Hi All, In the Pacific Ocean, we have a list serve for educationalists. There have been some posts about the article from Australia about their Governments "struggles" with introducing laptops into secondary schools.
These posts have prompted the Principle of Patuake College (in the outer islands of Solomon Islands) to make the following two posts about the OLPC project we have there. You may have seen the evaluation by the Australian Council of Education Research that was conducted some time ago on this project. Here are some recent views about what is happening. PS. NOPERS are people who subscribe to the list serve, called NOPE I am Brian Bird (Principal of Patukae College - Marovo Lagoon, Solomon islands). Patukae College is one of the schools piloting the OLPC project in the Solomons. I welcomed the article published yesterday. It helps to point out the challenges we all face in introducing laptops into classroom, to some extent not fully utilised and realised for their desired or intended purpose. I have also appreciated views and comments surfaced from other fellow nopers. I would like to think of the article as a beacon that shows pathway for the schools, teachers, students, parents but more so for each island country governments to see beyond just equipping schools with laptops as some nopers have said they are just tools needing humans to make them work. It is always a positive initiative to have ICT introduced in schools but it seriously requires innovation on the part of island states governments who are responsible of generating and regulating policies, to institute a mechanism that would allow the use of ICT in classroom compatible with the national curriculums. Unless this is realised ICT in classroom would remain a challenge for teachers. For my country Solomon Islands, it needs to collaborate how ICT should be used to help implement the national curriculum. Only then would teachers deploy the intended use of this vital and useful technology. Brian Bird Let me add something raw and home based to my previous article to nopers yesterday. Patukae CHS is one of the OLPC projects project in the Solomon. While it is true that technology does not in itself responsible for driving change, it is a tool that can be used to drive change in learning and in commitment to learn. In Patukae College for instance which is one of the pilots in the OLPC project we accepted OLPCs as tools and we invested efforts to make them work. We ran training programme for teachers, and students, and we provided back-up support to both teachers and students and the results have been quite exciting. Student literacy rates have gone up. The overall academic performance of students with laptops had increased and we have seen increase in school pass rates since the introduction of laptops. The attitudes of students with laptops have changed; they are more active in their learning objectives. Parents have also becoming more engaged in their children's learning and some of them have even improved their own English literacy through the use of the reading and pronunciation tools in the OLPC. We at Patukae College have definitely found the OLPC very useful. They have pushed the boundaries of Education, they have given teachers more option and ideas, and it has enabled students to learn in a different way. To make it work we took its vision, drive and commitment, and a belief that used properly, this tool can make the difference our rural schools are looking for. It is very easy to knock technology on the head, very easy to question its legitimacy, its usefulness, but let us not forget that we who can communicate are the lucky ones, we have the opportunity to have computers, they have helped us. For the first time similar opportunities are given to children in the rural areas at Patukae and they are now realising the same opportunities that some of us have been taking for granted. In elevating this ICT innovation to another height, Patukae CHS in collaboration with most of the leading Primary Schools in Marovo Lagoon started a project last year through UNESCO which has launched a Marovo Wiki educator program that can globally accessed. http://wikieducator.org/Patukae_College/OER_Reef_and_Rainforest_wiki_in_ Marovo_Language Teachers from these schools were brought together to learn wiki skills to enable them use the skills in devising lessons both in English and in Marovo vernacular with the aim that most of these lessons should be uploaded to the Marovo Wiki/Wiki educator online. This is ICT in action right in the classroom and our teachers and students used the OLPC to make this work. With the introduction of OLPC into its classroom, Patukae see opportunities through the challenges and decided to move on realising the potential ICT can bring to its populace. In that view point I would call on for more support towards ICT expansion in Schools. Let us not criticise the technology, nor those that are trying to help. But rather ask the question, what can I do to add value to this initiative. At Patukae we take the view that we need to empower our teachers so that they in turn can empower our students. There is no point always looking at the empty portion of the 'half-filled bucket of water'; rather we should be asking the question, how can I fill the rest of this bucket of water so that can achieve its full potential? I support the OLPC programme and what it sets out to do. I have seen the benefits it has provided to those that have received it. It is my hope countries can put in place mechanisms that will empower teachers to empower children but also processes that will objectively evaluate the impact of this technology in the education of our children into the future because the outcome of such evaluations will add more weight to the effectiveness of OLPCs as an effective learning and communication tool...' Brian Bird Ian Thomson ICT Outreach Section Economic Development Division Secretariat of the Pacific Community B.P. D5 - Noumea Cedex - 98848 New Caledonia Phone +687-265419 Fax +687 26 38 18 http://www.spc.int <http://www.spc.int/>
_______________________________________________ IAEP -- It's An Education Project (not a laptop project!) [email protected] http://lists.sugarlabs.org/listinfo/iaep
