Tag Archives: Baseline

Baseline Gender Analysis

Tomorrow the Baseline Participatory Gender Analysis of Fish on Farms will begin. The purpose of this is to gain a better understanding of the role gender plays in mixed-farm livelihood systems. This process involves a number of Participatory Rural Appraisal (PRA) tools to collect the data. A participatory process is particularly important as it involves the community participants, who will be the agents of change,  to be engaged as co-investigators. The information gained here will be used to inform a “Gender Aware” behaviour change for the project.

More specifically the tools we will be looking at are:

1) Historical timeline of gender changes – to understand how gender roles have changed in recent years, what factors have made them change, and what community members think about these changes.

2) Bodymap (image of ideal husband/wife) – to illustrate behavioral expectations and images for men/women, and to identify the consequences for people who do not follow it.

3) Market and extension access – to understand different agriculture and aquaculture institutions and services in the community to which men and women have access.

4) Gender division of labour – to view how household management tasks are divided among household members, to understand men’s and women’s views about what constitutes “work’’ and to demonstrate a tool that will help community members assess their situation.

5) Fish preference ranking – to better understand categories and species of fish that men and women prefer for consumption and marketing. And to identify any food taboos associated with different fish species and to explore decisions to sell or to consume fish products.

6) Asset control and management – to understand how men, women, and elders have ownership and decision-making control over critical livelihood assets, and to understand how men and women define “control” over asset-related decisions.

7) Seasonal calendar matrix – to understand seasonal and gender patterns related to the production, sale and consumption of agriculture and horticulture products, and how decisions about sales and consumption are made.

8) Financial management and meanings of income controlto understand the diversity of sources of income from men, women, and other family members, and how different family members are involved in managing, saving, and making decisions about income.

9) Nutrition and coping strategies – to understand the relationship between food and health/well-being; how people try to maintain good health for the family; and how they cope when food supplies are low.

10) Key informant interview – to better understand community leadership opinions on gender issues, opportunities, and priorities in the community.

The implementing staff, comprising of the HKI and NGO field staff officers, were trained over the past week to administer the research exercises. The training was focused on conveying the concept and purpose behind each tool and questionnaire guide. Each tool was reviewed and practiced separately, through team work and participatory learning.

Since the quality of the research is dependent on the responses given, special emphasis was put on asking “probing questions”.  This style of questioning is of particular importance, since oftentimes there is a lot that we can learn by simply questioning the responses given, such as “why is that important?” Or “What happened as a result?”

With these skills at hand, the implementing staff are now equipped to facilitate an open dialogue to gain insight into the role gender plays in these communities. Over the next seven days the research will be paced to allow for a full day of data analysis in between each data collection day. This method allows for critical reflection of the findings and minimizes loss of detail.

Stay tuned for more on the Baseline Gender Analysis from our new students in the field (and authors of this post), Pardis Lakzadeh and Hellene Sarin!

Baseline: Day 16

Our last day of baseline has come and gone. Given how smoothly every day had gone, it was surprising that we had a few minor problems on our last day. The village we were going to had the same name as a village in another district, so we got lost. Then we had to track some mothers down in the rice fields, which set us back a few hours. Of all the days to run into problems, Day 16 was probably the best because we weren’t rushing to get anywhere in the afternoon.

Leaving the field was bittersweet for me. I truly enjoyed being immersed in a culture and lifestyle so completely different from my own. The stories I heard were incredible, and I can’t wait to see how FoF impacts the lives of the people we met. However, I’m happy to be back in Phnom Penh, where my food options are more diverse.

I’m taking this weekend off, but check back Monday for a new post and some videos.

Baseline: Day 15

My how baseline has flown! Tonight is our last night in Prey Veng. Tomorrow morning we will go to one more village and then head back to Phnom Penh. I managed to get some videos of women and children at the anthropometry station today, but I’m far too exhausted to edit and post them tonight. They should be up by the weekend. For now I’ll leave you with a picture of a treat we had yesterday.

Fresh coconut water!

Baseline: A Day in the Life

5:45 am: Alarm goes off. Hit snooze for 15 minutes.

