Digital Hero Book workshop in Cape Town

For two days students from Eikendal Primary, Floreat Primary and Montagu Drive Primary schools created their own digital hero books in a workshop led by Steve Vosloo. The workshop, held at Montagu Drive school in Mitchell’s Plain, was both engaging and fun for all involved. Students worked from their paper-based hero books to create a 2-minute digital version made up of scanned images, photos and images taken from the web, displayed to the sound of their voice narrations. Selecting and editing the images, recording the audio and writing a script to tie it all together were some of the new skills that the students learned.

Big thank yous to the educators Druscilla van Niekerk, Joy Prinsloo and Bonnie Lamb for their hard work in bringing digital hero booking to their students, the principals, students and everyone from Khanya who made this possible.

See all the photos.

Druscilla van Niekerk and students
Druscilla van Niekerk and students creating their digital hero books

Bonnie Lamb and students
Bonnie Lamb and students

Steve Vosloo and students
Steve Vosloo leading the workshop

Montagu Drive Primary school
Montagu Drive Primary school, located in an area notorious for gangsterism and violence.

School visits in Cape Town

Today Steve Vosloo visited two schools in Cape Town that have been participating in the Digital Hero Book Project (DHBP): Eikendal Primary in Kraaifontein and Floreat Primary in Steenberg.

At Eikendal Primary there was an opportunity to meet Druscilla van Niekerk, the educator who has been hero booking with her students, Percival Meissenheimer, the principal of the school, John Jacobs, the IT/LAN administrator and also some of the young heroes.

A few of Druscilla’s students have already created digital hero books while others will be attending the second digital hero book workshop on 23-24 July. When asked what he thought of the project, one student replied: “It’s something new and exciting.” Druscilla felt that her students were now “more clear about goals and objectives in their lives,” even though sharing personal stories was difficult for some students.

Meeting at Eikendal Primary School
From left: Druscilla van Niekerk, John Jacobs and Percival Meissenheimer, along with students at Eikendal Primary school.

At Floreat Primary, Steve met with the school principal, Noel Isaacs, and educator Joy Prinsloo, who has been hero booking with her students. It was wonderful to put faces to names after working together - but virtually - for so many months.

Joy Prinsloo and Beverley Job-Beziek
Joy Prinsloo and Beverley Job-Beziek, Khanya facilitator

A big thank you goes out to the educators, facilitators, principals and students for making the project such a success at these schools.

Kenya begins Digital Hero Booking

We are extremely pleased to have the Tumaini Children’s Home for needy children in Nyeri, Kenya, join the Digital Hero Book Project (DHBP).

Claire Williams, a Berkeley resident who I met at Stanford University, co-founded the Hope Runs project. Hope Runs works to empower children in impoverished communities — in this case kids at the Tumaini Home — with an understanding of personal health, social entrepreneurship and technology through running. Claire is leading the participation of the Tumaini children in the DHBP. She has also helped them to write a blog — the first ever by orphans and vulnerable children.
Claire Williams with children from the Tumaini Children’s Home, Kenya

Putting safety first

The Digital Hero Book Project puts youth safety first. The goal of hero booking is for the participants to develop self-esteem, future-focus and communication skills. Therefore the emphasis on safety is not because this is a dangerous exercise, but because we value safety so much. At the end of the hero booking exercise each person has a hand-bound or digital storybook of their own making, that is a kind of solution-focused mission statement, but that also documents, heralds and reinforces their problem-busting strategies and their hero-survival-resilient abilities.

The process of making a hero book follows principles of consent and confidentiality. Because of the potentially sensitive nature of the stories, which can explore a young persons emotional, behavioral, social or political problems, each person makes a choice around the preferred balance of working alone, sharing in pairs, group sharing and eventually, sharing outside of the group, none of which are obligatory. To this end we ask the participating youths to sign forms to indicate that they understand and respect the privacy of the other participants as well as give their consent to sharing their stories only as it suits them.

A teacher or facilitator is always present to guide the youngsters through the hero booking process. They work through a manual written by psychologist Jonathan Morgan of REPSSI. REPSSI, the non-profit psychosocial support organization in South Africa that promotes hero booking has a number of internal as well as independent review mechanisms of its activities to ensure that its approaches – such as hero booking – “at least do no harm and at best promote and support the psychosocial well-being of children.” The hero book process has been tried and tested in the field and undergone refinements since it was first developed four years ago.

Hero booking has always happened in closed group situations, complimented by an opportunity at the end to share the stories to a public audience, e.g. in South Africa collections of hero stories have been published as books and placed in local libraries. In these cases the authors have the opportunity and are helped to change identifying information.

The Digital Hero Book model is slightly different in that the group now extends into a virtual space made up of a few physically located groups of youth simultaneously working on their hero books and choosing to publish certain aspects of this online. In our pilot project the group comprises teachers and students from Prospect Sierra Middle School (USA), Naz Foundation Care Home (India) and a number of schools in South Africa.

