of extension workers, relying on poaching diligent cadres from AGRITEX. He urged agricultural colleges to offer extension and advisory courses with an emphasis on philosophy, psychology and sociology. A rural development expert, Mr Ngwiza Khumalo, programme manager of Zinyangeni Christian Church (ZCC) believes the creation of a ‘primary locus of integration’ comprising of line ministries, NGOs, CBOs and the Rural District Councils at district level and the creation of an ‘amalgamated resource envelop’ will kill-off current discord caused by multiplicity of improperly coordinated extension service providers. The current setup is wasteful and unsustainable. The Government of National Unity (GNU) has not defused tension between government departments and NGOs thus lessening chances of collaboration of state and non-state actors. While the GNU recognizes the need for national healing as a prerequisite for establishing an all embracing enabling environment in the country, however, very little has been done, he said. Muhle Masuku, a trained agriculturalist is a regular writer on livestock marketing and rural extension services Zimbabwe. E Mail: Muhle.masuku@gmail.com

    Google Analytics User Conference in Spain - October 27

    We are excited to announce our first Google Analytics User Conference in Spain, which will be held on October 27 in Madrid.

    At the conference, you’ll learn from national and international Google Analytics specialists, who will discuss their vision for maximizing Google Analytics performance for different online business areas. You’ll also have the chance to meet some of the most influential Google Analytics professionals in Spain, including Enric Quintero from Metriplica, Pere Rovira from Web Analytics, and Jaum Clotet & Andrés Flores from Watt. They are all Google Analytics Partners, and they’ve worked together closely to develop this exciting event.

    This event will be an ideal opportunity to share your own analytics knowledge and talk with other Google Analytics users, experts, and members of the Google Analytics team.

    Key benefits of attending the Google Analytics User Conference:
    • Meet members of the Google Analytics team, experts, and other users like you
    • Improve your skills with Google Analytics through hands-on workshops
    • Ask your business questions at the Google Analytics Help Desk
    • Discover new features in Google Analytics
    You can find further information, such as the agenda and speakers, on the Google Analytics User Conference Website. Please visit the site today and and buy your tickets to attend.

    We look forward to seeing you there!

    WHAT HAS REALLY GONE WRONG?

    This article appeared in the Sunday News; Livestock Markets by Muhle M. Masuku WHAT HAS REALLY GONE WRONG? 16/10/11 Addressing farmers at a field day in Nyamandlovu recently, Cde Dzikamayi Mavhaire, ZANU PF secretary for production and labour said, “Traditionally, Matebeleland is good in terms of cattle ranching but just look at your livestock right now, the numbers are dwindling and most of them are in bad shape, let’s jerk up, improve our current means of cattle breeding.” The question is; are we masters of our destiny or just victims of circumstances? Or merely according to Seligman (1991) a depressed lot suffering from paralysis of the will, passive resignation (have given up on life) or motionless apathy (they would not react to anything, as if they have no feelings). Surely, people haven’t just developed unexplained laziness. Mavhaire said “it was disappointing that most people, especially those from the rural areas had this tendency of sitting back and waiting for the government to give them seeds and other farming inputs rather than actively working for self reliance.” Myers (2002) coined such phenomenon learned helplessness, a feeling of hopelessness and resignation learned when a human or animal perceives no control over repeated bad events. Haven’t I cited persistently, this incredible lack of reaction to very important issues as a symptom to a much bigger problem? Giving local farmers a seed and fertiliser pack is not working due to natural calamities, what we need is heifer packs or steer packs. Repeated requests have fallen on deaf ears, therefore citing the dearth of local farming due to laziness or beggar syndrome is simply unfair. Officiating at a field day last week, Umguza District Administrator, Ennety Sithole said “While in most cases farmers have failed in crop farming due to erratic rains, we urge them to try new ways of farming and focus on animal husbandry.” Practicing intensive cattle farming, she said, would enable farmers develop their communities while overcoming poverty. Amen to that. In what resonates with the status quo, Kaplan (1996:10) writes: “The idea of development stands like a ruin in the intellectual landscape…the development epoch is crumbling under the weight of delusion, disappointment, failure and crime, and …the time is right to write its obituary.” Over the years farmers have lost livestock due to recurrent droughts and the economic meltdown and they used divestment of livestock as a coping mechanism. They have been crying incessantly to the government to kick start the national herd rebuilding program. They have gotten only promises. The much awaited Cold Storage Company cattle finance scheme is a definite must for the region. Every farmer in Matebeleland will be watching Finance Minister Biti’s budget with a hawk’s eye. Development practitioners and politicians alike have closed their eyes and ears to the greater evil in the commodity markets. Plenty land, livestock and good techniques will not produce enough profit to sustain livestock production, unless there is a total overhaul of the unruly market systems. I have secretly hoped that some politician will see sense in what I am saying and take it up for inclusion in some party manifesto. I tend to agree with the notion that in terms of policies and programs, many parties are not hugely different and that politics is fought out in an area where histories and identities or ethnic based contests are more important than substantive policy issues. There is general despondency, around the region and a general disillusionment with deepening poverty. This is reinforced by a conscious state policy of “self-disconnection,” that is allowing the poor to disconnect themselves from basic services such as education, electricity, water and health services. At the same time the ‘connected’ are involved in widespread corruption and looting in the public and corporate sector. FEEDBACK; Email me at muhle.masuku@gmail.com or send an sms to 0712 938 659

