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Technical Internet MentoringCountryCambodia RegionGlobal, Africa, South East and East Asia, North America Programme SummarySponsored by the British Columbia Institute of Technology (BCIT), the Technical Internet Mentoring (TIM) project aims to develop new practices in the use of educational technologies. The TIM Project is a proposed internet-based web page providing technical data and mentoring for both students and practitioners in the field of drinking water engineering, chemistry and microbiology; the goal is to enable students and volunteer mentors to discuss issues related to the production and presence of clean drinking water. A 3-phase project, TIM will be accessible over the internet to: technical students at BCIT (Phase I); students of technical institutes worldwide (Phase II); and, as the web page becomes increasingly sophisticated, drinking water technologists in developing regions (Phase III). As of 2006, TIM was in its first phase - having been launched by Professor Peter Nix in his BCIT classroom. Communication StrategiesThe TIM project is an internet-based education-focused community of practice that is designed to be a cost-free way to respond to the "bottom-up" needs of people struggling to obtain clean drinking water (as opposed to the need, as organisers describe it, of development-based organisations to control the internet). On the TIM website, students are expected to be able to access: TIM aims to provide 3 components of learning and development through its mentoring capabilities: After its pilot phase, which was carried out in the classroom at BCIT (and which also involved the building of links to two universities in Cambodia with the hope of undertaking a second pilot project in 2006), BCIT hopes to be able to sponsor TIM to provide technical mentoring for students throughout the world. The plan for implementation is: Development IssuesClean Water, Environment, Natural Resource Management. Key PointsAccording to the developer, TIM could provide a practical, problem-solving, accessible teaching tool for students in any setting (i.e., classroom, fieldwork, home). Ultimately, it might provide a valued development tool for countries/regions that need help in solving small technical problems. Students or practitioners could stay in contact with TIM during their entire careers to: 1) maintain and develop their own professional expertise; and, 2) donate their skills by mentoring to people in their community of practice in the developing world in a fast, interactive manner, avoiding the bureaucratic costs and delays of formal development projects. Such a site would be administered by a not-for-profit NGO (preferably linked to an existing NGO) to support the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) of universal access to safe drinking water quality throughout the world. ContactSourceEmails from Peter Nix to The Communication Initiative, November 7 2005 and August 10 2006. Placed on the Communication Initiative site July 10 2006 Last Updated August 20 2008 |
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