Knowledge Sharing

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Improving CGIAR Effectiveness through Knowledge Sharing

Knowledge Sharing

Since its inception, the ICT-KM Program has striven to embed a culture of knowledge sharing in CGIAR events and has successfully mainstreamed knowledge sharing principles and tools in CGIAR Centers and programs.

Pilot initiatives at CIAT and CIFOR resulted in the Centers organizing and conducting their annual staff meetings differently. CIMMYT’s pilot led to the formation of an integrated team of scientists who share knowledge and information and work towards common goals, while IWMI’s pilot helped the Center launch its own pilot project to embed knowledge-sharing principles in the research cycle.

The Program has also helped showcase the work of some CGIAR Centers, such as that of The WorldFish Center, which produced two storymercials (1.5 to 3 min video clips) that are helping attract donors and investors to the Center’s work.

A the end of 2008, the Program helped facilitate the CGIAR Annual General Meeting held in Maputo, Mozambique, the third such meeting that saw active, strategic participation from the Program. The following are just some of the other CGIAR events that incorporated knowledge sharing methodologies:

  • CIAT’s recent Annual Knowledge Sharing Week (KSW09), held in Cali, Columbia
  • CGIAR Strategic Communications Workshop, held in Penang, Malaysia
  • Web2fordev Conference, held in Rome, Italy
  • KS Pilot Project Inception Workshop, held at IRRI
  • Knowledge Management for Development (KM4Dev) Meeting 06, held in Zeist, Netherlands
  • Knowledge Fair held during the Annual Meeting of CIFOR

The Program also focused on the good practices of knowledge sharing that can be used within research projects/programs in order to improve the effectiveness and impact of CGIAR work. Towards this end, six pilot projects integrated various KS approaches into the different stages of the research process.

For example, the IWMI project on Wastewater Agriculture and Sanitation for Poverty Alleviation piloted the use of ‘Learning Alliances’ as a way of bringing together relevant stakeholders in Sri Lanka and Bangladesh to discuss the issue of wastewater and to find ways to better coordinate activities, including generating the knowledge necessary to help support solutions. The project used radio programs, training videos and flip charts with printed messages and visuals to convey good practices to farmers, caterers and extension agents.

In terms of tools, one of the most popular online knowledge-sharing resources is the KS Toolkit. Developed in collaboration with FAO, the toolkit contains 70 tools and methods for sharing knowledge and receives more than 20,000 visits per month.

More about the history and documentation of knowledge sharing in the CGIAR.

KS project’s loo

Since its inception, the ICT-KM Program has striven to embed a culture of knowledge sharing in CGIAR events and has successfully mainstreamed knowledge sharing principles and tools in CGIAR Centers and programs since 2004. It has also helped showcase the work of some CGIAR Centers, such as that of The WorldFish Center, which produced two storymercials (1.5 to 3 min video clips) that are helping attract donors and investors to the Center’s work.

Pilot initiatives at CIAT and CIFOR resulted in the Centers organizing and conducting their annual staff meetings differently. CIMMYT’s pilot led to the formation of an integrated team of scientists who share knowledge and information and work towards common goals, while IWMI’s pilot helped the Center launch its own pilot project to embed knowledge-sharing principles in the research cycle.

A the end of 2008, the Program helped facilitate the CGIAR 2008 Annual General Meeting held in Maputo, Mozambique, the third such meeting that saw active, strategic participation from the Program. The following are just some of the other CGIAR events that incorporated knowledge sharing methodologies:

  • CIAT’s recent Annual Knowledge Sharing Week (KSW09), held in Cali, Columbia
  • CGIAR Strategic Communications Workshop, held in Penang, Malaysia
  • Web2fordev Conference, held in Rome, Italy
  • KS Pilot Project Inception Workshop, held at the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI)
  • Knowledge Management for Development (KM4Dev) Meeting 06, held in Zeist, Netherlands
  • Knowledge Fair held during the Annual Meeting of CIFOR

The Program also focused on the good practices of knowledge sharing that can be used within research projects/programs in order to improve the effectiveness and impact of CGIAR work. Towards this end, six pilot projects integrated various KS approaches into the different stages of the research process.

