Community Help for Inclusive Learning and Development (CHILD): A Study of How Mobile Phones Were Used to Recruit and Equip Community Volunteers to Support Children’s Learning During Covid-19 School Closures in Zimbabwe.
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By mid-March 2020, 107 governments around the world had instructed
schools to close their doors to learners, still more closed clusters of
schools in particular areas. Record numbers of children found themselves
‘out of school’. UNESCO predicts ‘devastating’ impacts from long-term
disruption to education.
While many technology-centred
initiatives were launched in response to Covid school closures, an
equitable educational response must recognise that in low and
middle-income countries most of these ‘out of school’ children are
offline. In Sub-Saharan Africa, most disadvantaged children will not
have access to TV or radio to continue their learning. How then to
design alternative arrangements for girls’ learning and to maintain
children’s identity as learners?
In this paper, we explore how
a collective sense of responsibility for education was activated and
supported in remote communities in Zimbabwe, and how this re-shaped
local understanding of educational practices. We examine the experiences
of those involved to address the overarching research question: ‘In the
context of pandemic disease and widespread school closures across
Sub-Saharan Africa, how can young people in disadvantaged rural
communities be supported, locally and from a distance, to maintain
engagement in educational activities?’
Funding
EdTech Hub Research Grant
History
Research Group
Centre for Research in Education and Educational Technology (CREET)