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Discovery Channel Global Education Partnership

Country

Angola, Mexico, Namibia, Nigeria, Peru, Romania, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, Venezuela, Zimbabwe

Region

Africa, Latin America, Eastern Europe and Central Asia

Programme Summary

Launched in 1997, the United-States-based Discovery Channel Global Education Partnership (DCGEP) is a non-profit organisation led by Discovery Communications, which brings together partners from the public and private sectors to support an international grassroots education and technology project serving populations left out of the information age. DCGEP's flagship programme, the Learning Center Initiative, involves providing under-resourced schools and communities with access to educational television and video, along with the training and monitoring thought necessary to enable such educational programming to become self-sustaining in each context. This effort to bridge the global information divide with tools and training is designed to reach children, teachers, parents, local HIV/AIDS and health care organisations, community development groups, and others who seek to receive or distribute information via television and video.

Communication Strategies

This initiative draws on information and communication technologies (ICTs) - in particular, television - in an effort to enhance learning and understanding, share new ideas, honour traditions, and stimulate a sense of community at a local and global level. Television is envisioned by the Partnership as a powerful tool in that it: reaches large groups of people at one time and in their own language, communicates effectively to young children and illiterate adults, conveys information simply and accurately, and is easy to operate and sustainable over time.

DCGEP's core approach for providing ICT tools for education- and community-based learning and exchange is attention to local context. As part of the process of providing these tools to foster access to knowledge and information, DCGEP begins its work in a new country by meeting with national and local education officials and other community stakeholders to plan the establishment of Learning Centers in a way that will most appropriately address the needs of that particular community. These Learning Centers are established in existing structures, such as in a school or community centre, a clinic, library, or mobile van. Locations are selected and set up to suit the context; for example, DCGEP worked with local organisation Rural Libraries for Resource Development (RLRDP) to set up a Learning Center in Zimbabwe in a donkey-drawn cart. Since it can difficult for vehicles to travel in some parts of Zimbabwe, RLRDP has been using donkey power to bring information and education to schools and communities in Matabeleland North since 1990; DCGEP helped RLRDP to modify its cart design to hold a solar-powered TV and VCR in addition to library books. RLRDP and DCGEP train cart drivers to facilitate learning through literature and TV/video resources. Surrounding communities have shared the resources by developing a circuit for the donkey carts and a timetable for school and community use.

In addition to providing actual ICT equipment, DCGEP offers original educational video programming, which is developed collaboratively with each community to complement local educational curricula. In developing this programming, language customisation (translation into local languages) is key, and DCGEP includes footage from local communities, private and public organisations, and government agencies; the idea is that familiar words and images can help make programming more accessible and relevant to local audiences. That said, in an attempt to bring subjects such as science, nature, history, and geography "to life" in a vibrant (yet still relevant way), the programming is designed to expose participants to that which is new and different, such as by experiencing other lands, other cultures, and even parts of their own countries to which they may not otherwise have access. DCGEP also provides additional sources of programming, such as free-to-air local television, satellite services, and videos from a range of local and international organisations.

Face-to-face capacity-building and monitoring activities - which also draw on participatory strategies - are thought to be central to the sustainability of the Learning Centers. DCGEP offers 3 years of teacher training and monitoring, which is regularly modified based on collaboration with local community members and education experts. The goal is to prepare teachers to use video interactively and creatively as part of a student-centred approach, as well as to help them tie the programming to their daily curricular objectives. Locally-adapted teacher resource guides help instructors use the programmes in support of their teaching objectives. Training is also designed to equip educators to draw on television to support specific community interests. For example, in Peru and Mexico, videos used during the day for students have reportedly stimulated discussions during parents' workshops on family values, parenting, government, and a variety of other topics. Regular monitoring is offered in an effort to encourage educators to develop their own ideas for using the technology and programming, and to work toward creating a sustainable community resource.

Development Issues

Education.

Key Points

Currently (July 2008), there are 221 Learning Centers serving 610,875 students around the world. Countries served include Angola, Mexico, Namibia, Peru, Romania, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, Venezuela, Zimbabwe, and Nigeria, with expansion into 5 new countries – Brazil, Egypt, Ghana, Kenya, Morocco. To read about specific local Learning Centers in more detail, please visit the Partnership's online interactive project map.) A total of 8,988 teachers have been trained. The Partnership is engaged in an effort to establish 1,000 new Learning Centers to serve an additional 1 million students.

In 2003, DCGEP commissioned an independent evaluation of the Learning Center project in the 3 most mature project countries, South Africa, Uganda, and Zimbabwe. Some of the specific findings include:

  • improvements in student motivation, concentration and memory (in particular, the ability to grasp abstract concepts), and English language and creativity skills;
  • increased access to teaching aids, increased use of a variety of teaching tools by teachers, and improved teacher professional development;
  • increased parent and community involvement in schools; and
  • increased enrolment and attendance, retention rates, and pass rates on matriculation exams (in some schools).

Partners

Click here for a list of the individuals and organisations who have supported DCGEP.

Contact

Discovery Channel Global Education Partnership (DCGEP)

One Discovery Place

Silver Spring MD
20910-3354
United States
Tel: 1 240 662 2986
Fax: 1 240 662 1847

Source

Discovery Channel Global Education Partnership brochure; DCGEP website; and emails from Ellen Henderson-Madhavan to The Communication Initiative on April 5 and April 6 2007, on October 31 2007, on March 20 2008, and on September 18 2008.


Placed on the Communication Initiative site March 30 2007
Last Updated September 18 2008

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