1 / 18

Risk Management Programming: Is it Effective at Creating Change?

Risk Management Programming: Is it Effective at Creating Change?. Kynda Curtis Assistant Professor & State Specialist University of Nevada, Reno. Introduction. Risk management education spending Literature on education impact Nevada experience Knowledge gain

joie
Download Presentation

Risk Management Programming: Is it Effective at Creating Change?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Risk Management Programming: Is it Effective at Creating Change? Kynda Curtis Assistant Professor & State Specialist University of Nevada, Reno

  2. Introduction • Risk management education spending • Literature on education impact • Nevada experience • Knowledge gain • Factors on near-term RM usage • Factors on longer-term RM usage • Conclusions

  3. Risk Management Education Spending 2002-2006 Is it working?

  4. Impact Literature • Producer attitudes toward risk & risk management topics of concern • Hall, Knight, Coble, Baquet, & Patrick (2003) • 1313 beef producers • Age, prior use, previous attendance, risk aversion • Draught & cattle pricing most important • Understocking pasture & hay storage • Eberspacher & Jose (2005) • Focus groups, NC RMEC • Labor issues, value-added, estate planning, farm transfer…

  5. Impact Literature • Covitt, Gomez-Schmidt & Zint (2005) • 11 risk related activities in school • Measure with pre-post testing • Improved understanding of risk, question in-depth knowledge gain? • Bastian, Nagler, Hewlett, & Weigel (2006) • 40 producers in 4 risk management sessions • Pre & post-testing, pre & post evaluations, 2 month follow-up evaluations • 75% had completed 8 of 20 evaluation options to reduce risk…

  6. Nevada Experience • Risk management programming 2004/2005 to 2006/2007 • 39 workshops • Topics • General risk management • Financials, water issues, futures/options, business planning, value-added & niche marketing… • Estate & farm transition planning • Human resource management • Niche livestock marketing • Livestock production • Animal ID, cattle handling, etc.

  7. Program Evaluation Methods • Pre-workshop test (content knowledge) • Post-workshop test • Post-workshop evaluation • Attitudes, usefulness, recommendation, speaker/content evaluations • Six-month follow-up evaluation • Attitudes, usefulness, recommendation, use/implementation of knowledge/skills

  8. Pre & Post Testing • General Risk Management Workshop Pre and Post-Test Scores, 2005 (2 day)

  9. Pre & Post Testing • Estate & Farm Transition Planning Seminar Pre and Post-Test Scores, 2006 (1 day) • Estate & Farm Transition Planning Seminar Pre and Post-Test Scores, 2007 (2 day)

  10. Pre & Post Testing • Human Resource Management Seminar Pre and Post-Test Scores, 2006 (1 day)

  11. Post-Seminar Evaluations 48.66% 80.67% 93.33%

  12. What influences the amount of material to be used in job/operation? Ordered Probit Model Probit Model* 150 observations

  13. Marginal Effects on Probit Model • A 1 unit increase in How Helpful leads to a 17.7% increase in potential usage • A 1 unit increase in Instructor Rating leads to a 27% increase in potential usage

  14. 6 Month Follow-Up Evaluations 18.55% 50.52% 70.10% 89.69%

  15. Financial Changes • 20% noted financial improvement by applying RM techniques learned in workshops • 10% on average increases in profits • Too soon to tell • Non-financial • Increased understanding of risk management factors & alternatives, marketing trends, communication needs….

  16. What influenced the amount of material used in job/operation? • Ordered Logit Model (97 observations)

  17. Probabilities of Use Normal Participant: Producer, use of RM techniques equals 62%, would attend future RM programs, rating of importance of RM in agriculture today is a 6 (of 7)

  18. Conclusions • Pre & post testing show short-term knowledge gain • Program length has little effect • Near term usage impact • Usefulness, instructor, content… • Longer-term usage impact • Attitudes toward risk management • Wish for further education • Program type/length not important • Improved financial & non-financial situation…

More Related