Tag Archive for 'water'

Education over the radio

A cool organization I came across today via my friend Laura: Farm Radio International. It’s a Canadian non-profit organization that “gather[s] and research[es] information about successful, low-cost practices in sustainable agriculture, nutrition, health and community development, and produce radio scripts for our partner-broadcasters and others engaged in rural development.”

How might this apply to our project? Well, I think we’d have to do some research about penetration in Cajamarca, but I’m pretty sure radio is pretty well ubiquitous. It might make sense for us to look into bringing health and sanitation education over the airways.

Ethical Considerations in the Design of an Educational Curriculum on Sanitation

Hey guys, I feel like I wasn’t able to really get across what I felt were important points about our curriculum project during our call today so I’m going to try to clarify them for you now in an email (that I’ll also post on the blog, so if you have any responses post them there).

So we’re being tasked to design the presentation that either we or some group will give to the villagers of Suro Antivo.  Now, one of the goals of that presentation–which everyone can agree upon–is that we need to transfer knowledge of the health benefits of sanitation as well as the means to achieve those benefits.  We’re not on any sort of ethically shaky ground here because all we’re doing is providing knowledge that is generally agreed to be correct to people who willingly come to hear us and we’re letting those people do what they wish with that knowledge.

However, since one of our overaching goals for the project is to improve health among the villagers of Suro Antivo and since there is a strong and direct correlation between sanitary practices and health, we might decide that we want to do everything we can (ie, more than just transfer knowledge) to get the villagers to adopt sanitary practices.  One such way to increase the adoption of sanitary practices is through persuasion.

If we designed the curriculum to not just be informative, but persuasive as well, then we would add elements that attempted to change the behavior of our listeners (now, I think a fair argument would be that even the informative-only approach attempts to change behaviors, but with the persuasive approach, changing behavior would be an explicit goal).  Now, there are levels of persuasiveness you can use.  You can simply rely on your authority as someone who seems to know what they’re talking about and say “you should really wash your hands!” and stuff like that.  Or, you can take it quite a bit further and use techniques from marketing and other disciplines who have studied human behavior and have well-established methods for changing people’s behavior.

Now, the question is–do we design our curriculum to be solely informative, or to be persuasive as well?  If persuasive, how much persuasion are we willing to use?

I would encourage you not to take this matter lightly, because the decision we come to here really sets a precident for the type of development organization that we are, and what development doctrine we adhere to.  Just to show you that there are different schools of development thought who would answer the questions I’ve posed very differently, I’ve liked you to two different readings (Encountering Development and Marketing Safe Water Solutions)  a that roughly argue for and against persuasion.

The Escobar reading (of which you only need to read from the beginning to the end of the second paragraph on page 5–though if you have time at some point, I’d like to have us read the whole thing, because it’s a fascinating different take on development) attacks that idea that Group A, which believes it knows better than Group B what is good for Group B, has the ethical right to do anything to Group B without Group B’s express permission, even if Group A thinks it is acting in the best interests of Group B (haha, sorry if that’s confusing). Furthermore, the reading argues that such efforts have been totally unsuccessful historically.  From this school of thought comes to common practice we see currently that NGOs don’t do development unless the target of the development asks to be helped and that the help provided should be based upon what the target asks for (often discovered through a needs assessment).  To this school of thought, you should only give people information and let them do with it as they please–you should NOT try to impose your ideas upon them.

The contrary opinion, provided by Marketing Safe Water Solutions (skim to get the main ideas), argues that such ideas are hindering development.  Marketing provides all sorts of unused methods to improve peoples health by changing their behaviors, and while developers worry about ethics, corporations (who have no such concerns) are already using methods from marketing to great effect.

Think about this, read the 2.5 pages from Escobar and skim MSWS, and let’s discuss this issue on Wednesday.

P.S. It also occurred to me that Green Empowerment and/or Solucciones Practicas might be expecting a certain kind of curriculum, so that’s also something for us to take into consideration.

Notes From Another Sanitation Project in Peru

I just read a project proposal from a Linfield group (available for download as “Conservation, Food, and Health Foundation Concept Application“) that is also working with Green Empowerment and planning to go to Peru.  Their project focuses more on sanitation than on water provision–they’ll be installing 300 Bio Sand Filters (they didn’t explicitly state that they’d be doing this many, but I inferred it from their budget).

