How much time should be allowed for training?
Training of the study team is a continuous process that begins
when the team is first formed until the end of the proposed study. This can take
anywhere from a few weeks (six to eight weeks) to a few months (three months).
For the purposes of the application of this handbook, we have divided the
training into two parts: initial training which begins at the preplanning stage,
and on-the-job training which continues throughout the conduct of the study.
Each project may allow varying lengths of time for each part of the training
depending on the availability of time and other resources.
See Table 1 for an example from rural Tanzania where a hygiene
evaluation study was conducted. The study team consisted of selected personnel
from the three government ministries: Water (Maji), Health (Afya)
and Social Development (Maendeleo) assisted by a (WaterAid) resident
engineer and a medical anthropologist from outside who conducted the training
and study coordination. The intersectoral and interdisciplinary study team was
not specially formed for the study. Instead, it was a pre-existing team that had
had considerable experience of fieldwork as part of the health education
activities supported by WaterAid in Dodoma Region. There were four such teams in
the region, one for each district, and two teams were involved in the study
which covered two districts.
Training of the WaterAid, Maji, Maendeleo and
Afya (WAMMA) teams who participated in the study was done in two phases.
The first phase, initial involved discussions of the rationale for assessing
hygiene practices. Documented references were used to inform the study teams
about current research findings and reviews of relevant works in the areas of
hygiene behaviour and control of diarrhoeal diseases. The F diagram (see
Figure 1, Chapter 1) was used in the discussion of sanitation-related disease
transmission.
TABLE 1. An Example of a Study Timetable Including an Activity
Flow Chart
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Part I: Preplanning and Initial Training
Days 1-12
· Meetings with project staff ·
Discussion of expectations · Discussion of study aims, objectives and
expected outputs · Visits to the selected study sites - acquisition of
consent from concerned parties, including village leaders ·
Commencement of initial training · Discussion of study schedule and
preparations for fieldwork
|
|
Part II(a): Fieldwork (District I)
Days l-2 (Project office)
· Resumption of training · Study design
- include choice of methods/tools
Days 3-5 (Village 1)
· Conduct of three-pile sorting. healthwalk,
community mapping, historyline and seasonal calendar for illnesses ·
On-site review of information
Days 6-7 (Project office)
· Interim review and write up of
findings
Days 8- 10 (Village 1)
· Feedback to participants - results of
historyline and mapping · Semi-structured interviews, seasonal
calendars for activities (gender-specific) and pocket chart · Feedback
to participants - results of seasonal calendar for illnesses and activities,
three-pile sorting and pocket chart
Days 11-12 (Project office)
· Interview and observation notes
write-up · Overall review, summary, and discussions ·
Discussion of follow-up plans
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Part II(b): Fieldwork (District II)
Days 15-16 (Project office)
· Resumption of initial training ·
Study design - include choice of methods
Days 17-19 (Village 2)
· Three-pile sorting, historyline, healthwalk,
mapping, semi-structured interviews, seasonal calendars and focus group
discussion · On-site review of information
Days 20-21 (Project office)
· Interim review and documentation of
findings
Days 22-23 (Village 2)
· Semi-structured interviews (cont.), three-pile
sorting and focus group discussion · Feedback to
participants · Slide show at village primary school ·
Presentation of results to participants
Day 24 (Project office)
· Overall review, write-up of interview and
observation notes · Discussion of preliminary findings and follow-up
plans
Day 25 (Project office)
· Joint meeting of two study reams, discussion
of study findings and follow-up plans · End of fieldwork
celebration
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This was followed by a review of the investigative and analytical
methods/tools available. The methods and tools with which the WAMMA were already
familiar were reviewed before any new ones were introduced. Each WAMMA team
reviewed the five clusters of hygiene practices with a view to identifying those
that are most relevant for their respective study communities (see Table 2,
Chapter 4). The most appropriate methods and tools for assessing the relevant
hygiene practices were then selected, discussed, and tried out before the team
set out for the study villages.
The initial training also included a detailed discussion of a
four-stage learning process: problem identification/defining the question(s),
gathering information, reviewing the information, and reflecting on the results.
The hygiene evaluation cycle (see Figure 2, Chapter 4) was discussed and
frequently referred to throughout the study. The initial training also included
trial runs of the selected methods and tools, facilitated by introducing games
and role plays including those described in "Transferring Technical Know-How" in
this chapter.
The total duration or initial training In this case was two weeks,
a week for each team which was located in a different district considerably
distant from the other. This is an example of how logistical problems can limit
the amount of time allowed for initial training. However, this was not a serious
problem in this case because the WAMMA teams both consisted of highly skilled
individuals (including district medical officers, community development
specialists and public health engineers/technicians) who had already attended
related training courses together and were used to working as a team. A week's
focused training for each team was thus considered
sufficient.