We have partnered with the International Education and Resource Network (iEARN) on this project. Launched in 1988, iEARN is the world’s largest network of primary and secondary schools and youth organizations using technology to engage in collaborative educational projects. iEARN-USA was selected by the US Department of Education to create the “Teachers’ Guide to International Collaboration on the Internet” and has won numerous awards because of its proven classroom credibility. It has created a safe and secure space online for its projects, as follows:

  • Online forums, like bulletin boards, are used for collaboration. The system is password protected. Once logged in, everyone participating in the project can see everything that the other participants are saying to each other. This transparency makes the users entirely accountable for their actions; iEARN has found it to be a powerful safety mechanism.
  • iEARN is based on school and teacher membership. Country co-ordinators vet applications as coming from legitimate entities, e.g. schools or non-profit organizations.
  • Once vetted, accounts are created for teachers or facilitators so that they can participate in the forums. They then create student accounts. Students cannot and do not create accounts themselves. Teachers control student access and can change passwords or delete accounts at any time.
  • Similarly, student information is not available to anyone except their teacher. No one in iEARN, even other teachers, can search for student identity information.

At the end of the process, we will also offer students the opportunity to share their stories publicly on the forthcoming Digital Hero Book site, to serve as inspirational and positive youth stories and raise awareness of issues facing young people today. Again, the stories will be adapted as necessary to protect everyone involved. Streetside Stories in San Francisco has been successfully following this approach for a number of years: private networks to develop the stories with some voluntarily being made public. Our ultimate goal is to build a public online library of positive youth stories that inspire and support others from around the world.

As in the physical world, there is no way to be 100% safe on a project such as this. However, we believe that the offline processes that teachers and students must follow, coupled with the tried-and-tested online platform make digital hero booking as safe and beneficial as it can be.

India begins Digital Hero Booking

On the same day that Prospect Sierra school began digital hero booking, seven students at the Naz Foundation Care Home in New Delhi, India, began their hero books.

What began with one child in the Summer of 2000, the Naz Foundation Care Home is now a thriving home for 31 children and 4 women all living with HIV. Supported by a committed staff that includes a full-time doctor, two nurses, and ten dedicated care workers, these children are thriving in a way that no one could have imagined when the first child walked through the door.

Naz Foundation Care Home
Naz Foundation Care Home

(Images courtesy Naz Foundation)

The students in the US were very excited to be collaborating with young people from India!

Thanks to Theresa Lacey, the project manager at Naz that we’ve been working with, for getting us to this point. And thank you to Anjali Gopolan for her support.

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.

Digital storytelling workshop in Cape Town

REPSSI logoAmy Hill, Community Projects Director for the Center for Digital Storytelling in Berkeley, California, ran a 3-day workshop with a group of grade-7 students from Eikendal Primary School in Cape Town. The seven students used their work-in-progress REPSSI hero books as content for their 2-minute movies. Jonathan Morgan of REPSSI provided psychosocial support during the workshop. He developed hero booking as an art-based narrative therapy tool four years ago.

Amy described the workshop as “a resounding success, better than we could have hoped for! The students were amazingly generous with their stories.”

Digital storytelling workshop at Eikendal Primary School
Amy briefing the students after editing their work till the early hours of Saturday morning.

Digital storytelling workshop at Eikendal Primary School
Beverley, Jonathan and students.

Digital storytelling workshop at Eikendal Primary School
Amy with the students and their teacher, Drucilla.

Before creating a final DVD with stories that can be shown broadly to the public and on the Web, issues around privacy and confidentiality will need to be addressed. The students need to be comfortable that their work is made public and the stories need to be edited to remove any sensitive topics that can make the students vulnerable.

Gail Ahrends, the Khanya project manager gave the following thanks to:

  • “The principal and staff from Eikendal Primary – selection of learners and arranging lunch.”
  • “Scottsville Primary – availing premises and Mr Yohn for his dedication and assistance.”
  • “All the Khanya staff – Estelle Malan, Beverley Job- Beziek, Neal Marthinus, Mark Carolissen and Chas Ahrends – availing themselves over after hours and over the weekend to be of assistance.”
  • “Jonathan Morgan for assistance and transporting of Amy.”
  • “Amy Hill for sacrificing her time to assist the learners in our country, we wish her success and trust that this is only the start of better things to come.”
  • “Finally a big thank you to Drusilla [the student’s teacher]. I have not seen such dedication in a long time, please be assured that these kinds of sacrifices do not go unnoticed.”

Personally I would like to thank Gail for her hard work in organizing the event, and Kobus van Wyk, program manager of Khanya, for support and allowing the workshop to happen. May this be the beginning of many more digital storytelling workshops indeed!

As always, a big thank you to REPSSI for their support and continued effort to provide psychosocial support through hero booking.

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.