Abstract

The study examined teaching capacity for agricultural adaptation to climate change in the University Faculties of Agriculture in South east Nigeria. One hundred and thirty randomly selected academic staff in the University Faculties of Agriculture were used. Data were collected using questionnaire and analyzed by descriptive statistics and factor analysis. Majority (78.3%) of academic staff were males, married (85.8%) with an average of eight years of experience in teaching. A greater proportion (50.8%) had Ph.D and two years of research experience in climate change. Only 10% of the Universities indicated existence of postgraduate programme. Climate change content of courses taught were on issues such as vulnerability to climate change (27.7%), adaptation (25.5%), mitigation (23.2%), and indigenous strategies to climate change (22.5%). The teaching materials employed included textbooks (83.3%), journal (78.3%), conference proceedings (66.7%), articles on Climate Change and agricultural adaptation (80.8%) and lectures/teaching notes (44.2%). The major teaching methods used to communicate climate change concepts were lecture (63.3%) and field trip (12.6%). Teaching capability of the Universities were constrained by poor understanding of climate change concept, poor learning environment, weak infrastructure, and inadequate fund. The study therefore recommends universal review of curriculum and programmes to increase climate change content of courses, and provision of climate change teaching materials in the University Faculties of Agriculture. This however, requires adequate funding, availability of infrastructure, enabling environment through favourable policy and cooperation of all stakeholders in development process.Key Words: climate change, adaptation, capacity, teaching, agriculture

Highlights

  • Climate change is a change in climate overtime, whether due to natural variability or as a result of human activity (Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change, IPCC, 2001)

  • It can be seen as change in climate which is attributed directly or indirectly to human activities that alter the composition of the global atmosphere and in addition to natural variability observed over comparable time periods (IPCC, 2007)

  • The proportion of women in agricultural science is still on the low side compared to level of their visibility and participation in other sectors like farming, agribusiness etc. This may be as a result of earlier domination of lecturing work by male in the universities. This agrees with the report that the literacy level of women in Nigeria is low (This Day Newspaper, 2010)

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Summary

Introduction

Climate change is a change in climate overtime, whether due to natural variability or as a result of human activity (Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change, IPCC, 2001) It can be seen as change in climate which is attributed directly or indirectly to human activities that alter the composition of the global atmosphere and in addition to natural variability observed over comparable time periods (IPCC, 2007). According to Ministry of Environment of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (2003), it has become a global issue manifesting in variation of different climate parameters including cloud cover, precipitation, temperature ranges, sea level and vapour pressure. The effects include among others, increase temperatures, decrease rainfall in the continental interiors, drought, desert encroachment, melting ice, extreme weather, floods, sea level rise, sinking of Islands, water scarcity, health and agricultural problems (Odjugo, 2007; 2009; Adefolalu, 2007; Nwafor, 2007). Et al (2012) observed that the area is currently confronted by irregularity in the rainfall pattern ( delay onset or early retreat of rains) leading to unsteady growing season and other soil –related problems

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