A presentation of South Africa’s Siyavula, which aims to support teachers’ curriculum needs through OER, professional development, and community building. The presentation was given at the Open Education Conference 2009, and addresses Siyavula's accomplishments to date and interventions going forward from a strategy, technology, and research perspective.
1. Siyavula: Supporting Teacher Communities For Curriculum-Aligned OER in South Africa OpenEd Conference 2009 Mark Horner, Shuttleworth Foundation Joel Thierstein, Connexions Kathi Fletcher, Connexions Cynthia Jimes, Institute for the Study of Knowledge Management in Education Siyavula:
15. OpenEd Conference 2009 Cynthia Jimes, Institute for the Study of Knowledge Management in Education ISKME: Research to Support Teacher Communities For Curriculum-Aligned OER in South Africa
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20. Evidence of Need for Siyavula Not having the curriculum materials needed Knowing if the materials are of high quality/good Knowing if the materials meet curriculum requirements Knowing which materials to choose Knowing how to use materials in the classroom We need easy to use materials that meet the standards of the district and that are easy to adapt. And having material that the learners understand easily. - Teacher Survey Participant “ ” N=192 Teachers reported the following curriculum challenges
21. N=198 I make use of a lot of 3-D apparatus, which I either bought or made myself to assist learners in mastering a concept (numeracy). - Teacher Survey Participant Evidence of ‘OER Behaviors’ in Place Teachers reported using the following types of materials in the classroom Newspapers, magazines or journals Materials created by other teachers Information/materials found on the Internet Textbooks recommended by the Dept. of Education “ ” Materials I created myself
22. N=190 The benefits [of working collaboratively with other teachers] are that one can see the strengths and weaknesses of ones own work and colleagues can give constructive suggestions. - Teacher Survey Participant Evidence of ‘OER Behaviors’ in Place Teachers reported the following curriculum development activities Shared materials I have with other teachers Created materials in collaboration with others Provided feedback to teachers on their materials Received feedback on materials I created Discussed materials informally with colleagues “ ”
23. Observations of a teacher “swap and share” group at one South African school revealed how teachers meet to share hard copies of science exams and exercises, and discuss ways to combine the new materials with their own Evidence of ‘OER Behaviors’ in Place Teachers reported the following use and reuse activities I combine materials with other types of materials I edit or modify materials to meet my needs I use materials ‘as is’ N=195
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26. Cynthia Jimes [email_address] Mark Horner mark.horner@shuttleworthfoundation.org Joel Thierstein & Kathi Fletcher [email_address] [email_address]