    Rabu, 19 Oktober 2011

    Fireworks Assignment

    Before you begin please write a blog post about any of the following items.  Be sure to include links!  What do you think?

    Today we will continue the Fireworks Tutorials.  This is sandbox time.  Please complete the following 8 tutorials and have the completed products in your Fireworks folder.  Now, some of these might not work perfectly as the software has changed.  If somethings not working, please substitute another tutorial.  Take your time and FOLLOW THE DIRECTIONS.
    Be sure to choose the right photograph for each tutorial.  Some photographs aren't appropriate (too dark, not enough contrast, etc...).  Be sure to save and name everything correctly.

    My goal is that by the end of class today you can identify the basic functions of Fireworks and apply those functions to an image.  

    Introducing Flow Visualization: visualizing visitor flow

    Many of you have shared with us difficulties you’ve experienced when using traditional path analysis tools. For instance, many of these tools don’t sensibly group related visitor paths and pages, and segmentation analysis can be difficult. You’re looking for better ways to visualize and quickly find those insights about how visitors flow through your sites.

    The Google Analytics team has been listening and is working hard to meet your needs. Our design team chose not to build individual “path analysis,” which can quickly become complicated. Instead, they took inspiration from a wide range of sources to reimagine approaches for visualizing visitor flow. Our goal is to help marketers and analysts better optimize their visitor experience by presenting the ways that visitors flow through their sites in an intuitive and useful way.

    This morning at Web 2.0 Summit, Susan Wojcicki & I unveiled the release of “Flow Visualization” in Google Analytics, a tool that allows you to analyze site insights graphically, and instantly understand how visitors flow across pages on your site. Starting this week, “Visitors Flow” and “Goal Flow” will be rolling out to all accounts. Other types of visualizers will be coming to Google Analytics in the coming few months, but in the meantime, here’s what you can expect from this initial release.

    Visitors Flow

    The Visitors Flow view provides a graphical representation of visitors’ flow through the site by traffic source (or any other dimensions) so you can see their journey, as well as where they dropped off. You’ll find this visualizer on the left hand navigation menu, where you’ll see a new “Visitors Flow” link under the Visitors section.



    Nodes are automatically clustered according to an intelligence algorithm that groups together the most likely visitor flow through a site.

    You’ll also notice that we made the visualization highly interactive. You can interact with the graph to highlight different pathways, and to see information about specific nodes and connections. For example, if you want to dive deeper into your “specials” set of pages, you can hover over the node to see more at a glance.



