Introducing CampusNet’s Virtual World

CampusNet is excited to announce the launch of their Virtual World.  The value of this virtual online space is that it can be used for live interactive training sessions as well as meetings, without the need to travel.

The Virtual World comprises of a number of ‘spaces’ such as the Auditorium, where students can browse, register and enrol for courses through the Auditorium Virtual Academy (AVA).  There is also the Meeting and Lecture room, which hosts live, interactive training sessions.  Added to this is an Exhibition showcase where product launches and conferences can be held.  A Community Centre environment is also available, and will offer NGO’s and other organisations the opportunity to showcase their initiatives, provide interactive information boards and facilitate live interactive training sessions & meetings.

Full two-way communication is possible via built in VoIP, webcam and text messages as well as full presentation facilities, document sharing and interactive information boards.

Keith Maree, the project leader, says of the initiative:

I think this is the way forward for live interactive training sessions, meetings and for providing unified communications and information to organisations and communities.”

The CampusNet Virtual World enterprise solution for collaboration will give organisations the ability to provide an engaging and immersive alternative to existing operational and training regimes.  (more…)

SAFIPA-supported projects welcome in 2012! We take a look at what this year has in store for some of these projects

With the first month of 2012 already under our collective belt, we caught up with SAFIPA-supported projects to find out what 2012 has in store for them.  In this article we share developments within FBSA, Reed House Systems, CampusNet, JamiiX, WhereisMyTransport and LiftclubSA.

FBSA brings out the bubbly at Bloekombos!

Fireworks image from Flickr by Bayasaa CC-BY

First Business South Africa (FBSA) has already had some extremely heartening developments within their initiative.  Tim White, the founder of FBSA says, “2012 might just be the year that we have all been waiting for!  Finally our facility has its power and so we are able to take the next important steps.”

Tim refers to the Bloekombos Uluntu Plaza, which is FBSA’s living lab business incubator, and which also happens to be an African first!  The project involves the establishment of a business training centre, or incubator, at which previously unemployed learner-workers are placed in retail based micro-enterprises, backed by a fully integrated supply chain and business services platform, whilst engaging in skills programmes and learnerships to embed the required knowledge.  The Plaza is an initiative of City of Cape Town Local Areas human and Economic Development department (LAED). The business incubator provides an unprecedented opportunity for suppliers and manufacturers to participate actively in the local economic development of South Africa.

During the latter part of 2011, implementation of the project was hampered by delays in the electrification of the plaza.  Whilst having to endure a number of frustrating months until power was finally delivered to the plaza, Tim can now enthusiastically report that, “Our immediate aim is to attract suppliers and manufacturers to participate in the supply chain processes.”

(more…)

Part 3 “This is what we’re doing”: SAFIPA projects talk ICT support for access to education

Learners trying out MoMaths at SAFIPA conference 2011

In the third parallel session Nokia’s MoMaths, the CECS Maths Portal and CampusNet find innovative ways of providing ICT support to enable access to education.

NOKIA’S MOMATHS

Jacqueline Batchelor, an independent consultant who works with Riitta Vanska’s team on the Nokia MoMaths project, talks about the hugely successful uptake of the MoMaths initiative by school students in South Africa and Finland.

Overcoming the Maths crisis
“There is a crisis in mathematics in South Africa. It is imperative that the South African secondary school educational system produces the kinds of results that will deliver scientists, engineers and the like.   Learning needs to be embedded in the learner’s every day life.  The value of the MoMaths project is that it goes where the learner goes.  Almost every youth in South Africa has MXit on their phones and that is why MoMaths leverages this platform.
(more…)

With SAFIPA’s support, the CECS Maths Project launches dynamic Maths portal for Grade 12 educators

The Community Education Computer Society (CECS) has the distinction of being the oldest national computer training non-profit in South Africa, having been established in the midst of South Africa’s political turmoil, in the mid-80s.  The intention of CECS was to support and empower historically disadvantaged South Africans by providing them with skills to which they would have had minimal opportunity – if any – to gain.  It is, perhaps, quite extraordinary that this non-profit organisation has weathered the storms of political instability, the financial crises, and also the difficulties experienced for local non profits when many large donor agencies slowly began withdrawing, or reducing, financial support in the early 2000s.  However, CECS has remained a viable organisation, and this year it is in the process of successfully completing a bold, widely-scoped project that aims to provide tools and resources for Grade 12 Maths educators.

