1. The practice
1.1 Description of the project
This plan has three main objectives:
- Meeting the challenges that differences in pupils’ circumstances represent
- Exploring the opportunities that ICT provides in work in schools with large numbers of pupils with different cultural and linguistic backgrounds
- Testing how ICT can help to create flexible and novel learning arenas for pupils and teachers
These aims are pursued throughout the provision of computers for the 3 schools involved and the implementation of training courses for teachers that have to learn to use computers. The school received the computers, with keyboard in Arabic, urdu, and other among the main language used by students. Every students received its own computer and the teacher carried out his/her lesson by using the ICT. Thanks to the supervision and training of ITU, teachers have been trained to the use of ICT and they learnt to plan their lesson throughout informal methods, able to appeal and to get the interest of students.
ICT equipment in the multicultural school helped the school itself to improve its status; children changed their perception of the school, which was not considered just as a school for migrants; the setting up of ICT stations in the schools help to change the status of the school which can represent itself as a modern and well equipped school. The results of national reading test can be quoted to underline results of this ICT provision Programme: in 2002, 42% of the students in seventh grade scored below the critical limit for reading comprehension. In 2004 this number was reduced to 25%. Common for all the four schools is a rise of interest and competence in questions related to cultural diversity, bilingualism and socialisation.
1.2 Time, structure and steps of the project
The Project started in 2000 after a research conducted by the University of Oslo, whose results demonstrated the importance of using ICT for pupils who do not have completed their language acquisition. There are lots of examples in the change of status and ethos at this school: Both on the individual level (the young students themselves), and at a more macro-level: Margareth Sandvik, Professor at Oslo University (Teacher Training Department), has wrote several articles and publications on the value of ICT as a method for second language learning. His counselling has allowed to the Public Administration to implement this plan, from the start up to the follow up observation.
1.3 Place and context
The three schools are based in low income areas of Oslo, and the population can be characterised by a high percentage of multicultural inhabitants. From being school with a bad reputation, a negative image, low attendance and low scores on national tests, the four schools have all changed into the opposite: attractive and successful schools for children, parents and teachers. The family socio-economic conditions and its geographical address in the city decide which school the child has to attend. “White” families moved out from these areas circa ten years ago, and now they have been mostly populated by immigrants. However, there are changes in population: these areas are very popular for young people now, the immigrants sell their flats and move from the inner city. And new areas for immigrant families grow up a bit outside the centre. In Norway today there is little acceptance for letting minority children learn to read and write in a language they don’t understand. Therefore some schools have recruited minority teachers and developed learning material in different languages, among them Vahl primary school. To become literate in relation to computers implies some practical challenges: the keyboard, the fonts, the writing direction and the delete button have to correspond with the particular language. Students have in several occasions expressed their positive attitudes and happiness for the change of working conditions and learning climate. When computers and books are made available for the minority students, this will have a positive effect. Many minority children grow up in low income families, with parents are not educated, and books and computers are absent in their homes. These resources have impact on students’ possibilities and success in school.
Norway and in particular Oslo’s experiences in ICT put into evidence the heritage on developing communication technology as a teaching tool and method. http://www.hundespor.no is another project, but it witnesses Norway’s will to develop learning resources at the Internet, and it also witnesses the status of minority languages.
1.4 Target
Students and school staff of three schools based in East Oslo.
1.5 Methodology
The Programme is based on the assumption that a great implementation of ICT also implies a change in teaching style. The students work in pairs in front of computers, and this cooperation is very fruitful for language development. The primary school in the project (Vahl primary school) has got hold of keybords with Urdu, Arabic etc. So the children learn to read and write on computers – in their own alphabet. Margareh Sandvik, the scientific advisor of this action plan, has completed a research at Vahl school on bilingual children’s writing development: this investigation shows as ICT is no doubt a very influential factor in the development of students second language acquisition: they write extensively, they write multimodal texts, and they have a solid ICT competence. The schools and their leadership were totally free to decide how the implementation should be carried out and on how to spend the money. An evaluation study was conducted to investigate the impact of ICT on learners with a multicultural and multilingual background. Secondly, the change is affected by a new learning regime: The three schools leaders have been aware of the importance of creating a new learning climate, with new learning styles at all levels. Every student has his own computer at an individual desk in an office landscape. The student work with one subject per day, and the “old-fashioned” is rejected. The “school class” is substituted by groups of students, and the each of them receives supervision from teachers who are organised in teams.
1.6 Authors, Financing and networks
Authors: the municipality of Oslo ant the ITU Network for IT Research and Competente in Education of Oslo University have worked together for the implementation of this plan. They Municipality has directly intervened for the distribution of ICT instruments and ITU has done the scientific counselling, by advising schools, teachers, and administrators in order to gain the best results from this action. Funding: Ministry of Education and the Oslo Municipality
2. Hints for an evaluation
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