Ashesi University, Ghana: Difference between revisions

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In the final week, the program will be evaluated by examining what effect the training had on the children’s learning habits. This is in two parts; taking a post-test to see how the children’s learning has improved, and evaluating the children’s understanding to know the effectiveness of our teaching methods and program design.
In the final week, the program will be evaluated by examining what effect the training had on the children’s learning habits. This is in two parts; taking a post-test to see how the children’s learning has improved, and evaluating the children’s understanding to know the effectiveness of our teaching methods and program design.
During this week also, work will begin on a report meant to assess the project and identify how best the model can be deployed in other location.
During this week also, work will begin on a report meant to assess the project and identify how best the model can be deployed in other locations.


Team members are well-motivated, ready and eager to commence the project.
Team members are well-motivated, ready and eager to commence the project.
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! header 2| Details
! header 2| Details
! header 3| Weekly Cost
! header 3| Weekly Cost
! header 4| Total Cost(Over 9 Weeks)
! header 4| Total Cost(Over 10 Weeks)
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| row 1, cell 1|Food and Water costs
| row 1, cell 1|Food and Water costs
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(21.6 miles × 2 passes) × 3 times a week × $0.63 = $81.66
(21.6 miles × 2 passes) × 3 times a week × $0.63 = $81.66
| row 2, cell 3|$81.66
| row 2, cell 3|$81.66
| row 2, cell 4|$8166.66
| row 2, cell 4|$816.66
|-
|-
| row 3, cell 1|Accommodation
| row 3, cell 1|Accommodation

Revision as of 19:20, 30 March 2009

Project Overview

Goals

• To provide an alternative learning tool for disadvantaged children at an orphanage in rural Southern Ghana.

• To facilitate the involvement of these children in information technology, thus opening them up to new educational opportunities.

• To equip the children in such a way as to enable them productively learn and interact with their laptops independently, and to encourage the children to collaborate, teach and learn from each other.

• To successfully provide a model for larger-scale deployment and training. The project might also provide a model for other NGO-supported orphanages to see the benefits of OLPC laptops to their students, and so might instigate a larger-scale deployment of laptops at private and other NGO-supported schools.


Sustainability

• Strong working relationship with managing staff at the orphanage.

• The Village of Hope is on a list of agencies where Ashesi University students perform community service yearly. This means that every year, the project will receive continued support from college volunteers in terms of training, troubleshooting, servicing, fundraising and development of educational content.

• Long-term commitment from the management to the support of innovative educational programs.

• The operations manager at the orphanage is a Computer Science graduate from Ashesi University. She is qualified to maintain and service the server herself, and will work to maintain working ties with the group, Ashesi and the orphanage.

• Close proximity of the orphanage to the group, Ashesi University and the Accra metropolis,(22 miles from Accra, 80-minute drive) VOHmap.jpg



Specifics

Target Institution: Village of Hope Orphanage, Ghana

Location: Gomoa-Fetteh, Southern Ghana

Local NGO Partner: Ghana West Africa Missions.

Advisors: Dr. Suzanne Buchele, The Baah-Wiredu One Laptop per Child Foundation




Team Members

Name Group position Competencies & Experience
Nii Ayertei Tettey Pedagogical and Creative Lead 2 years experience in charity and NGO work, prior teaching and mentoring experience at an orphanage; Business Administration major
Romeo Owusu-Aning Project Manager Co-author, Research paper:“The One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) Project and Its Applicability to Ghana” , volunteer for Ghana OLPC Pilot Project; Management Information Systems major
Hanan Yaro Boforo Volunteer work: Guinea Worm sensitization in northern rural Ghana; Teaching and helping transform delinquent juveniles at a remand centre in Accra ; Computer Science major
Solomon Kwashie Kofigah Accounts manager Volunteer program work at the Accra Psychiatric Hospital; Management Information Systems major
Joseph Ofori Amegatcher Technical Lead Volunteer work: Math teacher at Vocational School and ‘big brother’ at a remand centre

Computer Science major


Project Proposal

Project Timeline Project Timeline.jpg

The project is estimated to be over a 9-week period, starting in late May and ending late July, coinciding with our summer break and part of the vacation period for the kids at the Village of Hope. To measure the effect of the program on the children’s regular school learning, a pre-test and post-test are scheduled to be done in the first and ninth weeks of the project. This is separate from the evaluation of the project to measure the overall level of success and its suitability as a model for other private and NGO-supported orphanages and schools. To evaluate the impact of the training, Kirkpatrick’s 4-level training model will be used. This is because particularly important to us is the children’s ability to share what they have learnt with their contemporaries (level 3).


Orientation.

Focus: Child Ownership, Low Ages

During the first week, an orientation program will be organized to introduce the kids to the concept of the XO, the essentials of the training program, how to take care of their laptops, safety issues etc. For the teachers who we will be working with, a similar orientation will be organized on the education principles of OLPC and maintenance and safety issues.


Introduction to the XO

Focus: Low Ages, Connection

The second part of the program, which spans 3 weeks, is meant to introduce the children to the actual usage of the XO, its applications, to encourage spontaneous use and sharing by the children. This will be in 4 broad sections:

1. Introduction to XO applications

2. Fun with the XO

3. Communications and server interaction

4. Tools for self learning: Spontaneous exploration and sharing


Curricular Integration

Focus: Sustainability

The third part of the program, spanning 4 weeks, is designed to coincide with the reopening of school. Here, team members will collaborate with teachers in classroom sessions to teach the children how they can use the laptop for their regular schoolwork and as an alternative learning resource.


Evaluation and Post-test

Focus: Sustainability, Evaluation, Saturation

In the final week, the program will be evaluated by examining what effect the training had on the children’s learning habits. This is in two parts; taking a post-test to see how the children’s learning has improved, and evaluating the children’s understanding to know the effectiveness of our teaching methods and program design. During this week also, work will begin on a report meant to assess the project and identify how best the model can be deployed in other locations.

Team members are well-motivated, ready and eager to commence the project.


Budget

Deployment Costs

Item Details Weekly Cost Total Cost(Over 10 Weeks)
Food and Water costs $5 per day per team member (5 total) $175 $1575
Transportation Mileage rate: $0.63 per mile

Assuming round trips between Accra (home base) and the deployment site 3 times a week, Weekly transport cost:

(21.6 miles × 2 passes) × 3 times a week × $0.63 = $81.66
$81.66 $816.66
Accommodation Negotiated rate for nearby rented cabin for 10 weeks. - $500
Other miscellaneous expenses Cost of local errands, airtime, replacing damages etc. - $200
Total $3091.66


Kigali Trip Costs

Item Details Unit Cost Group members Total
Air ticket Kenya Airways, Economy Round ticket: Accra – Kigali – Accra $1085 3 $3255
Visa fee $100 3 $300
Miscellaneous air travel costs Airport tax, baggage charges, Taxi fares etc $75 3 $225
Total $1260 $3780


Equipment Purchase and Installation Costs

Item Details Unit Cost Quantity Total Cost
Secure storage Facility for the Laptops (Cost of purchasing 2 Wooden, locally manufactured sideboards; Inclusive of purchase of locks and Cabinetry Fee) $30 2 $100
Uninterrupted Power Supply Systems/ Power Stabilizers $100 3 $300
Power Strips $8 50 $40
Electrical Upgrades $500 - $500
Wireless Access Point Routers $100 2 $200
Miscellaneous Equipment Purchase Batteries, cables, adapters etc - - $10
Hardware Setup Kits $13 2 $26
Total $1176



Total budgeted expenditure = $1176 + $3091 + $3780 = $8047