A tool for every teacher:  a mixed bag of tools and resources

The project, which is supported by SAFIPA, seeks to provide a fully comprehensive offering for Grade 12 educators, by including the promotion of ICT training for teachers to enable them to both use and create digital Maths resources; by establishing a central dissemination network through which free and open Maths content can be uploaded and accessed; and to develop a multi-platform Maths application that will be web- and mobile-based.  It is envisioned that the Maths Portal will also serve as a collaborative platform for educators, NGOs, education authority decision-makers, teacher training service providers and digital resource service providers and content developers.  This portal will be the preferred, central repository for Maths education resources.

The project’s goals have been achieved by training workshops, train-the-trainer interventions, the production of training videos for educators, the production of screencasts, an investigation into the development of a dissemination channel for the Communal Maths Basket (CO.M.B), gathering FOSS applications and including these on a CD-Rom for educators, facilitating networking for educators, and creating and promoting the Maths portal.
(more…)

S@ID combining innovation, education & social media

“The Educational Cluster initiative is an innovative response, one that is based on collaboration and ‘new media’ to link together interested stakeholders from Government departments and educational agencies, academic institutions, FET colleges, content developers, content providers, infrastructure providers, donor organisations, NGOs, regional business as well as local community leaders.”

The S@ID cluster met in late January with interested stakeholders to plot a way forward for what is still an informal grouping.  Fifty-five people, some of whom came from the Eastern and Western Cape, gathered at the CSIR Meraka Institute for the meeting, despite the major thunderstorm that had descended on Pretoria that morning; according to Dave Lockwood of Naledi3d, a good omen for the organisation!

Diversity of participation – reflecting a real need

A wide range of people, from diverse backgrounds and sectors were represented at the workshop, including stakeholders from large corporations such as Intel, SAP, Microsoft and Vodacom, and over twenty companies representing the SMME sector such as Naledi3d, Learnscapes and Moveecom.  Similarly, non-profit organisations were also represented by organisations such as the Association for Progressive Communication (APC), Mindset, Young Engineers and Scientists of Africa (YESA), CampusNet, and Digi-Connect.  Donor agencies, such as the International Development Research Centre (IDRC) of Canada, were also at the meeting, and government was represented by national and provincial departments such as the Department for Public Service and Administration (DPSA), the Department of Public Social Services (DPSS), and the Tshwane Municipality respectively.  Academic institutions were visible at the workshop such as the Tshwane University of Technology (TUT), and the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits), and government agencies were also present.

The workshop hoped to build on the purpose of the Educational Cluster initiative which is, as outlined in the invitation to stakeholders, to provide an essential link between the private sector and Government agencies in the form of public-private dialogue and partnerships, to address skills shortages at the national level and also to address the needs of regional economies and businesses more effectively.  Thus the workshop’s main objective was to build upon these aims by providing partners with a space to actively engage and begin dialogue around how to collaborate in new ways to
nurture improved skills development in the country.

(more…)

Nokia’s MoMaths adds up to success

A Dinaledi learner engages with MoMaths

For decades, Maths teachers throughout the world have been grappling with the problem of how to make the subject of Mathematics an interesting and relevant topic for kids. Now, Nokia’s mobile maths project appears to have found a winning solution. The project, which is now in its third year of existence, has gathered evidence that overwhelmingly points to successful uptake and ownership by local learners who indicate a newly acquired enthusiasm and enjoyment of Maths. These results are astounding researchers involved in the evaluation of the project, one of whom claims that in twenty years of research into how to harness technology for education and knowledge transfer, this level of positive learner response has never been experienced.

