No/low resources simulation at VGHS
A dedicated group of awareNet learners at VGHS became involved in the
campaign for minimum norms and standards for education under the
direction of Dr Sarah Hanton (winner of the Judges Award of the
Microsoft Partners in learning Forum 2012; in the picture above). The
campaign is currently being waged by Equal Education, an NPO based in the Western Cape, but with the backup of the Legal Resources Centre
(LRC) in Grahamstown. Dr Hanton explains: "The aim is to persuade the
Government to adopt a set of legally binding minimum norms and standards
for educational infrastructure. The idea of this is not to set
impossible goals but to have accountability and a benchmark set to allow
proper planning for systematic reform. Currently many schools do not
have electricity, water, safe buildings let alone science and computer
laboratories or libraries. We feel that a right to an education should
infer a right to a decent educational infrastructure, otherwise the
opportunities for learning are limited."
awareNet is an official co-curricular at VGHS and perfectly suited to
link schools for such a campaign. It already has linked learners at
VGHS with learners from previously disadvantaged schools and served as a
means to engage and exchange ideas and knowledge. Now, VGHS is taking
it a step further after experiencing in a previous project that not all
learners have equal access to resources. Today, almost all teachers at
VGHS taught with no or very limited resources, eg. no text books,
electricity (so no overheads, digital projectors computers, etc.) and no
photocopied worksheets. The number of desks, chairs and blackboard
sizes were reduced or not used at all, some classes of different grades
and subjects were taught together in store rooms, some toilets were
locked and there was no toilet paper. Nonetheless teaching had to be
meaningful, so it was a great challenge for the learners as well as for
the teachers. At the end of the teaching day all learners and teachers
were asked to complete a questionnaire reflecting on their experiences
of the day and their thoughts regarding the facility of learning /
teaching with few or no resources. These data will be compiled and
published on awareNet and sent to LRC and Equal Education so that they can be used.
The main aim of this project was to raise awareness of the equal
education campaign and provide useful statistics to equal education and
the LRC which can be used in their campaign. The questionnaire has also
been published on awareNet to get data from schools that didn't
participate today, most of them in the Grahamstown township area.
Teachers, learners and facilitators were interview by Grocott's Mail and the Daily Dispatch, articles will be published next week. Tweets with impressions of the day and opinions can be found under #FixOurSchools. Two Anthropology students, Kiarin Gillies and Louise Featherstone, were on site to document the social impact of the event.
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Posted: May 5th 2012 05:00