"I was a bit afraid because I didnt know how to use a computer," he said. Two days later, Hermosura was surfing the web, sending emails, and chatting with friends and co-workers. He has also learned how to do basic office productivity tasks using the computer.
Hermosura and 57 other agricultural technicians from local government units in the Davao provinces recently took a two-day basic ICT (information and communications technology) training to become familiar with using computers and the Internet in the course of their work.
"We are already 10 years late in information," PhilRice (Philippine Rice Research Institute) executive director and OPAPA advisory council chairman Dr. Leocadio S. Sebastian said, adding that with ICT, "we can now go to any Internet café and download the latest information on rice, and other crops."
From August to December, the OPAPA aims to train 1,000 extension workers in five pilot sites in the country Isabela, Nueva Ecija, Pampanga, and Davao.
"We simulated a real-world situation for the training," Barroga said.
To overcome the extension workers initial fear of the technology, the training is held in a familiar setting, an Internet café.
"Internet cafés abound, and are easily accessible," he said. He added that teaching step-by-step procedures from handling and manipulating the mouse, to creating and saving documents jump-started the participants learning on the use of computers.
"We minimized the lectures and concentrated more on actual hands-on sessions," he added.
Training staff from USM, DOST XI and PhilRice guided the extension workers in the hands-on sessions.
Owned by the DOST Science Education Institute, the bus is equipped with 17 notebook PCs and a built-in audio-visual system, complete with a VHS player, and an LCD projector. Six such buses are deployed nationwide in Davao, Butuan, Los Baños, Laguna, and La Union. Custom-built by Daewoo Philippines, the bus can seat 32 persons and was initially designed for use by elementary and high school students.
The bus, though equipped with notebook PCs, is not "Internet-ready" it has no network and Internet connection. To connect to the Internet, the bus was parked near an Internet café, where a wireless access point (WAP) was set up. The notebooks were supplied by PhilRice and USM IT personnel with WiFi PC cards to connect to the WAP, which was linked to the cafés 256-kbps DSL connection.
"This is the first time the bus was used to train agriculture extension workers. This is also the first time it was employed for teaching the use of the Internet," Barroga said.
DOST Region XI director Morados said the use of the bus is timely, "since there is a directive from the top to expand its use in order to sustain the bus. We are now thinking of a Mindanao-wide deployment of the bus, through a tie-up with the OPAPA."
"Were providing them with new tools they can use to help farmers improve their productivity," Barroga said, adding that with the deployment of an Internet-ready mobile IT bus, "the OPAPA is moving one step closer to bringing ICT to the farmers and extension workers."
Through the OPAPAs portal, the Pinoy Farmers Internet, extension workers and farmers can get up-to-date information on farming technologies, and best practices. Mobile SMS-based applications, like a text-based querying system, are also available for information even without surfing the Web.
The OPAPA is part of a bigger ICT project, called the K-AGRINET, where it represents the e-learning component of the project, with PCARRDs e-Consortia and e-Farm connecting more than 80 LGU based FITS centers; and DLR-DAPs e-Agrikultura deploying ICT directly in farming communities. The project received a combined amount of P168 million for the next three years, from the E-Government Fund, administered by the CICT and the NCC.