Feedback From PNG Trials Nov08: Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 16:44, 8 December 2008


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Feedback from the Trials Projects in PNG

This feedback is in no way a substitute for a proper evaluation. SPC has plans for these, wishing to work with appropriate agencies and institutions. Part of the strategy for the trials is to work with Departments of Education to develop objective frameworks which can be measured. This is the case so far only with the Solomon Islands, where an evaluation framework was drawn up by the Ministry’s technical working group as part of their sector wide programme.

Visits to Dreikikir and Gaire in November 2008

A one day visit was made to Gaire and teachers consulted, and students put on a demonstration. The day provided all the information needed to conclude a plan to complete the school OLPC project. Gaire was visited on two days, in the company of Brian Monie and Nicholas Rueben from DOE, and staff of DBTI.

Training for a demonstration by students at the announcement of the DPM

It was expected that a press event would be held where the Deputy Prime Minister would make an official announcem,ent of PNG Government commitment to the OLPC programme. In the event, the DPM made the announcement in the ACP-EU meeting and a demo was not possible.

However, training was given to five Gaire students, Lorna, Key, Kerry, Emmanuel and Tau, and their teachers Mrs Tau and Mr Mede. Two parents were also present and were included in the group to give the demo, and a chance for the people at the press event to ask questions. The Department wrote to the school and permission was obtained from parents.

PNG-Nov08-1.jpg

Despite the demo not happening, the training was an excellent opportunity to assess the progress of the students and teachers, and at the same time give training on the use of a server with RICS connection, and to give the teachers positive feedback on how they were using the laptops in their teaching. The students gave some great ideas for the demo. The idea was for each in turn to demonstrate one activity, explaining to the audience themselves. Very good to see the enthusiasm and the confidence of these 8-year olds. Tau Paru (aged 8) produced the following created with "Paint" activity:

Tau-1.jpg

In PNG, trials were started in June at Gaire and Dreikikir. Only grade 3 was involved in each school owing to availability of laptops at that time. Also, insufficient training was given. However, both sites have been assessed by the Department with the assistance of the SPC advisor, and arrangements made to complete both schools so that all teachers and students will receive laptops, by the end of the year. The implementation will involve full training for teachers and introduction of support and monitoring arrangements, with partners Divine Word University and Don Bosco Technology Institute, who now have trained teams, and have also include OLPC as a component in their teacher training curricula.

A properly conducted monitoring and evaluation process is required. However, this has not yet been introduced by the Department and the Department is yet to develop an objectives framework and implement the M & E component. However, there are some observations that can be made following the five months since the trials were started in June 2008. SPC advisor David Leeming visited both schools in November 2008 accompanied by representatives from the Department. Teachers were asked to give feedback.

Feedback on Dreikikir

Feedback from teachers

  • Enormous enthusiasm. They really see the value of the programme and the head teacher is requesting the additional XOs immediately.
  • Motivation of grade 3s has soared, teachers too. Demand for transfers in to Dreikikir are increasing, and two teachers who have been promoted and have to transfer out were almost in tears as the prospect of leaving
  • They have been amazed by the self learning capacity, with learning continuing out of class, and obvious skills and knowledge of the grade 3s. The kids gave a demo and they were bursting with confidence, quite unlike their shy former selves during training in June.
  • They have been using the XOs in lessons on a regular basis. Both guided and unguided. Examples, regular use of Record in science to investigate natural objects, calculate, write, speak.
  • The teachers say that they totally accept and endorse the “agent of change” characteristic of OLPC, in terms of teaching practices. It is extremely timely as the same intended changes (active learning etc) are part of the current reform process. The XOs fit with that perfectly.
  • The teachers report that the grade 3s are noticeably improved in terms of engagement in learning and motivated in and out of class. All children are now more included with fewer children being left out.
  • Head Teacher Peter Kantipil did a test with his grade 3 class, giving them a grade 4 task. When evaluated they came out better than the grade 4s. They think this is directly due to their improved learning since June. (Note, a DWU researcher is interested in doing a 2-year study on IQ of students using XOs)
  • On the other hand, the other grades are demoralised by not having XOs. This is a real negative impact, and adds urgency to saturate the full school.
  • The teachers used the laptops to take photos to add to their attainment certificates in colour (each child has one end of year)
  • Community also very positive. During the demo, the kids showed me how they have filmed music DVDs so they can play them on their XOs at home, also one showed me an official letter that his Dad had written using the XO, so its useful at home. But the self learning is well noted by the parents
  • Hardware: only 1 laptop u/s (but they will try to reflash it). One has no audio. Others all look pretty well looked after.
  • The main issue – power – is solved. They have a robust work around solution, and we can make a more elegant one later. They actually bought a 5KVA generator specifically to charge the laptops, and have been doing a once a week in-school charge with the students finding power in their homes on other days. This is not enough for 300 laptops but can do it in two daily charges. They have grid power in evenings and will get that connected to school buildings. We designed a sort of shelving arrangement that will allow 300 laptops to be manageably stocked in shelves for charging each day. The gang chargers can be used later, and they are now not dependent on them.

