Today is my last day at BRAC. I can’t believe how quickly
the time flew by and I wish I had just a few more weeks. In the last few weeks,
my teammates and I have accomplished quite a bit. We used data from the sweet
potato farmer program and analyzed whether certain factors are linked to child
nutrition. I was specifically interested in farmers’ experiences of major
climate events that led to crop loss. These climate events were survey
questions asking farmers whether they had experienced major crop loss due to
droughts, flooding, or pests and diseases. After running analyses in STATA
software, we found that 88% of farmers experienced crop loss due to drought,
21% due to flooding, and 40% due to pests and diseases. When running a
regression to see if there are any relationships between climate events and
having a stunted child (short for their age) in the household, we found that
drought reports were related to having a stunted child. We submitted a total of
four abstracts to two conferences on different themes with the research. For my
two colleagues, I believe this is their first conference submission. They are
talented and I know one might have an interest in pursuing a PhD or further
graduate school.
Yesterday, I held a 2-hour training workshop with 11
attendees. It was exciting to apply my skillsets from UCLA to others. I focused
the workshop into 3 components: GIS mapping, qualitative theory, and international
graduate school admissions. Of course, my actual experience is far more limited
than my coworkers who all have years of field experience. And while academia
tends to use expensive and proprietary software like ArcGIS for geographic
mapping and STATA or SAS for statistical programming, I realize these are
prohibitive in Uganda with their expensive licensing fees. So I sought out to
learn and then teach a free GIS software called QGIS. I developed a
step-by-step guide for open-access and free data and then integrated this into
QGIS. We had some minor downloading and internet hiccups, to be expected, but
my 13 attendees created colorful and beautiful maps of Uganda. I’m glad most
shared the “wow” moment when your maps function and you have a color schematic
of dots that were once longitude and latitude coordinates.
I met with my supervisor and main coworkers today. We put
together a 3-month plan to publish the academic papers we began as abstracts!
I’m looking forward to working remotely with this talented team and meaningful
project. Sometimes I wonder if I’m living in a dream, working in Uganda and
doing work that positively impacts thousands and millions of people. Right
after this meeting on a Friday afternoon, I walked back to my office space and
there was cake, soda, and a bulletin of kind sticky notes waiting for me! My
coworkers had surprised me by all chipping in money to buy a cake. And as
customary to other farewell parties, each person went around the room to say
something nice. It was incredibly sweet and so bittersweet that I’ll be leaving
without any concrete return plans. I know I leave this experience with more
knowledge and connection to Sub-Saharan Africa than even before. I also know
that these friendships remain and I foresee an amazing future for so many BRAC
programs here. I feel more than privileged to have this opportunity, funding,
and time to be in Kampala. Until next time!