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ICT for Education, Development and Social Justice Charalambos Vrasidas CARDET – University of Nicosia www.cardet.org www.vrasidas.com/vrasidas2009.ppt
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ICT for Education, Development and Social Justice

Jun 19, 2015

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Presents findings and arguments on the role of ICT for development and social justice
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Page 1: ICT for Education, Development and Social Justice

ICT for Education, Development and Social Justice

Charalambos Vrasidas

CARDET – University of Nicosiawww.cardet.org

www.vrasidas.com/vrasidas2009.ppt

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Page 3: ICT for Education, Development and Social Justice

Inequalities and injustice are evident all around the world,

in all forms and shapes including the developing and developed world, urban and rural regions in areasurban and rural regions, in areas

such as economy, access to food, goods, education, health, and services.

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In 2004, almost 1 billion people lived below the international t li i l th $1 dpoverty line, earning less than $1 per day

840 million people in the world are malnourished p p— 799 million of them live in the developing world

153 million of the world's malnourished people153 million of the world s malnourished people are children under the age of 5

Source: UNESCOSource: UNESCO

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Every day, 16,000 children die from hunger-related causesOne child every five secondsOne child every five seconds

6 million children under the age of 5 die lt f hevery year as a result of hunger

In 2005, about 10.1 million children died before h h d h i 5th bi hdthey reached their 5th birthday.

Most of these deaths occurred in developing countries

Source: UNESCO

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Eliminating poverty is not an act of kindness;Eliminating poverty is not an act of kindness; it’s an act of justice

-Nelson Mandela

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Eliminating poverty is not an act of kindness;Eliminating poverty is not an act of kindness; it’s an act of justice

-Nelson Mandela

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Education for Better Quality of LifeBut, is Education for ALL?

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EFA

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www.efareport.unesco.org

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Breaking out of the Poverty Cycle

NO EDUCATIONNO EDUCATION NO JOBSNO JOBS

POVERTYPOVERTYNO MONEYNO MONEYNO BASIC NEEDSNO BASIC NEEDS

… 5 years of education can help break the cycle of poverty …… 5 years of education can help break the cycle of poverty …

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DFID (2006) reports that in low-income countries:

• with each additional year of education• with each additional year of education, average earnings rise 11%

ith h dditi l f i l• with each additional year of a girls education, her eventual wages rise 10-20%

• with each additional year of a girls education, the death rate of her children

d 5 f ll b 8%under 5 years falls by 8%-(Power et al. 2008)

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Development as Freedom

“Expansion of Freedom is viewed … both as a primary end and as the principal means of development. Development consists of the removal of various types of unfreedoms that leave [people with [p plittle choice and little opportunity of exercising their reasoned agency. The removal of substantial unfreedoms, it is argued here is constitutive ofargued here, is constitutive of development.”

- Amartya Sen (1999)

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Social Justice education are those pedagogies and policies that improveand policies that improve

the learning and life opportunities of typically underserved studentsyp y

Cochran-Smith (2004)

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Online Activism

• Use the internet for online campaigns

• Amnesty International: Your signature counts

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WikiPedia – what is valid?

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ICT for Peace, Reconciliation and Social Justice

How to use ICT to promote peace andpromote peace and reconciliation when you have challenges like:

•Language•History conflict•Religion•Religion•Politics•Infrastructure

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http://ocw.mit.edu

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http://www.oercommons.org/

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Open for Whom? In what LANGUAGE?With what infrastructure?

Where are the TEACHERS?

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Need for teachers

• Sub-Saharan Africa will need to expand its teaching force by p g y68%.

• Ethiopia must double the number of its teachersChad will need almost four times as many from 16 000 to• Chad will need almost four times as many, from 16,000 to 61,000 (UNESCO, 2006).

• It is calculated that 18 million teachers are still needed if the Millennium Development Goals are to be met (GlobalMillennium Development Goals are to be met (Global Campaign For Education, 2006).

• Commission for Africa Report (2005) identifies teacher training and development as a key priority area for reducingtraining and development as a key priority area for reducing poverty.