Here are the notes for that reading, with thoughts and questions specifically about how aspects of their project and their proposal apply to what we hope to do:

  • We need to find out how many people in the village where we’ll be working speak Quechua.  Also, even if many villagers speak Spanish, we might be better off giving presentations in their native tongue.  If we need to prepare presentations in Spanish and Quechuan, we will likely have to pay for a translation and so we should work together with the Linfield group, even if only to split the cost of this translation.
  • In this project, money is budgeted to pay for training and educational programs–is there any way we can reduce these costs by using members of our group rather than hiring people and by preparing educational materials ourselves or finding them for free.  I’d like to see a more detailed account of their expenses that went toward education.
  • This project plans to have some of its hygiene education accomplished through theater.  We should communicate with them and find out how exactly they’re doing this and see if we can’t also use their scripts or whatnot in our project.
  • We should think about alternative methods besides theater we could use to convey knowledge and proper concern for sanitation.
  • This paper talks about biosand filters removing 96% of fecal coliform bacteria.  I wonder if this is a high enough removal rate to be substantial.  I imagine that it is, because Bio Sand filters have a good reputation, but I could also imagine that not being the case if, for example, it only took 1 PPM of coliform to have a 90% likelihood of sickness, and the water has 100 PPM (this would mean the filter would reduce the coliform to 4 PPM–still far more than the hypothetical amount that would be highly likely to cause sickness).

Some Useful Psychology to Aid Development

I was reading an article in the NYT on the issue of relative happiness–a phenomenon which can basically be summed up by the finding in many studies that many people would choose to lose money if they knew others would be losing a larger amount of money and, conversely, would rather earn $50,000 a year if their neighbors earned $25,000 than earn $100,000 if their neighbors earned $250,000–and it got me thinking about development.

One of the big problems with a project like we’re hoping to do in Peru is getting the community to care enough about the system we’re installing to put in the time and money to maintain it.  Now, we’re addressing this in many ways, including education programs (to show people the benefits of sanitation) and community investment of time and money (the idea being that you care a lot more about something if you had to pay for it).  I was thinking that we could also leverage the phenomenon of relative happiness.

We need to show people that our system has increased their relative happiness, not just absolute happiness.  Let me show you the difference:

(Absolute happiness) “Now you don’t have to spend time every day carrying water from a river back to your homes.”

(Relative happiness) “Now you have to spend way less time than in neighboring villages carrying water from a river back to your homes.”

The article would suggest that the second statement would cause the listener to value the solar water pump much more.

This can be further applied to a goal of spreading a desire for development to neighboring villages.  If we subtly drop hints in neighboring villages that they have to work all day carrying water while their neighbor sits back and lets the sun do the work, then they’d start organizing and working hard for such a system as well.

Of course, there are downsides to this approach (especially the second aspect).  First, you’ll be promoting the worst of Western Capitalism’s “Keeping Up With the Jones’,” a terrible habit in my opinion that leads to excessive consumption with no increases in happiness.  Also, until the neighboring villages get water systems of their own, they’ll feel their lack much more acutely and we’d be spreading unhappiness.  Suddenly carrying water, which likely was an acceptable every day routine, would become torturous for these women and children.

We’re off to a start

The water project is off to a good start. We just heard that the Christadelphian Meal A Day Fund of the Americas will be supporting a water project in Suro Aniguo with a $15,000 grant for the rehabilitation of the exisiting water distribution system, sand filters for households that the potable water system doesn’t reach, and community work to sustainably manage the water resource. In the next 2 months, we’ll be undertaking the socioeconomic and technical surveys in this and several other communities in the district of Tumbaden with the goal of launching a larger project to address the critical water needs in this area. Check out my post on the Green Empowerment blog for more about the area.

FLOW: For The Love Of Water at the Bijou this Friday

Arguably the most amazing film I’ve seen this year, “FLOW: For The Love Of Water” is playing at the Bijou Cinema in Eugene this Friday at 7:30 PM.

Granted, it isn’t the most uplifting film in the world, but it’s a must-see. Even if you’ve seen it before (hint, Shane), I would highly encourage you to come see it again. It is so many adjectives I’m lacking right now, and might just convince you to get involved with ODA.

What I learned: the October technical workshop

As Shane mentioned earlier, he and I spent the whole weekend at a Green Empowerment workshop covering solar, solar water pumps, wind turbines, and a few other topics related to energy development in the developing world. It was about 20 hours of total immersion in how to scope, install, and maintain appropriate technology. Not entirely what I was expecting, but cool nonetheless.

For me, the most beneficial component to the workshop was the hands-on experience in assessing, say, water demands of a village and determining how many watts the solar panels had to provide to the pump in order to meet the demand. Whereas I don’t claim to be an expert in this arena, I feel comfortable in saying I would be a good assistant to this part of the project in the field. It’s also sweet that we now have notebooks full of slides and equations to reference back to. I think Shane and I could definitely put together a whiz-bang session for the fall retreat.

