 |
Datum: |
Monday, 07. May 2007 |
| Von: |
Sandy Malapile |
| An: |
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| URL |
www.nepad.org |
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"Wir wollen Computer an allen afrikanischen
Schulen."
(Interview) Eine gut ausgebaute Infrastruktur
für Informations- und Kommunikationstechnologien gilt
als Voraussetzung für eine nachhaltige Entwicklung Afrikas.
Dazu gehört auch Kompetenz im Umgang mit den neuen Technologien.
Die NEPAD e-School-Initiative lehrt Schüler und Lehrer,
die neuen Medien einzusetzen. Das Team von eLearning Africa
sprach mit Sandy Malapile, Projekt-Koordinatorin für
die Initiative. Text in Englisch.
eLA: What is the background of NEPAD e-Schools initiative?
Sandy Malapile: The NEPAD e-Schools Initiative was publicly
launched in Durban at the Africa Summit of the World Economic
Forum on June 12, 2003. The Initiative aims to impart ICT
skills to young Africans in primary and secondary schools
as well as harness ICT technology to improve, enrich and expand
education in African countries.
Private sector involvement in the e-School Initiative is through
the Information Society Partnership for Africa’s Development
(ISPAD). This partnership brings together fiscal and human
resources, as well as ICT infrastructure and curriculum materials,
from private and public sector partners as well as civil society.
The first phase of the Initiative is a Demonstration (Demo)
project that is being implemented by the private sector partners.
Project execution will entail at least the following components:
infrastructure including computes, communications, networking,
power, etc.; ICT training for teachers; content and curriculum
development; efforts towards community buy-in, involvement
and ownership of the process; "health point" definition
issues; organisation and management of the project; partnership
issues; and financial and sustainability issues.
There are other strands that form part of this initiative
such as Business Plan development, National Implementing agency
and Satellite Network.
eLA: What is the aim of the NEPAD e-Schools initiative?
SM: The aim is to equip all African primary and secondary
schools with ICT equipment, such as computers, radio and television
sets, phones and fax machines, communication equipment, scanners,
digital cameras, copiers, etc., and to connect them to the
Internet. Each school will be equipped with a 'health point'.
The NEPAD e-schools Initiative will be executed over a ten-year
period, with the secondary school component being completed
in the first five years. Three phases are envisaged with fifteen
to twenty countries in each phase. The phases will be staggered
by one year. An estimated 600,000 schools are expected to
benefit.
The countries invited to participate in the first phase are
those that have acceded to the MOU of the NEPAD African Peer
Review Mechanism (APRM) as follows: Algeria, Burkina Faso,
Cameroon, Republic of Congo, Egypt, Gabon, Ghana, Kenya, Lesotho,
Mali, Mauritius, Mozambique, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, South
Africa and Uganda.
eLA: How are the schools - both students and teachers
- reacting to the new challenges?
SM: The first monitoring and evaluation report has been produced
providing feedback from the participating schools. The current
level of student experience with ICTs and their proficiency
in using them is generally quite low. More than 55% of the
students stated that they had no experience at all in using
computers. Their typical school environment neither provides
much opportunity for student access to computers and related
ICTs nor the training to use them.
However, they are keen to change this reality! Most students’
comments demonstrate a clear understanding of the ways that
the use of ICTs could enhance their learning experience and
the importance that they attach to acquiring ICT skills for
their future. But they also demonstrate an understanding of
the barriers that hinder their achievement of these goals,
such as lack of access to equipment, obsolete and poorly maintained
equipment, and the lack of trained teachers.
While the majority (75%) of responding teachers have no, or
very limited, experience and expertise regarding ICT educational
applications, the other 25% do have a good to excellent level
of competency and are applying it in their classrooms. This
obviously reflects both the training they have received and
the ICT resources available to them in their schools. Very
few teachers (less than 15%) reported using ICT tools for
teaching, communicating with other teachers or students, finding
information or educational materials, preparing reports or
monitoring and tracking student progress.
But here, too, there is a lot of enthusiasm. The teachers’
comments were extremely positive, and they are highly motivated
to improve their skills – for a variety of reasons,
including career enhancement, personal growth, or to become
better teachers. They are, however, also very aware of the
factors that constrain their ability to achieve these goals.
eLA: What are the main problems with implementing
ICT in African schools?
SM: Some of the main problems are the often ineffective management
of the project in countries, the fact that expectations of
governments have still to be clarified, and communication
that is complicated by the use of three languages - English,
French and Portuguese. There are also current infrastructure
problems such as Internet connectivity. We have to align the
existing e-learning initiatives with the NEPAD e-Schools,
as many activities similar to the e-Schools Initiative are
underway.
Also most of the participating countries have an ICT development
policy for education or are developing one, but very few have
clear implementation plans. It is therefore necessary that
each participating country formally establish a National Implementing
Agency for the NEPAD e-Schools that will bear responsibility
for all operational aspects of the initiative’s implementation.
eLA: What is the NEPAD e-School Satellite Network?
SM: This project is at the core of enabling the Internet-based
connectivity for the NEPAD e-Schools Initiative at the Continental
level. The aim is to establish an Africa-wide satellite network
that will connect the schools to the Internet as well as to
points within each country from which educational content
will be fed to the schools on a continuous basis. MBV Ubumabono
Systems Pty (Ltd) has been appointed to provide the definition
and preliminarily design of the NEPAD e-Schools Satellite
Network within the next four months.
eLA: Mr Malapile, thank you very much indeed.
Interview zuerst erschienen auf eLearning
Africa. Die Veröffentlichung erfolgt mit freundlicher
Genehmigung. Foto © UNESCO/Darryl Evans
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