I chose to write about the Early Childhood Development Virtual University (ECDVU) Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) website. They have quite a few research topics listed but the two I chose to elaborate on are as follows: "The Development of an Integrated Early Childhood Development Urban Model Training Program for Informal Minders and Community Volunteers in Ghana" and "The Status of Coordination and Supervision of Early Childhood Education in Ghana".
The Study of Coordination and Supervision of Early Childhood Education in Ghana was conducted in the Greater Accra and Eastern regions from August to December 2003. The main objective of the study was to identify the factors that have engendered the current problems militating against the successful implementation of early childhood education in Ghana. Specifically, the study examined concepts such as early childhood care and development (ECCD), surveyed types of Early Chilhood Development (ECD) programs in the country and presented a general framework for the subsequent discussion.
I came across some interesting information as I navigated through the website. But one thing that stuck out to me the most was the Early Childhood Development Virtual University (ECDVU) "generative curriculum". The generative curriculum encompasses the following characteristics:
- a learner-focused approach - drawing as much as possible on the learner's experiences in their personal and professional lives;
- an ecological approach - placing individuals, programs and policies into an interactive and dynamic context and seeking to plan activities and interventions to maximize resonating impact throughout the larger ecology;
- a capacity building approach - aiming to strategically strengthen the capacities of participants to effectively fulfill their mandates in their professional position and to be accountable to their constituents and the broader ECD community in their countries. Although most education activities claim this as a general 'purpose', the ECDVU program addresses capacity development in a specific, strategic manner.
- a co-constructive approach - encouraging each learner to draw upon provided curriculum material as well as their own in-country experience and data to derive their own perspectives and applications;
- a multicultural approach - considering ideas, research, and goals pertaining to child care and development from many different cultural sources, including (but not limited to) African and Euro-Western sources;
- a cohort driven approach - encouraging collaboration, reciprocal learning among peers, and consolidation of networks within and between learners representing each participating country.
- an historical approach - exploring 'how we came to be here' vis à vis the evolution of various theories and constructions regarding children and their care and more recent international development activities focusing on children's care and development.
Early Childhood Development Virtual University (ECDVU) Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA): Developed and maintained by the University of Victoria, Canada, this virtual university is the international gateway for early childhood research worldwide. Through the link below, you can access ECDVU’s Sub-Saharan Africa portal. The second link takes you to a list of current early childhood research conducted by students in Sub-Saharan Africa.http://www.ecdvu.org/ssa/index.php
http://www.ecdvu.org/ssa/major_reports.php
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