[kictanet] One subject, varying quality - We lack an accreditation system for ICT courses
Walubengo J
jwalu at yahoo.com
Thu Jun 25 08:40:33 EAT 2009
I agree that something is happening within the High-School teaching fraternity. Last April, Multimedia University College trained 80 high school headteachers from Samburu and I think Transmara Districts, giving them basic ICT skills...am aware Strathmore University, IAT etc also do such trainings regularly...It may not be enough, but its definitely a good kick in the right direction.
As for the University Level IT faculty staff. Unfortunately the statistics are likely to be true. You can count the number of IT Professors in this country on your three fingers ;-)
walu.
--- On Wed, 6/24/09, Barnabas K. Sang <bksang at education.go.ke> wrote:
> From: Barnabas K. Sang <bksang at education.go.ke>
> Subject: Re: [kictanet] One subject, varying quality - We lack an accreditation system for ICT courses
> To: jwalu at yahoo.com
> Cc: "KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions" <kictanet at lists.kictanet.or.ke>
> Date: Wednesday, June 24, 2009, 11:32 PM
>
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> Betty,
>
>
>
> Thanks for your response on the article
> mentioned below. Will go
> through it and perhaps respond on key issues raised, which
> ICT in Education has
> already done or planned. I hope it will minimize fears all
> of us have or may be
> persuaded to think all is totally misplaced and lost.
>
>
>
>
> “ICT Integration” is currently Ministry
> of Education focus, and
> steps already put in place are expected to make Kenya
> improve both teaching and
> learning environment, with better education ‘products’
> across all levels.
>
>
>
> Kind regards
>
>
>
> B. K. Sang
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> From:
> kictanet-bounces+bksang=education.go.ke at lists.kictanet.or.ke
> [mailto:kictanet-bounces+bksang=education.go.ke at lists.kictanet.or.ke]
> On
> Behalf Of Betty Ogange
>
> Sent: Wednesday, June 24, 2009 4:31 PM
>
> To: Barnabas K. Sang
>
> Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions
>
> Subject: Re: [kictanet] One subject, varying quality
> - We lack an
> accreditation system for ICT courses
>
>
>
>
>
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>
>
> Hallo David,
> Last week there was furore in this forum
> about media
> misrepresentation of the Kenyan situation. The article
> that you make
> reference to in today’s Standard (24.06.09) may be
> accurate in the areas that
> you have highlighted. However, I wish to take issue with
> a few points raised
> in the article. http://www.eastandard.net/education/InsidePage.php?id=1144017693&cid=316
>
> ‘Unlike other academic fields, very
> little has been done
> to train most teachers in ICT skills. Currently, no
> primary teacher training
> college offers comprehensive pre-service training in
> information technology.’
>
> Anyone with a modest interest in education in
> Kenya would not
> miss something as obvious as a subject in the national
> curriculum when reporting
> in a national daily. Prior to the year 2004, a few
> colleges had ICT skills
> courses for pre-service teachers based on in-house
> curricula that were
> independently developed by each college. The Primary
> Teacher Education (PTE)
> ICT curriculum developed by the Kenya Institute of
> Education has been in
> force since the year 2004 and ICT is taught as a
> compulsory subject in all
> primary teacher training colleges. It is examined
> internally at the end of
> the first year and all students must pass in the subject,
> among other
> subjects, in order to proceed to second year. There are
> several
> implementation hitches in this programme arising from the
> fact that ICT is
> being taught as a discrete subject in the curriculum and
> has yet to be
> mainstreamed in the other subjects in the PTE curriculum.
> The debate around
> ICT- pedagogy integration in education and how to
> operationalise it right
> from curriculum development to classroom level
> implementation continues in
> the education circles.
>
> ‘In-service training is often
> provided by trainers who
> are just barely literate in
> computers’
>
> In my knowledge, this has happened especially
> in instances when
> some hardware providers ‘dangle’ teacher training as
> an additional offer to
> the institution. TTCs used to hire ICT technicians to
> teach the course, but
> in the last 2 years, the Teacher Service Commission has
> posted trained
> lecturers of ICT to a number of TTCs. There have also
> been some highly
> professional training offered to college lecturers by
> Microsoft (in
> conjunction with the Institute of Advanced Technology -
> IAT) and the Kenya
> Technical Teachers College. Computers for Schools Kenya
> and the Nepad
> e-schools teacher training programmes have also reached
> teachers in selected
> secondary schools. Lack of co-ordination (as with the
> rest of the ICT
> initiatives in Kenya ), lack of clear training targets
> and time-lines have
> compromised continuity and impact of some of these
> training programmes.
>
> ‘The
> entire ICT education is in tatters’
> An interesting analogy there. But I see a
> sector that is struggling
> with what some scholars in educational reform have called
> an ‘implementation
> dip’ – that for a number of reasons things normally
> tend to get worse before
> they can get better. There are lots of difficulties in
> implementing large
> scale ICT initiatives in the education sector world over.
> In our country,
> there have been positive efforts by the Ministry of
> Education, the KIE and a
> number of stakeholders in education, and these do count.
> On the other hand,
> there has been the tendency (by education leaders)
> towards elaborate policy
> documents, ‘ICT networks’ and trust funds whose
> mandates remain
> indeterminate. All these need to be researched and
> accurately presented.
>
> Accurate reporting by the media and objective
> analysis of both
> the positives and difficulties are important in helping
> the public target
> their attention and effort. Besides the inaccuracies, the
> use of expressions
> such as ‘in tatters’ ‘the situation is bad’,
> ‘alarmed professionals’
> ‘obsolete hardware’ to describe ICT in education in
> Kenya sounds to me fairly
> sensational.
>
> Betty
>
>
>
>
>
> --- On Wed, 6/24/09, David Otwoma
> <otwomad at gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>
> From: David Otwoma <otwomad at gmail.com>
>
> Subject: [kictanet] One subject, varying quality - We
> lack an accreditation
> system for ICT courses
>
> To: ogange at yahoo.com
>
> Cc: "KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions"
> <kictanet at lists.kictanet.or.ke>
>
> Date: Wednesday, June 24, 2009, 9:32 AM
>
>
> .....universities
> offer many degrees but their quality and market demand
> differ......
>
>
>
>
>
> Although
> nearly all universities offer degrees, only the
> University of Nairobi, Jomo
> Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology and
> Strathmore have
> Master’s programmes and only UON and Jkuat teach at
> doctoral level.
>
>
> There
> is a diminishing number of staff with PhDs in ICT
> departments. According to
> Prof Rodrigues, UoN has the highest number of full-time
> lecturers with PhDs
> in ICT that stands at eight of 18, while Jkuat has three
> of six, which is the
> same number for Strathmore.
>
>
> Kenyatta
> University has nine full-time but none of them have a PhD
> or an equivalent
> qualification, while none of the Kabarak’s eight
> lecturers have a PhD. Two of
> six of United States International University has
> doctoral degrees.
>
>
> Many
> lecturers have no experience as ICT professionals as
> engineers, software
> developers or in the emerging area of computer and
> network security.
>
>
>
>
>
> See http://www.eastandard.net/education/InsidePage.php?id=1144017693&cid=316&
> for full story
>
>
>
>
>
> --
>
> David Otwoma,
>
> Chief Science Secretary,
>
> National Council for Science and Technology,
>
> Utalii House 9th Floor,
>
> Mobile tel: +254 722 141771,
>
> Office tel: +254 (0)20 2346915,
>
> P. O. Box 5687 - 00100, Nairobi, Kenya
>
> email: otwomad at gmail.com & otwoma at ncst.go.ke
>
> www.ncst.go.ke
>
>
>
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