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CÔTE D'IVOIRE / EMPOWERING WOMEN IN SCIENCE
In Africa, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations has been supporting young people, particularly women, to access high-quality statistical education through scholarships for a Master in Agricultural Statistics to help close the agricultural data gap.
Country
Côte d'Ivoire
Duration
4m25s
Edit Version
International
Video Type
Video News Release (VNR)
Date
02/07/2024
File size
584.62 MB
Unique ID
UF15KFS
All editorial uses permitted
Production details and shotlist
UNFAO Source
FAO Video
Shotlist
STORY: CÔTE D'IVOIRE / EMPOWERING WOMEN IN SCIENCE
TRT: 4’:26’’
SOURCE: FAO
RESTRICTIONS: PLEASE CREDIT FAO ON SCREEN
LANGUAGE: FRENCH / ENGLISH / NATS
DATELINE: PLEASE CHECK SHOTLIST
SHOTLIST
28 DECEMBER 2023, KONOU VILLAGE, DÉPARTEMENT DE JACQUEVILLE, CÔTE D'IVOIRE
1. Aerial shot, Konou Village
2. Aerial shot, Bus travelling
3. Wide shot, Students walking
4. Med shot, Daud Mone Dèsirèe and other students greeting local farmers
5. Close up, Daud Mone Dèsirèe
27 DECEMBER 2023, ABIDJAN, CÔTE D'IVOIRE
6. SOUNDBITE (French) Daud Mone Désirée, statistician: "As a child, I used to wonder, after finishing an orange, I'd take the seed, put it in the ground. And then a few days later, I see leaves, petals. In fact, I used to wonder, what was behind that mechanism?"
7. Aerial shot, Institute of Statistics and Applied Economics (ENSEA)
8. Wide shot, Computer lab
9. Close up, Computer lab, Daud Mone Désirée talking
10. Wide shot, Daud Mone Désirée talking
11. SOUNDBITE (French) Daud Mone Désirée, statistician: “I am the first in my family to work in statistics, handling numbers”.
28 DECEMBER 2023, KONOU VILLAGE, DÉPARTEMENT DE JACQUEVILLE, CÔTE D'IVOIRE
12. Wide shot, Farmers at work
13. Med shot, Farmers cleaning manioc
14. Aerial shot, Farmers loading a truck with oil palm fruits
15. Top shot, Farmers loading a truck with oil palm fruits
16. Med shot, Nayo Ankouvi, FAO statistician, talking with Daud Mone Désirée and other students
27 DECEMBER 2023, ABIDJAN, CÔTE D'IVOIRE
17. SOUNDBITE (French) Daud Mone Désirée, statistician: "Statistics can be beneficial for African agriculture in the sense that, with the data we will now have, thanks to us, the newly trained agricultural statisticians, we could provide figures that will enable our policymakers to make informed decisions based on the actual state of our lands and the information we collect."
18. Aerial shot, Institute of Statistics and Applied Economics (ENSEA)
19. Tracking shot, students arriving at the Institute of Statistics and Applied Economics (ENSEA)
20. Med shot, Daud Mone Désirée studying
21. Wide shot, Nayo Ankouvi, FAO statistician, teaching
22. SOUNDBITE (French) Daud Mone Désirée, statistician: "I believe that data manipulation is beneficial for all our hardworking farmers and everyone involved in agronomy. This is because it could enable us to make forecasts about the yields they achieve and even the types of crops to use."
28 DECEMBER 2023, KONOU VILLAGE, DÉPARTEMENT DE JACQUEVILLE, CÔTE D'IVOIRE
23. Wide shot, Bus with students arriving at the village
24. Wide shot, Rubber trees plantation
25. Close up, Liquid oozing from a tree
26. Wide shot, Students in a rubber tree cultivation
27. Med shot, Students listening
28. Close up, Hands touching a rubber tree
29. Med shot, Student making an incision on a rubber tree
30. SOUNDBITE (French) Nayo Ankouvi, FAO statistician: "In particular, two themes of interest, in agriculture and agricultural statistics, are production and yield. It also includes areas of cultivation. Therefore, the theme that brings us to the field today is measuring yield and setting up yield squares. But specifically, to understand yield, one must understand how it is produced. This is why we are in a rubber plantation today, to observe tapping, how tapping occurs, how latex is collected, and how yields are measured afterward."
27 DECEMBER 2023, ABIDJAN, CÔTE D'IVOIRE
31. Wide shot, Nayo Ankouvi, FAO statistician, teaching
32. Close up, Student listening
33. Med shot, Students taking notes
10 JANUARY 2024, ROME, ITALY, FAO HEADQUARTERS
34. SOUNDBITE (English) Neli Georgieva Mihaylova, FAO senior statistician: “Since 2012, FAO has been the proud host for the Global Strategy to Improve Agricultural and Rural Statistics to address the decline in the agricultural statistics systems in many developing countries."