6:00 am: Wake up, put on sunscreen, bug spray, and clothes. Grab name tag, water, field bags (a small one with camera and notebook, bigger one with laptop, sunscreen, first aid kit, and hat), and food box with snacks.

6:15 am: In the truck, ready to go.

6:40 am: Stop for breakfast with the team. This is usually soup with noodles and meat. A bowl of vegetarian noodles (my order) costs 3,000 Riel ( $0.75 USD). We also get Vietnamese coffee, which is iced coffee with condensed milk. It tastes more like chocolate milk, but I’m not one to refuse caffeine. Total cost: 2,000 Riel ($0.50 USD).

Breakfast!

7:00 am: Back on the road.

8:15 am (sometimes earlier, sometimes later depending on the day’s destination): Stop at house of village chief to announce our arrival and assign houses to each enumerator. This is also usually where we set up the anthropometry and hemoglobin analysis stations.

Assigning houses to the enumerators.

8:30 am: Walk to houses to begin survey. Each survey lasts about an hour, and each 24 hour recall lasts roughly 30 minutes (it varies depending on how far away the house is and how varied the woman’s diet was the day before). At this point I either follow an enumerator to observe, or hang out in the car getting work done on my laptop/reading from the Kindle app on my phone. As the first surveys go on, issues can arise that field supervisors must troubleshoot. This part of the day can be really exciting or really boring.

Chris, getting work done from the field.

9:45 am: The first mothers to finish their survey arrive at the village chief’s house with their child to be measured and pricked.

11:45 am: Pack up and leave first village.

12:00 pm: Lunch break. Depending on where we are, we can drive out of the village to a restaurant or we eat in the field. If we go to a restaurant, lunch is usually rice and meat. Also on the menu: a second coffee. Total cost: 7,000 Riel ($1.75 USD).

12:45 pm: Set out for the next village

1:45 pm: Arrive at village chief’s house. Set up anthropometry and hemoglobin analysis stations. Enumerators set off to survey or conduct the 24 hour recall.

Getting everything ready at the anthropometry station.

2:00 pm: The afternoon is the same as the morning – surveys, 24 hour recalls, measurements, finger pricks, work in the car, reading, maybe even a nap in the car (the heat makes everyone a little drowsy).

4:30-5:30 pm: Pack up and head home. We end at a different time every day, and our travel time back to the guesthouse varies.

6:00 pm: Downtime in our rooms. Usually a good time for a shower, uploading pictures, or a nap. If we get back on the early side, maybe some wine and card games.

7:15 pm: Head to dinner (there are maybe 6 restaurants to choose from in the provincial capital, where we’re staying). It usually costs 12,000 Riel ($3.00 USD).

8:30 pm: Home from dinner. Do some computer work – fill out reports, work on the blog.

10:00 pm: Bedtime. Sleep comes easily after a long day.

Baseline: Day 3

Day 3 of baseline started out differently than the past two days. Instead of heading directly to a village to survey, we went to the Svay Antor Health Center to watch the first day of our blood collection. This part of the project is significant because it will provide us with quantifiable data (in the form of biochemical analyses) that will show whether or not our interventions have had the desired impact. I will write a special post about the more technical aspects of this process in a few days.

Several mothers and their children were waiting patiently at 7:30 am for us to set up. The village health volunteers were also there to make sure that everyone was accounted for, and to go back to their village to pick up women who hadn’t made it to the health center yet. There were a lot of familiar faces, as the women who were having their blood drawn today were women we have interviewed over the past two days.

A special team from the National Institute of Public Health (NIPH) came to collect and process the blood samples. They were extremely efficient, so the morning went by quickly. The only troubleshooting that had to be done was tracking down the right kind of tubes for one of the samples. Thankfully the problem was solved quickly.

