Archive for the “Reflections” Category

July 17, 2010 Categorized under Featured, Reflections

The Challenges of OLPC Scale Implementation in Rwanda

Juliano Bittencourt, Learning Development Coordinator for OLPC in Rwanda, posted in his personal blog a reflection about the challenges of the OLPC scale implementation in Rwanda. He discuss the strategies the OLPC Learning team is using in the country to achieve scale without totally sacrificing quality. See more at JBittencout’s Blog.

Popularity: 6% [?]

June 17, 2010 Categorized under Reflections, School Work

Reflections on Holiday Teacher Training

During the school holiday, from April 5th to April 16th 2010, the One Laptop Per Child Learning Team conducted an intensive teacher training program at two public schools in Kigali: Kagugu and Nonko Primary Schools. 

The objectives of this training were to enable teachers to feel comfortable and confident in the use of the XO Laptop; to strengthen teachers’ knowledge about how to integrate the laptop with the curriculum, and to let teachers experience the impact of Project-based Learning as they developed their own projects on the theme of malaria.

Read more…

Popularity: 8% [?]

April 14, 2010 Categorized under Featured, Reflections

During Genocide Remembrance Week

Samuel Dusengiyumva, close friend and colleague, began a blog to tell his story during the conflict in Rwanda. Samuel is heroic in his actions and a true inspiration to us all.

Please read follow his touching stories in his blog: http://dusengiyumva.wordpress.com

Popularity: 4% [?]

April 14, 2010 Categorized under Reflections

Creating Learning Cultures

This text was the base of this discussion during the Learning chat for April 14, 2010.

I first heard the following joke from Walter Bender:

What do you call someone who speaks 3 or more languages?

Poly-lingual

What do you call someone who speaks 2 languages?

Bilingual

What do you call someone who speaks 1 language?


American

This is only a joke, certainly a caricature, and obviously not 100% true. Yet there is sufficient truth in the joke (or else it wouldn’t be funny) to merit some thinking.

Almost all American children receive language instruction in school beginning around age 8 and continuing through the end of high school, typically in Spanish or French. For those that go on to university, they receive further classes. That is a lot of instruction, with curriculum, qualified teachers, texts, support, and all the things that are alleged to be the essentials for learning.

Think about that. Children receive years and years of language instruction but do not learn the language. How can that be?

Read more…

Popularity: 4% [?]

April 7, 2010 Categorized under Reflections

How Can We Create Environments That Truly Support the Full Human and Social Development That are the Aims of Education?

This text was the base of this discussion during the Learning chat for April 8, 2010.

Yesterday was the first day of the genocide memorial period in Rwanda. Words cannot convey the horrors, the pain, the suffering, and the inhumanity. Before I knew the date for this chat, I was intending to launch this chat by trying to focus on how we can use the laptops not merely to teach the same old things on computers instead of with paper and pencil, but how to introduce the more powerful uses of computers. I wanted to focus on the pragmatics of this, not merely to have a chat on abstractions and philosophy. It is rather remarkable that despite the shortcomings in schools, and despite the huge body of evidence of the lack of progress by using computers in this way, this trend continues. This demonstrates the power of what Tyack and Cuban term the “grammar of school.”

Read more…

Popularity: 3% [?]