ELT World » uganda Your local friendly TEFL blog Fri, 04 Jun 2010 05:32:55 +0000 http://wordpress.org/?v=2.9.1 en hourly 1 Uganda lays mother-tongue foundations /2009/05/uganda-lays-mother-tongue-foundations/ /2009/05/uganda-lays-mother-tongue-foundations/#comments Wed, 27 May 2009 12:04:23 +0000 david /news/?p=398 Uganda: The first-language teaching policy highlights the rural-urban education divide, notes the Guardian. On a hot Friday afternoon at Katine primary school, in north-east Uganda, Santa Awiyo points her large wooden ruler at the blackboard as her year-three pupils chant the words she has written in white chalk. ” Idwe pore ngapo, igwen me sukulu gi . . . ” The paragraph, written in Kumam, the local dialect of this rural region, refers to the importance of school uniform and is part of a lesson that combines language and social studies.

Read on…

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Technology for Innovation and Education in Developing Countries /2008/05/technology-for-innovation-and-education-in-developing-countries/ /2008/05/technology-for-innovation-and-education-in-developing-countries/#comments Tue, 13 May 2008 09:50:00 +0000 david /2008/05/technology-for-innovation-and-education-in-developing-countries/ 5th International Workshop: July 31 – August 2, 2008, Kampala, Uganda

Just one of the many elephants that will be in attendance
Just one of the many elephants that will be in attendance
One strictly for the locals I fear but it may be worth a try if you’re feeling lucky and you catch your boss in a good mood. The goal of this fifth international workshop will be to bring together interested parties to discuss various issues involved in developing new techniques and on novel uses of technology for innovation and education in developing countries.

This conference aims to have a unique combination of academics, community outreach, and connection with nature. There is one main conference day, followed by an outreach day and a national park day, whatever that might entail.

Click here for registration details.

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Teaching English in Africa /2008/03/teaching-english-in-africa-2/ /2008/03/teaching-english-in-africa-2/#comments Sat, 29 Mar 2008 06:22:00 +0000 david /2008/03/teaching-english-in-africa-2/ After yesterday’s Euro news marathon, it’s high time I turned my attention to the TEFL scene in Africa:

South Africa: Speaking the Language of Hope by Teaching English

Through training the Themba women in English, Neilson Young Consulting (NYC) hopes to do more than teach them the basics of a new language. Rather, through building communication ability and confidence, the company seeks to further the Themba mission of instilling hope and dignity. It brings a tear to the eye, it really does.

Read the full story…

In Nigeria’s Ornate Brand of English, Victorian Words Dance With African Grammar

Nigerian English melds Victorian-era vocabulary inherited from long-gone British colonialists with the grammatical structures and syntax that underpin indigenous languages in Africa’s most populous nation. The results can be ornate, oddly understated, or remarkably apt. But in a rapidly globalizing world, some worry that Nigerians will be handicapped by an English that differs from the language of board rooms and Internet bulletin boards. Get rid of the bloody chat rooms if you ask me.

Read the full story…

Uganda: Teaching in Local Languages Good Policy

The idea of teaching in local languages in lower primary school classes followed recommendations from a number of researchers. The 2004 Tony Reed report on the review of primary curriculum pointed out that “generally children learn faster if early education is conducted in a familiar language”.Er, perhaps I am missing something here, or is someone getting paid for stating the bleeding obvious?

Read the full story…

Ghana: New English Teaching Techniques Out

A new methodology (ooooh, I’m foaming at the mouth with excitement) for the teaching and learning of the English language has been launched in Accra by the International English Language Teaching Commission. The commission seeks to replace the present methodology which it considers cumbersome and full of technicalities (with another equally cumbersome and full of technicalities, if my experience is anything to go by).

Read the full story…

Yemen: Curriculum Reform Project to train English language teachers

Graduation ceremonies for English language teachers participating in the Curriculum Reform Project was (sic) held on Tuesday afternoon at the headquarters of the Ministry of Education. Participants in the project received certificates of qualification for the first and second stages of teaching English language to students at the elementary, preparatory and secondary levels of education. Very proud we are of them, too.

Read the full story…

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Teaching English in Africa /2008/03/teaching-english-in-africa/ /2008/03/teaching-english-in-africa/#comments Fri, 28 Mar 2008 12:19:50 +0000 david /news/?p=10 After yesterday’s Euro news marathon, it’s high time I turned my attention to the TEFL scene in Africa:

Through training the Themba women in English, Neilson Young Consulting (NYC) hopes to do more than teach them the basics of a new language. Rather, through building communication ability and confidence, the company seeks to further the Themba mission of instilling hope and dignity. It brings a tear to the eye, it really does.

Read the full story…

In Nigeria’s Ornate Brand of English, Victorian Words Dance With African Grammar

Nigerian English melds Victorian-era vocabulary inherited from long-gone British colonialists with the grammatical structures and syntax that underpin indigenous languages in Africa’s most populous nation. The results can be ornate, oddly understated, or remarkably apt. But in a rapidly globalizing world, some worry that Nigerians will be handicapped by an English that differs from the language of board rooms and Internet bulletin boards. Get rid of the bloody chat rooms if you ask me.

Read the full story…

Uganda: Teaching in Local Languages Good Policy

The idea of teaching in local languages in lower primary school classes followed recommendations from a number of researchers. The 2004 Tony Reed report on the review of primary curriculum pointed out that “generally children learn faster if early education is conducted in a familiar language”.Er, perhaps I am missing something here, or is someone getting paid for stating the bleeding obvious?

Read the full story…

Ghana: New English Teaching Techniques Out

A new methodology (ooooh, I’m foaming at the mouth with excitement) for the teaching and learning of the English language has been launched in Accra by the International English Language Teaching Commission. The commission seeks to replace the present methodology which it considers cumbersome and full of technicalities (with another equally cumbersome and full of technicalities, if my experience is anything to go by).

Read the full story…

Yemen: Curriculum Reform Project to train English language teachers

Graduation ceremonies for English language teachers participating in the Curriculum Reform Project was (sic) held on Tuesday afternoon at the headquarters of the Ministry of Education. Participants in the project received certificates of qualification for the first and second stages of teaching English language to students at the elementary, preparatory and secondary levels of education. Very proud we are of them, too.

Read the full story…

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