smile symposium presentation

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SMILE in Newala, Tanzania

Elizabeth Buckner Seeds of EmpowermentPaul Kim Stanford University

Our Mission

• We aim to bring mobile technology to students in rural Tanzania to increase learning, reduce the achievement gap and bridge the digital divide.

• But, we have learned that hardware alone is not enough.

• We couple mobile technology with innovative pedagogical practices to improve the learning environment as well as students’ engagement and achievement.

Inquiry Based Learning

• Being told something is not the same as knowing it.

• Teachers lecturing does not necessarily lead to student learning.

• Memorization is not an education – you cannot memorize the information you need in life.

• Creativity, problem-solving, and critical thinking are the most important skills we can develop among children.

• Children learn best by doing – by asking and answering questions they engage with their own learning, and begin to teach themselves.

The SMILE Project

• SMILE is an assessment tool and inquiry maker which allows students to quickly create own inquiries based on their own ideas, curriculum and curiosity.

• SMILE runs as an application on smart phones.

• Two versions of SMILE (SMILE ad-hoc and SMILE Global). • SMILE ad-hoc can be set up to run on mobile phones

in physical classrooms (off line).• SMILE Global uses the Internet to connect to other

students’ globally.

Overview: SMILE network structure

Teacher Management Application

Creating and Solving Questions in SMILE

Benefits of SMILE

• Provides a technological platform to promote student-centered learning

• Creates highly interactive learning environment

• Engages learners in analyzing their own learning

• Allows students to generate, share, and evaluate multimedia-rich inquiries

• Facilitates evaluation of peer inquiries

• Encourages team collaboration and competition

Testing SMILE in NewalaFrom Silicon Valley to Mtwara Region…..

SMILE-Tanzania

• One pilot school in Newala District, which is one of the poorest and least resourced regions in country.

• As part of the Seeds’-Stanford SMILE project, we provide notebook computers, one projector, and 25 smart mobile phones to the school.

• We worked with the school and teachers to run a 10-day workshop that introduces devices and student-centered pedagogical practices.

• Project carried out in partnership with Jiamini, a local NGO.

Nangwanda Secondary School

• Nangwanda Secondary School serves ~600 students, in Form 1-6.

• 73% of Form 4 students fail, of those who pass, all receive Division IV. (35 pass, 94 fail).

• School ranked 2774/3108 in Tanzania.

• Nangwanda Secondary is representative of many of the issues teachers and students face in Tanzania.

Who are the students?

Sample Group: 139 students from Form 1

Age: 14.4, ranging from 12-18

Males: 71 males (51.1%)

Females: 68 females (48.9%)

What we do… 1) Technology Infusion

2) Student Centered Pedagogy

3) SMILE Mobile Application

3) Teacher Technology Trainings

4) Follow-Up The SMILE –Seeds’ Team with School Principal and participating English teachers.

Technology Infusion…

Before• Electricity wired in only

one classroom

• No laptops

• No desktop computers

• No projector

• No speakers

After• 3 Notebook ($350 ea.)

• 2 Local Routers ($70 ea.)

• 25 LG Android mobile phones ($100 ea.) loaded with SMILE, StoryMaker, ESL videos, and ~50 educational games.

• 1 Projector ($380 ea.)

• Internet USB (Airtel. $30 ea.)

• Headphones ($5 ea.)

• PA system ($150 ea.)

Bridging the Digital Divide

Mobile ExplorationWe ask students to explore mobile devices. We do not teach them how to use them initially. This encourages curiosity and discovery. Students learn very quickly and teach each other.

Team Collaboration and Competition We encouraged small group work and organized small group collaborations.

Encouraging CreativityWe ask students to read stories, write their own stories, and record their stories on mobile devices and make questions regarding the stories using SMILE.

Student Centered Pedagogies

Encouraging Question-Making

We ask students to write their own multiple choice questions.

We run small competitions between peers to evaluate and rate each others’ questions. This encourages self-reflection.

Inquiry is not a pedagogical practice encouraged in most classrooms in Tanzania, but with some practice, students became more creative and incorporated pictures and drawings into their questions.

Student Centered Pedagogies

Using SMILE to ask questions….

Students compose questions in English and KiSwahili. They type them into the program.

They solve each others questions.

SMILE: Inquiry, Collaboration, Competition, Responding, and

Reflection• Student inquiry promotes creativity and thinking.

•Collaboration encourages teamwork and sharing of ideas during the inquiry process.

• Competition in small groups encourages students to do their best in group activities.

• Responding to student generated questions encourages students to review material, and pushes their thinking. • Evaluating quality of all questions encourages reflection of what makes a good question.

Teacher Training

• We ran a series of teacher training workshops every afternoon.

• We gave an overview of laptop computers, email, mobile devices, SMILE applications.

• We encourage teachers to innovate with their use of technological resources.

How did students and teachers respond?

• Teachers were able to take over running sessions after observing 3 sessions.

• Students able to grasp the mechanical aspects of the technology, quickly. It took about 3 sessions for students to feel comfortable navigating smart phones.

• Students were able to take photos and videos and add them into their inquiries.

• Teachers were active in coming up with their own ideas about how to use the technology in their classrooms.

Sample Student Questions

• What is the solar system?

• Who is the President of America?

Sample Student Questions

Question:

What is science?

Teacher:

Leads discussion on whether this is a good question, asks: is it properly written in English, is it creative?

Follow – Up

• Teachers and Principal have agreed to carry out a SMILE workshop at least once a week for the next six months, in different classrooms.

• Stanford will monitor how technology is being used and how student inquiry improves over time.

• Stanford provides regular email support and support with any troubleshooting of technology

• One follow-up visit to Tanzania is planned in 6-months.

Takeaways

• SMILE is simple enough to work in under-resourced areas.

• Relatively rapid deployment, even when students have never touched smart phones.

• Replicable and scalable

• SMILE facilitates a paradigm shift by combining technology and pedagogy.

• Teachers are willing and able to take it on; teachers have innovative and creative ways of using technology (video, capturing tools)

Takeaways

• Mobile phones are relatively easy to maintain; durable in areas with fewer resources.

• Mobile phones are less susceptible to electrical failure and environmental challenges.

• Relatively cost-effective, when compared to computer labs.

• 100,000+ free mobile applications from open source network, easy to target to local needs

Looking to the Future

The critical elements needed to incorporate SMILE into schools:• Mobile devices: SMILE is highly effective even with

a ratio of one device per three learners.• Application localization and development

(translation and development). • Facilitator workshops to train and empower

teachers to use technology.• Monitoring and evaluation.• SMILE works best when it is a collaborative effort

between Ministry officials, civil society organizations and universities.

Thank you! Asante Sana!

Contact

Please feel free to email me at any time.

Paul Kim phkim@stanford.edu

Elizabeth Buckner ebuckner@stanford.edu

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