PA-MOJA has taken a significant step forward in its cultural exchange program.
Because PA-MOJA believes that students in Kenya and North America can learn a great deal from each other through collaboration, PA-MOJA president, Silvia Knittel, and PA-MOJA vice-president, Alison Stuart, decided to build an online cross-curricular website where sister school students could guide their own learning and support the learning of their peers.
Knittel, an English teacher and Stuart, a science teacher, wanted PA-MOJA’s cultural exchange program to move beyond pen pals and generate a forum whereby students could learn and share information about their intellectual passions using an inquiry based model. The site was inspired by Simon Fraser University professor, Dr. Cheryl Amundsen, who taught an Instructional Design Masters class taken by Knittel and Stuart.
Both educators felt it was important that students interested in specific disciplines such as science, languages, history, business, and the arts interact with students interested in other subject areas in other countries to encourage broader thinking and break down stereotypes. “Many people think that creativity belongs to the arts,” says Knittel. “It doesn’t. We want our arts and humanities students to know that scientists have to be extremely creative thinkers. And we hope that our science oriented students will understand the complexity of thinking and planning that goes into producing a work of art or a philosophical essay.”
The website was named ‘Butterfly Effect’ because the physics term describes the potential for small changes in one place to have large effects elsewhere, which is one of the aims of the website. “By collaborating online,” says Stuart, “students have the opportunity to make small but significant changes in each other’s research or way of thinking.”
In the summer of 2013, Alison Stuart worked with Kenyan teacher, Daniel Mburu, and his science students from Tigithi Secondary who become the first members of the site. The students spent a day at the Ol Pejeta Conservancy getting their first email addresses and learning to navigate the internet, most for the first time in their lives. By the fall, they were connecting with another small group of students at Heritage Woods Secondary School in Canada. In spite of a few technical problems, the project kicked off successfully and the students were soon designing projects and actively collaborating.
In July 2014, the project was expanded to include Loise Girls school in Kenya, Langley Fine Arts School in Canada and Madison East Secondary School in the United States. PA-MOJA supplied both Kenyan schools with an iPad to help facilitate the documentation of student projects. Before handing over the devices, PA-MOJA director, Moses Muthoki, led a team of PA-MOJA volunteers who trained the Kenyan students to use the iPads; the students were successfully able to practice skills such as video recording, editing and uploading. This now allows Kenyan students to share their projects on the Butterfly Effect website in the same way their North American peers do.
The feedback from students and teachers involved in the project has been positive. “Something magical happens when students from different countries are able to communicate with each other; it gives them the opportunity to explore their common interests and a way to act upon them,” says Langley Fine Arts School teacher, Penny Carnrite, who team teaches Butterfly Effect with Silvia Knittel.
Tigithi student, Victor Mageto, says that Butterfly Effect has helped him academically and has given him his first opportunity to learn with technology Evan Robson from Heritage Woods says that he has learned a lot about Kenyan life: “I found it interesting that Canadian students often focus their inquiries on issues of general interest, whereas Kenyan students focus on inquires that involve practical problems that need to be solved, such as how to build a fire extinguisher for dorms. It made me realize how different our lives are.”
The students especially enjoy the skype calls which begin with intense conversations about their projects and often end with song and dance exchanges and a lot of laughter.
However, the project does have its challenges. Due to problems of unreliable internet connections in Kenya, students are often forced to visit cyber cafes to upload their projects; this is both inconvenient and expensive.
Traditional teaching methods are another challenge. “Many teachers, both in North America and Kenya, find the inquiry method quite daunting.” says Stuart. “Because it is student centred, these learners require more attention. They are not asked to fill out worksheets, they are engaged in independent projects that require a lot of one on one mentorship. This can stretch the resources of over-worked teachers.”
“We are working closely with the teachers,” says Knittel. “Somehow we have to encourage teachers to value the inquiry model. Inquiry trains students to be intellectual thinkers and more importantly, intellectual leaders.”
Moses Muthoki and PA-MOJA coordinator, Emily Lerosion, have worked hard to keep the Kenyan students connected to their peers in North America. During the November/December break, Tigithi students were bussed to Loise Girls School where the internet connection allowed them to access the Butterfly Effect website. Students in North America only break for the last two weeks of December so it was important to keep the connection alive.
It is PA-MOJA’s hope to widen the scope of this project through bringing more schools on board and acquiring more equipment for Kenyan schools.
Please visit the Butterfly Effect website to see the incredible collaboration and work being done by students engaged in this project.