The Department of Basic Education Circular requiring proprietary office & programming technologies: An excellent example of how not to do IT in education in South African schools. This presentation was given at the a stakeholder meeting at the Department of Basic Education, December 6th 2013
The DBE Circular requiring proprietary office & programming technologies: An excellent example of how not to do IT in SA schools
1. The Department of Basic
Education Circular requiring
proprietary office & programming
technologies:
An excellent example of how
not to do IT in education in
South African schools
Derek Keats, PhD
derek@dkeats.com
http://dkeats.com
5. This is 2013!
We are not getting enough young people interested in
computer science and other areas of IT
It is time to stop focusing on programming languages...
We need to make computing more exciting!
6. Injecting vision into the curriculum:
Free and Open Technologies
platforms
Free Software
(Open Source)
Marymount School (New York) 7th graders designed a light kit to be an educational project
for a community center in Zimbabwe.
Credit: Adam Provost, 2013
http://www.edutopia.org/blog/dive-into-the-maker-movement-adam-provost
Creating an exciting
maker culture
8. Recommendations
The implementation of Circular S9 should be suspended
pending further investigation, hence the status quo remains
for now
During 2014-2015, the DBE examining panel needs to
review the current assessment practice so as to make the
IT practical paper language independent.
An independent group should be appointed to review both
the CAT and IT curriculum to make them more current
and more exciting so as to attract learners to the subjects
The revised curricula should be phased in in Grade 10
in 2016 and the IT curriculum should not have a
prescribed programming language
Both CAT and IT must be compliant with the
Government FOSS policy and the Minimum
Interoperability Standards