For example, the IWMI project on Wastewater Agriculture and Sanitation for Poverty Alleviation piloted the use of ‘Learning Alliances’ as a way of bringing together relevant stakeholders in Sri Lanka and Bangladesh to discuss the issue of wastewater and to find ways to better coordinate activities, including generating the knowledge necessary to help support solutions. The project used radio programmes, training videos and flip charts with printed messages and visuals to convey good practices to farmers, caterers and extension agents.

Synthesis of the results of these pilot projects and other activities are documented on

In terms of tools, one of the most popular online knowledge-sharing resources is the KS Toolkit. Developed in collaboration with FAO, the toolkit contains 70 tools and methods for sharing knowledge and receives more than 20,000 visits per month.

Articles from Knowledge Sharing & Knowledge Sharing in Research Categories:

African ‘carrots’: Results of a consultation at the African Agriculture Science Week

African ‘carrots’: Results of a consultation at the African Agriculture Science Week
On 5th July 2010, I posted a blog entitled “How to motivate more knowledge sharing in research: using the carrot or the stick?” to explore what makes or would make researchers and research projects share their agricultural research knowledge. This received some interesting responses. This...

Open Access Workshop in Bioversity – a summary

Open Access Workshop in Bioversity – a summary
On July 7th, 2010, Antonella and I had the opportunity to participate in the one-day workshop titled: ‘Open Access- Maximising Research Impact”, hosted at Bioversity International; organized by Maria Garruccio (Bioversity) and the CGIAR’s Central Advisory Service on Intellectual Property...

How to motivate more knowledge sharing in research: using the carrot or the stick?

How to motivate more knowledge sharing in research: using the carrot or the stick?
As the CGIAR moves ahead with its change process, it is continuously being told that it needs to do a better job at sharing its vast wealth of research-generated knowledge, so that this knowledge can be applied to solving real problems. While the publications written-the major output of most projects- are...

Want to make knowledge move around: Is the roundtable approach applicable?

Want to make knowledge move around: Is the roundtable approach applicable?
How can you make knowledge move around?  Well like any mechanism that moves around you need the right kind of apparatus to be moved around,  some sort of push or force to make it move, a good track for it to follow, and some momentum to keep it going.  You need the whole system to be applicable...

ShareFair Cali Roundup

ShareFair Cali Roundup
The recently concluded ShareFair in Cali was a huge success and generated a number of posts on the ICT-KM Program’s blog. To help give you a more complete picture of this week-long event, we’ve consolidated the various posts for easy reading. Find out what happened on the first day of the ShareFair,...

Sharing project outcomes using a “cattle corral”(FishBowl) approach: What’s in a name?

Sharing project outcomes using a “cattle corral”(FishBowl) approach: What’s in a name?
Knowledge sharing tools and methods come in all shapes and sizes, and with some very interesting names often too. Many can be found on the  Knowledge Sharing Toolkit. Have you ever heard of a Samoan circle, brown bag lunch, world cafe, chat show, DeBono’s six thinking hats, icebreakers, knowledge...

Part 2 – My first back-to-office blog: ‘AAGW and CIARD- a match made in space!”

So in this second part of the blog about back-to-office blogs, I am actually writing a back-to-office blog about my recent trip to Nairobi, Kenya to work on the 2nd Africa Agriculture Geospatial Week (AAGW10), held on the ILRI Campus from 8th-11th June 2010. In my blog post about re-joining the CGIAR...

Part 1: Need to do a back-to-office report? Why not blog it?

So like many of you out there reading these blog posts, I often travel and attend meetings and workshops, and need to document and share what happened and what I did for my Institute/Program on my return. The usual format is a back-to-office report written in Word, with a fairly generic format—right? It...

Sharing, connecting and building relationships

The Share Fair in Cali a couple of weeks ago brought back memories of the first Share Fair held in Rome last year.  An unprecedented event bringing together major food and agriculture organizations: CGIAR, FAO, IFAD and WFP, the Share Fair took knowledge sharing to new heights within many of these...

Nadia Manning-Thomas (re)joins the ICT-KM Program

So, I- Nadia Manning-Thomas, have (re)joined the CGIAR ICT-KM Program. So in true ICT-KM fashion I am writing a blog post about this and sharing it with every other social media outlet possible! I wonder where/how you found this post? I previously worked with the program between 2007 and 2009 as the...

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