Talking to Riitta Vanska, the project lead of MoMaths, enthusiasm for the project is certainly contagious. Riitta, who is based in Finland and works as the Senior Manager of Mobile Learning Solutions within the Sustainability Operations of Nokia’s Corporate Social Responsibility arm, has almost single-handedly steered the project. Her passion, drive and commitment are boundless. Riitta stresses that this project is not a ‘content push’ but rather aims to build learners’ confidence in order for them to harness their own capabilities and, in a way, manage their own learning destinies.

Yet how has MoMaths achieved this? The answer is beguilingly simple: MoMaths awakens the competitive spirit. Learners are encouraged to compete – but here is the interesting catch – with themselves. This ‘solution’ came largely through having to think out-of-the-box: without being able to use smart phones and the more sophisticated mobile applications, due to the pilot learners using low-end phones, the team had to think about what would be at the core of getting children excited about learning. They stripped it back to a sense of personal fulfillment and achievement. Thus, learners are encouraged to better their scores on quizzes, practice exercises and tests. Of course, there is also competition amongst their peers; this is only natural, but the self-improvement and self-actualisation that the project awakens in each learner is a personal achievement.

Harnessing learner enthusiasm via MXiT

Another plus to MoMaths is that it happens where the learners are to be found, namely on the popular mobile chat channel called MXiT. This is not unique: a number of other learning initiatives use MXiT to connect with learners, recognising that this popular mobile platform is where learners spend a great deal of their free time.

(more…)

Local education projects show commitment to working together to strengthen their goals

While in Finland, a number of the participants on the SAFIPA Knowledge Exchange Trip came to the realisation that the way in which people in Finland interact, share information and collaborate was a wake-up call which motivated them to embark on a path of discovery, cooperation, integration and innovation.  They strongly feel that these activities are capable of moving education in South Africa in a positive new direction.

Keith Maree  from CampusNet, Ron Beyers of Young Engineers and Scientists of Africa, Leon van der Merwe from LearnScapes, JanHendrik Oosthuizen from Trydian Interactive and Dave Lockwood who heads up the Naledi 3D Factory, have recently come together to found the South African Alliance for ICT and Development Education Cluster.

Inspiration from Finnish innovation practices

Based on the Finnish approach to innovation, collaboration and discovery, the South African Alliance for ICT and Development Education Cluster, established in 2010, offers a new way to tackle the education challenges facing South Africa, through dialogue and project collaboration.

Education, training and skills development at all levels of society remain high on the national agenda and few would disagree that there is a willingness to identify more efficient and accessible ways to meet this need and to promote a broader culture of learning, skills development and responsible citizens. Education is a powerful way to address poverty alleviation.  Many education projects, however, explore new approaches and technologies in isolation, leading to one major difficulty – that of sustainable replication.

Educational Cluster goals

The Educational Cluster initiative is an innovative response, one that is based on collaboration and “new media” to link together interested stakeholders from Government departments and educational agencies, academic institutions, FET colleges, content developers, content providers, infrastructure providers, donor organisations, non-profit organisations, regional business as well as local community leaders. Thus, through the Educational Cluster, partners can collectively engage and collaborate in new ways that can nurture improved skills development in the country. (more…)

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The SAFIPA Newsletter

The final SAFIPA Newsletter, Spring 2011

This is the final edition of the SAFIPA newsletter. The month of November 2011, marks the conclusion of this dynamic initiative.



This newsletter pays tribute to the SAFIPA programme in the form of commentary and insights gathered during the very successful SAFIPA 2011 Conference. Project partners from the MFA, DST and CSIR Meraka Insitute applaud the programme. And SAFIPA supported projects have a final opportunity to showcase their innovations and processes.



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