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An
integrated training programme to set up technical service centres
in support of education in African schools
SchoolNet
Africa
June 22, 2004
Johannesburg
- Building
technical and managerial capacity among a community of African schoolnet
practitioners linked to the local establishment of technical service
centres as facilities for ICT access, refurbishment, deployment,
maintenance and teacher training for their educational use in schools,
forms the essence of SchoolNet Africa's Campaign for One Million
PCs for African Schools according to its Executive Director, Ms
Shafika Isaacs-Bardien. "Once we have an established management
and support system in place at local level, will we be able to process
large volumes of computers and related ICTs for use in schools",
she adds.
SchoolNet Africa,
(www.schoolnetafrica.net),
an African-led NGO which promotes learning and teaching through
the use of information and communication technologies (ICTs) in
African schools has just concluded the development of its training
course entitled Technical Service Centre Manager's Course in partnership
with the Open Society Initiative for Southern Africa (OSISA). This
comprehensive course, available in English and soon in French, covers
the spectrum of activities from sourcing and procuring PCs ( particularly
second-hand PCs), to setting up technical service centres as maintenance
and support centres, to the environmentally-responsible disposal
of end-of-life PCs, from an African perspective. It contains a wealth
of reference materials and case studies on the African experience
and integrates issues of gender equality, making it the first of
its kind in Africa.
The first 15
of a targeted 200 schoolnet practitioners has commenced their online
training on this course on Monday 14 June which will be followed
by a hands-on face to face training programme for one week on 12-16
July 2004 in Johannesburg. The training will lay the basis for the
set-up of schoolnet-based technical services centres in an estimated
10 African countries, starting with Mozambique, Malawi, Zambia and
Zimbabwe.
"We will
do more than just refurbish PCs. We will offer education solutions
to schools, provide maintenance and support, engage in teacher training
and educational content development", says Payton Sondashi
from Computers For Zambian Secondary Schools who is one of the programme's
participants.
The course is
available at www.schoolnetafrica.net/fileadmin/1MillionPCsTraining/Index.htm
For more information
contact Ms Sara Kyofuna at s.kyofuna@schoolnetafrica.org
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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