Hub extension and adoption bursaries awarded to UWA students

20/04/2023 | 2 mins

Four students from The University of Western Australia have received bursaries from the South-West WA Drought Resilience Adoption and Innovation Hub (SW WA Hub).

The SW WA Hub bursaries, worth $8000 each, require the students to undertake activities including engagement with WA grower groups, participatory action research, workshops, field days or conferences.

Led by the Grower Group Alliance (GGA) with funding from the Australian Government’s Future Drought Fund, the SW WA Hub has a strong focus on extension and adoption of drought resilience research outcomes.

UWA students Jane Brownlee, Emanuel Gomez, Garima, and Dan Kierath, with Hackett Professor Kadambot Siddique, SW WA Hub monitoring, evaluation & learning officer and adoption officer Theo Nabben and project manager Kellie-Jane Pritchard.Image: UWA students Jane Brownlee, Emanuel Gomez, Garima, and Dan Kierath, with Hackett Professor Kadambot Siddique, SW WA Hub monitoring, evaluation & learning officer and adoption officer Theo Nabben and project manager Kellie-Jane Pritchard.

SW WA Hub Director Mark Holland said the Hub’s bursary program provided an exciting avenue for students to build their understanding of the need for co-designed research to increase the adoption of outcomes that can improve drought resilience.

“The students will have the opportunity to work with GGA’s grower group network members so they can understand the importance of industry collaboration while gaining stronger experience and knowledge in extension practices for adoption and practice change,” Mr Holland said.

“The bursary program also enables the hub to engage more deeply with WA universities such as UWA, which are among the hub’s more than 50 valued consortium partners representing all sectors of the WA agricultural supply chain.”

Director of The UWA Institute of Agriculture, Hackett Professor Kadambot Siddique, welcomed the bursary initiative which he said would provide valuable opportunities to participating students.

“These student bursaries will enhance the ability of our postgraduate students to engage meaningfully with grower groups and industry,” Professor Siddique said.

“UWA is pleased to be a consortium partner of the SW WA Hub and to be working with the hub on this initiative, which will help to translate research outcomes by bringing people together.”

The four student bursary recipients include:

  • Garima – PhD student undertaking a ‘Farm to Port’ study aimed at optimising grain supply chains. The study is being informed by a survey for grain growers which can be completed here.
  • Dan Kierath – Master of Science (MSc) student investigating the impact of farm-level management decisions on soil carbon content down to one metre on a WA Wheatbelt property.
  • Emanuel Gomez – PhD student studying grain growers’ adoption intentions and behaviours regarding supply chain digital technologies, with the aim of identifying impediments and key drivers.
  • Jane Brownlee – MSc student assessing water quality used for chemical applications in agricultural production systems. Quality issues will be identified, costs and benefits of improvement techniques quantified and viable solutions communicated with farmers.

The SW WA Hub’s extension and adoption bursary program, which is led by the hub’s project manager Kellie-Jane Pritchard, is open to further applications from WA university students.

Students are encouraged to have research themes that align with SW WA Hub priority topics, which are available on the hub webpage.

Eligible students include those undertaking Honours studies; Master of Science (MSc) (coursework projects) or accelerated MSc; work placements (work integrated learning) while studying at post-graduate level; or PhD students.

Contact [email protected] for more information about the SW WA Hub bursaries.

Media references

Rosanna Candler (Communications Officer, The UWA Institute of Agriculture) +61 08 6488 1650

Natalie Lee (Stakeholder & Communications Manager, SW WA Hub) +61 456 869 791

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