Author Archive for Steve Vosloo

US schools starts Digital Hero Booking

Today the Digital Hero Book Project (DHBP) kicked off at Prospect Sierra middle school in the Bay Area. This first ever session in the USA is with a group of seven students (from the 7th and 8th grades). The project is being offered as an elective subject on Monday afternoons and will finish on June 4th, 2007, just before the summer vacation begins.

Prospect Sierra School
Kathryn Lee and students on the DHBP.

Prospect Sierra School
Prospect Sierra students are very familiar with issues of social justice and activism.

Prospect Sierra School
The reading room.

Prospect Sierra School
Prospect Sierra Middle School: looking onto the library.

A challenge has been deciding how and where to include the project into the school’s usual activities. At first we discussed offering it to all 7th-graders during normal class time, but this would require substantial teacher training and a major change to the existing activities planned for those classes. In the end running the project after school with a small group of students proved to be the best idea. This is a pilot after all, so if it is successful then the school staff will consider “mainstreaming” it during morning classes in the future.

Molotech looks forward to working with Prospect Sierra. Thank you to Kathryn Lee, Rob Lewis and Abigail Joseph for being the team running the project at the school, and also to Nina Cohen for her support and willingness to pilot the project there.

Learning from Streetside Stories

I recently met Linda Johnson, Executive Director of Streetside Stories, a San Francisco-based non-profit literacy arts program. In 13 years, it has helped over 7000 students to share their life stories, connect with the arts, and improve their literacy skills. There is much overlap between the work of Molotech and Streetside Stories. I hope to volunteer on their Tech Tales digital storytelling program and learn from this wonderful organization.

BAVC intern joins the team

The Bay Area Video Coalition (BAVC) has provided an intern to Molotech to assist with website production. Jessica Dorfman, Outreach Coordinator at BAVC, placed Anthony Ngo with us for a 60-hour internship. BAVC has a program to teach web design and video production skills to final year school learners and then place them in organisations or companies to gain hands-on workplace experience. We thank BAVC and Anthony for this opportunity and look forward to working together over the next few months.

India may be on board

Last year at Stanford I met Anjali Gopolan, the Nobel Peace Prize-nominated founder of the Naz Foundation in India. She was interested in the Digital Hero Book Project (DHBP) and I’ve been talking to her people on the ground in New Delhi. If all goes well, a few of the youths at the Naz Foundation house there will participate in the pilot, making it a South Africa, USA and India project.

Meeting with StoryCorps

Logo of StoryCorps

I met with Sarah Kramer of StoryCorps to introduce the Digital Hero Book Project (DHBP) and ask for general advice. StoryCorps is a US-based project to instruct and inspire people to record each others’ stories in sound. Sarah made very useful suggestions, building on what Joe had spoken about. We discussed interview questions for the DHBP participants, logistics around doing the actual audio recordings, e.g. at different schools using a portable kit or at a permanent studio where the school learners come to record for a day.

Meeting with Joe Richman of Radio Diaries

Logo of Radio Diaries

I met with Joe Richman of Radio Diaries to introduce the Digital Hero Book Project (DHBP) and ask for general advice. The award-winning Radio Diaries “works with ordinary people to document their own lives for public radio.” For example, Thembi’s AIDS Diary covers a year in the life of a South African teenager who is struggling to live with AIDS.

Joe offered this advice on producing good quality audio stories: 1) it’s a real skill to produce compelling audio, 2) it takes a lot more time to edit than you think, so 3) if you’re working with a group of youth, make their involvement as simple as possible, e.g. get them to interview each other, read from prepared texts or record very short sound bites such as their dog barking.

DHBP to join iEARN

I flew to New York for a series of meetings around the Digital Hero Book Project (DHBP). The first was with Ed Gragart, Executive Director of the International Education and Resource Network USA (iEARN-USA), to discuss the possibilities of the DHBP becoming an iEARN project.

iEARN, made up of all the country chapters around the world, such as iEARN-USA, has been using technology to connect learners in classrooms since 1988, so it has a wealth of experience in tech-based educational projects — especially on issues of privacy and cross-cultural differences — and also solid infrastructure. By becoming a project in their portfolio of around 150 projects, the DHBP can be made available to their network of schools and use their website for interaction between participating learners. It really is an amazing network: over 22,000 schools and 2 million kids. Participating teachers have their own discussion board to discuss the project and support each other.

It was agreed that the DHBP will join the iEARN as a project for its members.

DHBP business strategy brainstorm

Shortly before the Stanford University winter break, six of us held a brainstorm to discuss the business strategy for the Digital Hero Book Project (DHBP). Sustainability is a key to any project; the aim of the three-hour session was to brainstorm ways of how to generate revenue through the project.

John Kuner, an attendant and Fellow on the Digital Vision Program, made a funny vlog about the event.

Shuttleworth Foundation funds DHBP

Shuttleworth Foundation

The South-African based Shuttleworth Foundation, which invests in projects that offer unique and innovative solutions to educational challenges faced by the developing world, has part-funded the Digital Hero Book Project (DHBP).

The funding is important for two reasons: firstly, by making a significant contribution to the pilot-phase budget it has made the project possible and, secondly, it is an endorsement of the DHBP as a worthwhile ICT-in-education initiative.

We thank the Shuttleworth Foundation for their support and look forward to working with them on this project.

DHBP pilot goes global

We are pleased to announce that Prospect Sierra Middle School have joined the Digital Hero Book Project (DHBP) pilot. This means that US-based school students will engage the students at a number of schools based in and around Cape Town.

Fostering international dialogue between youth from different countries and cultures has always been a major goal of the DHBP. The participation of Prospect Sierra’s 7th grade class will make this possible.