On the other hand, I think I had hoped the workshop would cover more of the cultural/social/political issues you can run into (although these are largely dependent on the country you work in). There’s quirks that come up in every project, and I would’ve loved to hear a roundtable of different scenarios Green Empowerment has had to address. I would’ve also liked to cover project design more in depth, but I suppose that’s why this was a technical workshop and not a learn everything workshop.

Overall, though, it was a great weekend spent learning about how to implement solar and wind installations.

Reflections: Green Empowerment Technical Training

This weekend, I spent most of my days at a technical training, put on by Green Empowerment at PSU. The training was divided up into 3 sections: 6-9 PM on Friday, 9-5 PM on Saturday, and 9-5 PM on Sunday. Most of the time was spent in a classroom where we learned about specifics of solar and wind electricity generation and using these things to pump water. Four times throughout the sessions, we would break from a classroom format for hands on time, where we got to work with and assemble the systems we were learning about.

For this reflection, I will start with the things I didn’t like, and then end with the things I did like. For me, having not been in a class setting in awhile, the 8 hour blocks on Saturday and Sunday were difficult for me at times. I would have preferred a different division of time (perhaps a session across multiple weekends). Also, I felt like the teaching sessions got bogged down in details at times. Finally, I wish that we could have spent more time talking about interacting with the people we’re helping–something that both Michel and Jason agreed occupied 90% of time spent when working on a project (be it electrification, water pumping, or otherwise). However, given that this was a technical training session, I was not too bothered by the technical focus.

Things I liked: While I said that I felt that sometimes the session got bogged down in too many details, for the most part I appreciated the in-depth approach to teaching us about the technical side of such a project. The book of slides they gave us will serve as a good reminder of all of the lessons we learned, and I look forward to having it when I design and implement a project. I also very much enjoyed the hands-on sessions, where I got to work with a voltmeter, solar-panels, a wind-turbine, and ask informed people all of the questions that came to me, both practical and theoretical. I’m glad that I got to do this electrical work now in a friendly, no-pressure environment full of people who know what’s up, because it’d be a lot harder (and potentially very costly) to have to pick this stuff up in the field. Finally, I enjoyed the chance to meet and spend time with a wide variety of intelligent, pleasant, and motivated people. Almost everyone there had a project they were working on. I got to chat with them and exchange ideas. I just regret that I didn’t get anyone’s contact information, because I feel that there were a lot of potential partners there.

In conclusion, though the format was hard on me, the experience was definitely positive. I’m glad I have the skills and knowledge that I do now, and I feel that they will be very helpful to me in the future.

Water survey in Incatambo

Incatambo is also sometimes spelled Ingatambo or Inkatambo.

It is possible that the highland lagoons could serve as a potable water source with pipes flowing to many communities, although this would be a major infrastructure of 10s of km of pipes. For the time being it probably makes sense to focus more on small-scale distributed options.

20 households (HH) and the primary school get water from a piped system with an enclosed spring box. The remaining 50 drink from untreated surface water. 2-3 HH capture a few springs and channel them into a pond. Water is then delivered in pipes from the pond to the households. Most people drink from ‘puqueos’ (shallow surface water holes) or ‘quebradas’ (streams or gullies). Some people boil the water because a health promoter told them that the surface water is dirty.

Community groups include: Programa Juntos, Comedor Popular, Ronda Campesina, Asociacion de Productores and now the Frente de Defensa de las Lagonas.

There is a milk cooling plant (gas-fired) that the teacher rents to Nestle. Each morning 4 milk trucks deposit the fresh milk into the plant. Milk production is basically the only income of the community (80 cents of a sol per liter, each cow produces 5-10liters per day). There is no public transportation other than getting a ride on the milk truck. 

Electricity options

Strangly, there is a TV tower in this village without electricity. The tower does not work because they don’t have gas for the generator.

There is a river 3-7km away, apparently 4 times the size of the other river in Regalado (where ITDG is installing a micro-hydro). Gilberto from ITDG will visit the site to see if there is potential and if it is feasible to power the town at this distance. Otherwise, wind power seems like a good option. ITDG-GE are currently applying to a foundation for a 500w wind turbine for the secondary school.

Possible partnership with EWB University of Portland

In somewhat random fashion, I had a meeting yesterday afternoon with Teddy Acunas, his brother Christian, and Bethany Foran. All three are affiliated with EWB University of Portland, which currently has two projects on the table. The first is developing a rainwater harvesting system for the village of Agua Negra in Guatemala, and the second is a drainage system for the village of Guadalupe Carney in Nicaragua. My understanding is that they have enough manpower, and funding, to become involved with a third project. I’m excited to connect with them further as, although we have a number of big thinkers on the ODA team, we don’t have much engineering talent. EWB University of Portland could be a good source for this.