The Relationship between Agricultural Teaching Approaches and Food Security in Kenya
View/ Open
Date
2020-07Author
Njura, Hellen J.
Kaberia, Isaac K.
Thuranira, Simon T.
Khakame, Kakai Shem
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
(e continued food insecurity, despite the teaching of agriculture amidst the novel coronavirus (Covid-19), is a major global concern
especially in Africa. (ere is food shortage in Africa and Kenya in particular despite the teaching of agriculture as a major subject in
secondary schools. Many youth who have graduated from Kenyan secondary schools cannot adequately employ the agricultural skills
developed during and after school for food security. (e teaching approaches employed in secondary school agriculture should be
able to develop skills of students on the aspects of food production, its accessibility, food safety, and nutrition as well as production
economics. Towards this direction, this paper investigates the relationship between the agricultural teaching approaches employed in
secondary schools and food security in Kenya. (e study adopted descriptive survey design where data were collected using an
Agriculture Teachers’ Interview Schedule, a Students’ Focus Group Discussion Guide, and a Parent’s Questionnaire and were then
analyzed using descriptive and inferential statistics. (e research findings established that the lecture method, class discussions, class
projects, problem solving, and tours and field trips were the common methods in agriculture classes. (ough recommended in the
literature review section, digital learning was hardly mentioned as a teaching approach for this study. A major conclusion for this
study is that there is statistically insignificant relationship between the teaching approaches and food security. (ere are other factors
not in the scope of this study that could be affecting food security and can be tackled at secondary school level. (is paper makes a
contribution to the growing body of knowledge by highlighting research gaps worth investigation on the relationship between the
agricultural teaching approaches and food security that were beyond the scope of the study.