This afternoon we went to a new village to watch more surveys, 24 hour recalls, anthropometric measurements and hemoglobin analyses. My favourite place to sit is with the anthropometrists and blood analysts. They are usually set up at the village chief’s house (or the village health volunteer’s house), and every mother and child that is part of our study has to come over to have their measurements taken and their fingers pricked. Usually news of our arrival spreads throughout the whole village, and a lot of children come just to see the foreigners. This afternoon went according to plan, so I don’t have many stories. I do, however, have a lot of pictures that I will be sharing soon.

Baseline: Day 2

Today we continued surveying villages in the Svay Antor district. Our enumerators acted like total pros, even though this was only their second day in the field.

I sat in on a 24 hour recall in the morning and a survey in the afternoon. The village where the recall took place was stunning. There was lush greenery everywhere, gorgeous views of rice fields, and a beautiful temple that we paused to admire.

Walking through a village in Svay Antor on our way to a 24 hour recall.

The path leading to a temple.

News of our arrival in the village spread quickly, and people kept coming into the house to look at us foreigners. We experienced a range of responses, from surprise, to fear (especially on behalf of the children who had probably never seen foreigners before), to warm smiles, to nosy grandmothers wanting to know if I was single or married!

This visit was the first time I stepped into a house, which was fascinating after only sitting under houses yesterday and in Kampong Chhnang. I finally saw what is under the roof of a typical (n=2) house: a big room with rolled up bamboo mats that are used as beds, and a TV. The TV surprised me given how few possessions people have, and how undeveloped the electrical infrastructure is in the region.

Being inside the house highlighted another way in which Cambodian culture differs from North American culture. In Cambodia, everyone sleeps together in the same room, which is also the living space during the day. This contrasts with the typical family dwelling in Vancouver (and probably most of the West) where almost everyone has their own bedroom, which is used mainly for sleeping.

We went to another village in the afternoon. I spent part of the time there sitting at the village chief’s house, which was the hub of a lot of action. Our anthropometry and hemoglobin analysis teams were set up at the chief’s house, so every mother and child that we surveyed came over. Today was the first day that I saw visible signs of malnutrition. The children we’ve seen in the past few days haven’t demonstrated any clinical symptoms of malnutrition. Today, however, we saw children with light, almost blond, hair. This is a sign that their diet is lacking in protein.

The supervisors also used the village chief’s house as a home base, so I observed them troubleshooting as problems arose (I will be writing a post about the types of problems we’ve encountered as baseline continues).

On top of all of that, a few people were bagging rice that had been harvested recently.

Bagging rice that is still in its husk.

But the kids were most excited about the arrival of the ice cream moto.

Trying to decide what to get from the ice cream moto!

Tomorrow we’ll be going to a health center to watch the first day of blood collection. This is a large, important (and expensive) undertaking, so hopefully it goes smoothly.

Baseline: Day 1

We left Phnom Penh early this morning and arrived in Prey Veng before lunch. Our task today was to interview women from a village in the district of Svay Antor. We stopped at the home of the village health volunteer to give the enumerators their list of houses to visit for the day, as well as directions.

Working with the village health volunteer to assign pre-selected houses to each enumerator.

The volunteer then took us into the village. where each enumerator managed to get one survey done before lunch, and one after. The goal is to for each enumerator to complete four surveys per day, which should be feasible since we won’t be traveling long distances every morning like we did today. Also, as baseline continues, the surveys will hopefully take less time to complete as the enumerators become more familiar with the questions and corresponding instructions.

Today was also the first time we tried our new and improved 24 hour recall. During the test survey, it was a series of questions incorporated into the survey. Today it was done as a separate event with a different team of enumerators. Bowls, spoons, and cups of varying sizes were purchased before our trip to help women measure their consumption. This turned out to be very helpful, as women could compare their own dishes with the sample ones to give us a better idea of how much they ate in the past 24 hours.

A woman compares her dishes to those provided by the enumerator during the 24 hour recall.

Though it is only 8:30 pm, it’s bedtime. The days are going to be long and hot, and with a 6:30 am departure time, I’m anticipating many early nights. I’ll leave you with the following picture:

A handful of the 20+ cattle that walked by the houses this afternoon.

Watching these cattle being herded down the village road definitely provided my first surreal “where am I?” moment. I’m sure there will be many more to follow.