Abstract
This paper reports on the development and outcomes of the second phase of OER4Schools, a school-based professional development programme supporting interactive forms of subject teaching in conjunction with Open Educational Resources (OER) and technology in Zambian primary schools. We worked with partners to identify the needs of school-based continuing professional development adapted to the local context; the programme was based on participatory, collaborative and inquiry-based pedagogies for both classroom learning and teacher development. We worked over a one-year period with four experienced teachers in two basic (primary) schools serving disadvantaged communities. Data were collected from observations, interviews, surveys, lesson planning/review meetings and team workshops. All participants integrated OER and technology into mathematics and science lessons and developed more interactive practices, including collaborative learning. Professional dialogue, quality conversations, reflective practice, cultural sensitivity, peer learning and cooperation were pivotal mechanisms through which teachers shifted their focus from teaching (and teacher exposition) to student learning. Seeing students as capable individuals, teachers raised their expectations and developed insight into interactive practices such as group work, providing meaningful opportunities for student collaboration and active learning by all.
Acknowledgements
The authors are most grateful to the teachers and the two schools who participated in our trials. Thanks also to Riikka Hofmann for useful comments on an earlier draft.
Notes
2. The focus of this paper is on the CPD aspects of our programme, rather than on infrastructure and information and communications technologies (covered in more depth in a forthcoming technical report).
3. A clip from this lesson showing a teacher talking through a ratio exercise on the tablets using the Visual Mapping tool is available online: http://sms.cam.ac.uk/media/1165259.
6. See http://orbit.educ.cam.ac.uk/wiki/Video/Geogebra-group-interaction.m4v. More clips from the lesson (http://orbit.educ.cam.ac.uk/wiki/Video/Abel_rectangles) provide additional context.
7. See http://www.oer4schools.org.
8. Note that schools without Internet access (or electricity) can use an offline (or print) version of the resource, although a media player is needed for playing the videos. A solar-powered technology solution is an option.