Feedback from Gaire

  • The children love the laptops, and have become experts in the eyes of the teachers
  • The teachers are extremely positive and don’t feel any way imposed upon
  • The main observation is the power of the laptops in helping the children to learn and discover things, beyond the school. They have become experts
  • One example, they have already discovered creating games with “Memorise”
  • The children have become very busy in the classroom – i.e. very engaged in what they are doing
  • They are very impressed with the creativity of some of the students, for instance the standard of drawings using Paint is quite out of the league of the adults!
  • The G3 teachers use the laptops quite a lot in class, both guided and unguided. They can allow the students quite a lot of freedom to use activities to tackle various tasks.
  • One teacher listed some guided uses:
    • Write
    • Calculate
    • Tamtam
    • Paint
    • Chat (they found it is quite useful in class)
  • They did a school survey that involved creating music with the laptops
  • The deputy head teacher has a G3 child, and he has made a lot of positive observations. He could also speak as a parent. He gave his child a question on science, and the child researched the answer on the Internet! This is a grade 3, 8 year old.
  • Teachers have been using/borrowing laptops to research material for their lessons, as well as downloading materials and sending emails.
  • The children line up outside the RICS and use the Internet quite often
  • This is evidence of the added value of the RICS
  • As with Dreikikir, the ones without laptops have been a bit demoralised. One teacher very eloquently explained that until the whole school was saturated, judgement on the laptops is unbalanced.
  • Teachers were very aware and supportive of the need to monitor and evaluate, and to involve the Province in this task
  • Two laptops of the 53 had problems, one has half the screen distorted (horizontal lines) and one has the dead battery syndrome. We managed to get the battery charging again although it is only very slowly taking up charge.
  • They could not think of any negative impacts.

Other Feedback

  • Two members of the Department accompanied the SPC advisor to Gaire on Sunday 23rd November and witnessed the skills demonstrated by five Grade 3 students and their teachers, in preparation for the demonstration at the press conference scheduled for Parliament. The students displayed advanced skills and the teachers illustrated guided learning.
  • The Gaire teachers reported a visit by School Inspectors, who witnessed Grade 3 lessons with students using the laptops. The teachers stated that the inspectors were very impressed.

There is some excellent indication of the potential with children with disabilities. When DWU conducted teacher training for 87 teachers from schools in the area at St. Benedicts in October, they invited people from Callan Services, an international NGO that has centres around PNG helping people including children overcome disabilities. Some teachers from Callan Services in Wewak attended the DWU training and immediately saw the potential. Dr Alfred Tivinarlik, Dean of St. Benedicts, captured on video the Callan Services teachers using the laptops to create visual resources for teaching sign language. They also have a centre in Kiunga, where PNG Sustainable Development plan to start OLPC projects in their areas of interest.

(David Leeming reports....) I also visited the Mt Hagen area, where PNGSDP hope to start a project "exhibition school" at Kisap near Banz, and visited Sister Rose at the nearby Shalom Centre (Banz), a centre for people diagnosed with HIV. We discussed how we might link that in some way to the street children who had been pointed out to me at the market. I remembered that in the early days, we were primarily thinking of the children who did not attend school, but the focus has now become centred around schools - probably as it is easier to manage. But those children do not attend school - a visible side of the 50% who are not at school in the 6-17 age group in the region. We discussed ways in which the residents at the Centre might somehow use the laptops to share their stories, in some way working to involve children not at school. Not sure how that will develop but it shows the range of possibilities.