27 DECEMBER 2024, ABIDJAN, CÔTE D'IVOIRE
35. Med shot, Student studying
36. Close up, Hands typing on a keyboard
10 JANUARY 2024, ROME, ITALY, FAO HEADQUARTERS
37. SOUNDBITE (English) Neli Georgieva Mihaylova, FAO senior statistician: "In 2023, 48 scholars from 24 African countries have access to this program and graduated successfully. And we are very proud that 43% of them were women."
28 DECEMBER 2024, KONOU VILLAGE, DÉPARTEMENT DE JACQUEVILLE, CÔTE D'IVOIRE
38. Med shot, Students taking notes
39. Wide shot, Students meeting farmers
40. Tilt down, Daud Mone Désirée taking notes
41. Top shot, Konou Village
Script
In today's rapidly evolving world, science and innovation play a crucial role in addressing global challenges. However, despite progress, women and girls still face significant barriers to pursuing science careers.
Daud Mone Dèsirèe, a 27 years old statistician from Côte d'Ivoire, never imagined that her love for nature would lead her to work with numbers. When she was a child, she loved to cultivate and see plants grow.
SOUNDBITE (French) Daud Mone Désirée, statistician:
"As a child, I used to wonder, after finishing an orange, I'd take the seed, put it in the ground. And then a few days later, I see leaves, petals. In fact, I used to wonder, what was behind that mechanism?"
Daud began studying agronomy before discovering agricultural statistics and dedicating her life to it. Today she is the first statistician in her family.
SOUNDBITE (French) Daud Mone Désirée, statistician:
“I am the first in my family to work in statistics, handling numbers”.
She explains that those numbers are vital for improving agricultural production, and that an emerging generation of young African statisticians, particularly women, are working to contribute to African nations' sustainable development.
SOUNDBITE (French) Daud Mone Désirée, statistician:
"Statistics can be beneficial for African agriculture in the sense that, with the data we will now have, thanks to us, the newly trained agricultural statisticians, we could provide figures that will enable our policymakers to make informed decisions based on the actual state of our lands and the information we collect."
Statisticians are essential in gathering and analysing data crucial to understanding food security challenges. Developing nations, however, lack quality data. Without the information they need, decision makers face challenges taking evidence-based actions.
In Africa, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations has been supporting young people, particularly women, to access high-quality statistical education through scholarships for a Master in Agricultural Statistics to help close the agricultural data gap.
Daud is one of the many students converging from across the continent at the Institute of Statistics and Applied Economics (ENSEA) in Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire, to unlock their potential to contribute to addressing food security issues.
Her goal is to help farmers become more productive and sustainable by increasing crop yields and adopting sustainable agricultural production practices.
SOUNDBITE (French) Daud Mone Désirée, statistician:
"I believe that data manipulation is beneficial for all our hardworking farmers and everyone involved in agronomy. This is because it could enable us to make forecasts about the yields they achieve and even the types of crops to use."
In addition to classroom learning at ENSEA, master’s students are sent to the field for practical study, to see how their theoretical training applies to the agricultural world.
SOUNDBITE (French) Nayo Ankouvi, FAO statistician:
"In particular, two themes of interest, in agriculture and agricultural statistics, are production and yield. It also includes areas of cultivation. Therefore, the theme that brings us to the field today is measuring yield and setting up yield squares. But specifically, to understand yield, one must understand how it is produced. This is why we are in a rubber plantation today, to observe tapping, how tapping occurs, how latex is collected, and how yields are measured afterward."
Scholarships are provided by the Global Strategy to Improve Agricultural and Rural Statistics (GSARS), a statistical program hosted by FAO focusing on strengthening countries' capacity to implement agricultural surveys and complementing data collections already existing on the African continent.
SOUNDBITE (English) Neli Georgieva Mihaylova, FAO senior statistician:
“Since 2012, FAO has been the proud host for the Global Strategy to Improve Agricultural and Rural Statistics to address the decline in the agricultural statistics systems in many developing countries."
Supporting women in agricultural statistics is one of the key elements of the program. UN Scientific Education and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) data shows, in fact, that less than 30 percent of researchers around the world are female, and this number does not vary for sub-Saharan Africa.
SOUNDBITE (English) Neli Georgieva Mihaylova, FAO senior statistician:
"In 2023, 48 scholars from 24 African countries have access to this program and graduated successfully. And we are very proud that 43% of them were women."
Empowered by their training, the vast majority of students in the programme return to their countries after completing their studies contributing to strengthening the agricultural statistics sector thus promoting food security.
The International Day of Women and Girls in Science is celebrated on February 11th. The theme for 2024 is “Women and Girls in Science Leadership, a New Era for Sustainability”.
Tags
Women
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