Your search
Results 16 resources
-
Developing sustainable and scalable educational initiatives is a key challenge in low-income countries where donor-funded short-term projects are limited by both contextual factors and programme design. In this commentary we examine some of the issues related to in-service teacher development in the context of sub-Saharan Africa, grounded predominantly in our work of over five years of iteratively developing, refining and evaluating an intensive school-based professional learning programme...
-
This article describes a five country (Cameroun, Egypt, Ghana, South Africa, Tanzania) study of ‘TVET Teacher Education in Africa’ that was commissioned in terms of an EU-South African collaboration in 2013. While the focus was on vocational teacher education, the contextual realities of each country‘s vocational systems was studied as this would impact on every aspect of vocational teacher development, for instance, what teachers would have to teach, who the students might be, how students...
-
© 2016 The Author(s). Background: Mental health literacy (MHL) is foundational for mental health promotion, prevention, stigma reduction, and care; School supported information pertaining to MHL in sub-Saharan Africa is extremely limited, including in Tanzania. Successful application of a school MHL curriculum resource may be an effective way to increase teacher MHL and therefore help to improve mental health outcomes for students. Methods: Secondary school teachers in Tanzania were trained...
-
This study has three broad objectives. Firstly, it seeks to compare experiences on the education and training of Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) teachers in South Africa, Egypt, Ghana, Tanzania, and Cameroon. Secondly, it seeks to get input from inspiring practices from European Member States. Lastly, policy pointers should be proposed for further action. This study was commissioned as part of the South Africa - EU Strategic Partnership sectoral policy dialogue in...
-
This baseline study has been undertaken to describe and analyse the current situation with respect to TVET, in order to evaluate the needs and the viability of employing open and distance Learning (ODL), and in particular eLearning in a flexible and blended approach. The main focus of the study is directed to that part of the system that is under the responsibility of the National Directorate for Technical and Professional Education (DINET) – namely the pre-tertiary level public-sector TVET...
-
This study aimed at establishing the challenges that may have affected the training of teachers through ODL at the Zimbabwe Open University. The study was carried out in order to put in place a model that may be implemented to improve the quality teacher training programme. The study adopted the case study design for the gathering the in-depth perceptions held by the given population. Questionnaires, telephone interviews and documentary analysis were adopted for data collection. The...
-
Apprenticeship in developed and industrialised nations is increasingly understood and practised as learning which connects workplace activity and formal study. The concept of 'expansive apprenticeship' defines frameworks for workforce development where participants acquire knowledge and skills which will help them in the future as well as in their current roles; 'restrictive' apprenticeships limit opportunities for wider, lifelong learning. In developing world economies, apprenticeships are...
-
While many countries in Eastern and Southern Africa are on track for meeting the Education for All targets, there is a growing recognition of the need to improve the quality of basic education and that a focus on pedagogy and its training implications needs to be at the heart of this commitment. By drawing on three East African countries, Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda, which are at different stages of development with regard to the reforming of teacher education, this paper explores the...
-
Internationally there has been concern about the direction of technical education and how it is positioned in schools. This has also been the case in Malawi where the curriculum has had a strong focus on skills development. However, lately there has been a call for enhancing technological literacy of students, yet little support has been provided for teachers to achieve this goal. This paper reports from a wider study that looked at teachers’ existing views and practices in technical...
-
The use of ICTs (information and communication technologies) in Zimbabwe’s teacher education colleges is of paramount importance. The teacher trainees have a dual role to play: learning through ICTs and also learning how to teach through them. Interestingly, the rate at which schools have embraced the use of ICTs is unprecedented, but this has not been matched with an equal effort by teacher education colleges and hence teacher trainees have been less exposed and trained in using such...
-
The underlying assumption to this paper is that learners' ability to appreciate the relevance of school science and its importance to socio-economic development of their communities to a large extent depends on the quality of instruction they receive from their teachers. A popular conundrum is that no country is greater than the calibre of its teachers. However, a sort of Mathew's principle of the "haves" having more and the "have-nots" losing even what they do have tends to hold. Hence,...
-
The world needs workers with more and better skills. Conventional apprenticeships and old methods of professional training are not providing enough skilled workers, so governments, companies and colleges are all using open and distance learning to fill these gaps. This unique international review of experience looks at the policies needed in both the private and the public sector for effective vocational education and training at all levels – from basic skills to continuing professional...
-
This article reports findings of a study conducted in Swaziland to determine computer literacy skills of teachers of agriculture, commerce, home economics and technical studies in 16 pilot vocational schools. These teachers are expected to teach the new vocationalised curriculum of the four subjects. Findings revealed that the teachers lacked the basic computer knowledge and skills needed in the newly vocationalised curriculum that was to be mounted in the year 2000 with the financial...
Explore
Our programmes
- Activating EdTech (Jordan) (1)
- EdTech Hub (1)
-
OER4Schools
(1)
- Publications (1)
-
TVET in sub-Saharan Africa (GOVET-BIBB-BMBF)
(16)
-
Citations
(16)
- Chapter 01. Introduction (2)
- Chapter 03. Overview (3)
- Chapter 04. Conception (3)
- Chapter 05. TVET Actors (5)
- Chapter 06. Themes (9)
- Chapter 07. Systematic Review (3)
- Chapter 08. Models (5)
- Chapter 09. Inclusion (2)
- Chapter 12. Standards (1)
- Chapter 13. Policy Implementation (2)
- Chapter 14. Institutional Frameworks (1)
- Appendix 1. Annotated Bibliography (4)
-
Citations
(16)
Organisations, collaborators and clients
Location
-
Africa
-
Southern Africa
- Botswana (1)
- eSwatini (1)
- Lesotho (1)
- Malawi (3)
- Mozambique (2)
- Namibia (1)
- South Africa (10)
- Eastern Africa (7)
- Middle Africa (3)
- Northern Africa (2)
-
Western Africa
(5)
- Ghana (5)
- Mali (1)
- Nigeria (3)
- Sierra Leone (1)
-
Southern Africa
-
Americas
(4)
-
Northern America
(3)
- Canada (2)
- United States (1)
- South America (3)
-
Northern America
(3)
-
Asia
(3)
- Eastern Asia (2)
-
South-eastern Asia
(3)
- Brunei Darussalam (1)
- Cambodia (1)
- Myanmar (1)
- Singapore (1)
- Thailand (1)
-
Southern Asia
(2)
- Afghanistan (1)
- Bangladesh (2)
- India (2)
- Iran (1)
- Pakistan (1)
-
Western Asia
(1)
- Iraq (1)
-
Europe
(4)
-
Northern Europe
(4)
- Denmark (1)
- Finland (1)
- Ireland (2)
- Sweden (1)
- United Kingdom (3)
-
Western Europe
(2)
- France (1)
- Netherlands (1)
- Switzerland (1)
-
Northern Europe
(4)
Publication year
- Between 2000 and 2024 (16)