    This type of visualization allows you to answer important questions, such as “How successful is my new promo page?” In the example above, a marketer instantly gains the insight that there are 5.46K visits (based on the sources on the left hand side) and the majority of visits to the “specials” or promo page come from Google search.

    To take this a step further, you can drill down into any node by “exploring the traffic” through the node. In this case, you can see how visitors coming specifically from Google search journeyed across your site.



    We realize that you might want to specifically focus on a node, so we’re providing data on all the visits that lead to that node, and not just the ones that come from the top sources in the Visitors Flow. You can also traverse the path forwards or backwards on this visualizer to gain more insight on how engaged the users are to your new promotion.

    Goal Flow

    Goal Flow provides a graphical representation for how visitors flow through your goal steps and where they dropped off. Because the goal steps are defined by the site owner, they should reflect the important steps and page groups of interest to the site. In this first iteration, we’re supporting only URL goals, but we’ll soon be adding events and possibly other goal types.



    You can find the Goal Flow visualizer in the Conversions > Goals section of the “Standard Reporting Tab.” Goal Flow helps you understand:
    • The relative volume of visits to your site by the dimension you choose (e.g. traffic source, campaign, browser)
    • The rates at which visitors abandon different pathways
    • Where and how visitors navigate each of the steps that you defined
    • How the visitors interacted with your site, including backtracking to previous goal steps
    You can also apply any advanced segments to a Flow Visualizer. In addition, for those who want to see how visitors arrive at a page (or pages) of interest, they can select that page (or pages) and visualize “backward”. Such “reverse paths” could help site owners identify suboptimal placement of content. Similarly, “forward” paths from a page (or pages) can be visualized to understand most visited pages or to see visitor flow leakages that a site owner might be unaware of.



    Pages before and after the node of interest are automatically grouped based on the most common “visitor” flows, and we’re building continued improvements to help group together sensible visitor paths and page nodes.

    If you don’t have goals or goal funnels already set up, don’t worry. You can create a new goal or goal funnel from your profile settings and check it out right away - it works backwards on your historical data.

    These two views are our first step in tackling flow visualization for visitors through a site, and we look forward to hearing your feedback as all users begin experiencing it in the coming weeks. We’re excited to bring useful and beautiful tools like these to help you understand your site, so stayed tuned for more!

    As always, we welcome your input on how we can make Flow Visualization truly useful for you, so let us know in the comments, or send us your thoughts.

    - Posted by Phil Mui, Google Analytics team

    Selasa, 18 Oktober 2011

    Making search more secure: Accessing search query data in Google Analytics

    As search becomes an increasingly customized experience, particularly for signed in users, we believe that protecting these personalized search results is important. As part of that effort, today the Google Search team announced that SSL Search on https://www.google.com will become the default experience for signed in users on Google.com (see the Official Google Blog post to learn more). Protecting user privacy is important to us, and we want to take this opportunity to explain what the Google Analytics team is doing to help you continue measuring your website effectively in light of these changes.

    How will this change impact Google Analytics users?
    When a signed in user visits your site from an organic Google search, all web analytics services, including Google Analytics, will continue to recognize the visit as Google “organic” search, but will no longer report the query terms that the user searched on to reach your site. Keep in mind that the change will affect only a minority of your traffic. You will continue to see aggregate query data with no change, including visits from users who aren’t signed in and visits from Google “cpc”.

    What is Google Analytics doing about it?
    We are still measuring all SEO traffic. You will still be able to see your conversion rates, segmentations, and more.

    To help you better identify the signed in user organic search visits, we created the token “(not provided)” within Organic Search Traffic Keyword reporting. You will continue to see referrals without any change; only the queries for signed in user visits will be affected. Note that “cpc” paid search data is not affected.

    Our team continues to explore ways that we can surface relevant information, like search query data, to help you measure the effectiveness of your website and marketing efforts, and as always, we welcome any feedback or comments that you have. Thank you for continuing to help us improve Google Analytics.