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Virtual University Small States Commonwealth

• The VUSSC is a consortium of institutions that aims to address education needs in small states of the Commonwealth

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Vi t l U i it f S ll St t f th C lthVirtual University for Small States of the CommonwealthP A R T I C I P A T I N G C O U N T R I E S

22 R t ti ti i t d i fi t ti i Si (22 Representatives participated in first meeting in Singapore (e.g. Cyprus, Mauritius, Seychelles, Gambia, Samoa, Zambia, Jamaica, St.

Vincent, Le Soto, Barbados, Malta, West Indies)

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Singapore Statement (Courses)

• Teacher Education,Teacher Education, • Information and Communications Technology,• Information Systems• Information Systems, • Tourism and Hospitality, • Nursing and Health Care• Nursing and Health Care,• TechVoc Edn & Trg and Life Skills,

M t & P bli Ad i i t ti• Management & Public Administration,• Agriculture and Fisheries.

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COL’s role in the VUSSC

• Coordinate the initiative & Facilitate creation of networksnetworks

• Share expertise in educational technology: radio, TV, print, multi-media, internet, wikis, eLearningTV, print, multi media, internet, wikis, eLearning

• Support local capacity enhancement& Share resources

• Not a degree awarding body• Not a funding agency• Not a funding agency

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The role of Ministries & Institutions

Role of Ministries• Develop policy

Li i ith th i i t i• Liaise with other ministries• Allocate people and responsibilities• Support implementationpp p• Monitor implementationRole of Institutions• Take responsibility for program development andTake responsibility for program development and

delivery• Adapt course materials to local contexts

G t d d b t d t• Grant awards earned by students

• http://www.wikieducator.org

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Online Masters Degree in ITT (Pacific)

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Games Attributes

•Interesting & Exciting •Multi-sensory•Active EngagementI t ti•Interaction

•Feedback•FantasyFantasy•Competition•Cooperation•Levels of Difficulty•AdaptiveP f E l ti•Performance Evaluation

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Games with a Social Dimension

• Designing to support social it t d l ldcommitment and real-world

action. • QA is an immersive context

with over 20 000 registeredwith over 20,000 registered members worldwide.

• Engage children ages 9–14 in a form of dramatic playa form of dramatic play comprising both online and off-line learning activities, with a storyline inspiring a disposition towards socialdisposition towards social action.

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FOOD FORCE www.food-force.com

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Food- Force - Mission 1

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Mission 2

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Mission 3

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Mission 4

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Mission 5

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Mission 6

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Challenges in Integrating Games in Traditional Schools

• Students play video games, most teachers do not• Anti-authoritarian and anti-puritanical values, challenge p , g

traditional conceptions of education and schooling• Games allow exploration, personal meaning-making, playful

experimentation, and individual expression (something that contracts some of the core ideals valued in schools)contracts some of the core ideals valued in schools)

• “…even if we sanitize games, the theories of learning embedded in them run counter to the current social organization of schooling” (Shaffer et al. 2005, p. 110).organization of schooling (Shaffer et al. 2005, p. 110).

• Teachers do not have time• Not a lot of games in appropriate language• Integrate games to match the curriculum

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Way Forward …

• Physical access to technology is not the• Physical access to technology is not the only condition.

Wh t ll tt i l ’ bilit d• What really matters is people’s ability and context for use

- Warschauser (2003)

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De elop projects hich encourage teachers and st dentsDevelop projects which encourage teachers and students

to ask critical questionsb t j ti d i j tiabout justice and injustice,

engage in action, and move beyond

‘ i th ld’ i t l t i t‘seeing the world’ as virtual touristsfrom the safety of their home

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Common metaphors such as the global villaget l k h li d t i fmay not always work when applied to experiences of

marginalized people in online environments and thus regardless of physical accessand thus, regardless of physical access,

the online environment can be exclusionary

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Current Perspectives on Applied Information Technologies

A lot of the work presented here is published in the Book Series edited by CARDET

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Educational Media International

http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/authors/remiauth.asp