News Release: mobile learning course for African refugee teachers

RAMZI ABDURRAHMAN AFTER SEVERAL YEARS OF TRAINING TEACHERS IS CO- PRESENTING A VIDEO SERIES TO HELP UNTRAINED TEACHERS TO IMPROVE THEIR CLASSROOM SKILLS.

RAMZI ABDURRAHMAN AFTER SEVERAL YEARS OF TRAINING TEACHERS IS CO- PRESENTING A VIDEO SERIES TO HELP UNTRAINED TEACHERS TO IMPROVE THEIR CLASSROOM SKILLS.

30 March 2020

A new mobile phone video course will improve the classroom skills of teachers who cannot attend training. Aimed initially at teachers in refugee schools, the filming was completed in Ethiopia earlier this year and the course is now being assembled by Digital Learning Associates for The British Council. The course will be delivered to teachers on their mobile phones, printed on micro SD cards. Initially 2000 teachers will take the 8-unit course. Video is the instruction method, and each unit shows leading local teachers demonstrating core techniques.

Filmed in February 2020 at two refugee camps near Ethiopia’s Sudanese border, the materials show a group of stronger teachers working under normal conditions in schools of up to 4000 students with class sizes around 100. Under the Language for Resilience programme, trainers have worked in the camps with selected teachers for over two years. These trainers host the videos, appearing as online tutors and presenting the best aspects of localised teaching. 

In one unit, trainer Ramzi Abdurrahman (pictured) hosts a film in which different examples of good blackboard teaching techniques are shown and explained. Other units cover topics such as using songs, games and stories in classrooms, or methods like group work and pair work. 

Editing the units is now underway and Digital Learning Associates will have the training courses in the field by September 2020 in time for the new school year. The course is based on a successful pilot of two films produced in 2019 and distributed in schools on micro-SD cards. These demonstrated a positive impact on teacher skills. Ethiopia is home to roughly 1mn refugees from neighbouring countries and improvement of teaching quality and language skills in refugee schools is supported by the British Council’s Language for Resilience programme and UNHCR. Digital Learning Associates works also in English language resources for use in India by State teachers and for Rohingya refugee teachers in Bangladesh.

Director of Digital Learning Associates Stephen Haggard commented “Video allows volunteers who themselves have little education to see effective methods and follow it. The mobile screen is everywhere in Africa, even in the refugee camps, and we can use it to show good practice to every teacher working in these schools.”

Contact for more information: mail@digitallearningassociates.com 

Notes

There is a shortfall of over 10mn teachers on the African continent (UNESCO, 2018). On nearly all measures the effectiveness of teaching in African schools ranks among the lowest in the world (University of Bristol, Research Report, 2016)

Keeping students engaged online

 
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Remote teaching throws up lots of challenges and one of the top ones is keeping students engaged. Our award winning Ready to Run ELT videos are made to engage and inspire English learners whether in classrooms or online.

In this week’s new release we tell the story of Heston Blumental’s quest to make gourmet space food for astronaut Tim Peake as he orbits the Earth on the ISS. It’s the sort of video story students will love watching and it’s also a fully graded B1+ ELT resource. Check out how Heston gets on here using password Eduvideo and look at another 120 equally compelling videos in our catalogue here

  We are launching new videos throughout Spring and Summer 2020 so keep watching this space.

Try out the Ready to Run platform here https://digitallearningassociates.com/ready-to-run/

Inspiring. Engaging. Effective 

How ELT teaching is going online during Covid-19. Data from Ready to Run

Is ELT teaching frozen by Covid-19 school closures? Or is there a transformation as classes go online? What’s the impact of suddenly closed borders on demand for the language of global mobility? The Ready to Run graded video library used by ELT teachers has some answers. 

Since countries began closing schools in mid-March, here’s what we can see from teachers’ use of Ready to Run authentic video and lesson resources for English language classes. 

  • Surge in use at the weekend of 14-15 March. Especially in the countries that closed their borders on Saturday or Sunday - including Slovenia, Slovakia and Poland. 

  • A strong rise in before-and-after school hours use. For example: the day after Greece ordered the closure of its schools, a teacher in the largest Greek chain of language schools started a subscription at 07.35 and had got the material for six lessons by 07.45. 

So we can guess that subscribing teachers are urgently looking for lesson material for online and remote teaching - and video is the quickest and surest way to anchor a remote classroom. 

Ready to Run covers all ELT topics but we’ve seen a spike in the streaming of some videos. 

  • Life in a Japanese High School is a vlogger video that introduces core vocabulary and grammar about schools. We guess it’s for speaking activities on school closures.

  • Tati’s Morning Routine sees a student vlogger describe her get-up and get-started routine. We think teachers are delivering language around habits and staying at home. 

ELT teachers online seem to be wanting to engage with young people's lives in the pandemic. 

The morning routine of tati, a student, is a popular Vlog for online classes this week

The morning routine of tati, a student, is a popular Vlog for online classes this week

Ready to Run is contacting and supporting teachers who frequently use the resources, giving tips for screencasting, and video advice on managing remote ELT classes. It seems schools are relieved to know about online options: a teacher in The Bridge, a large Slovakian ELT schools chain wrote to us today: “it is very reassuring to know we can use them also remotely and we are allowed to mail them to students or use in our online lessons”.


Ready to Run is available worldwide with authentic videos for the full ELT syllabus at all CEFR levels. Access to one video per level is free, and £1.99 gets a month’s worth of video at any chosen CEFR level. Contact for enquiries: mail@digitallearningassociates.com