МонголEnglish
You are here: Home » About project
2012 May 20, Sunday

Workshop in local area

E-mail Print PDF

Local participants in UB workshop came back to their aimags and conducted local workshop in November among teachers of kindergarten and teachers of 1st and 2nd grade students, parents involved in project. Total 43 teachers of the 1st and 2nd grade students, 49 kindergarten teachers and 39 parents have respectively participated in workshops that have been held on Ulaanbaatar, Khovd Orkhon, Dundgovi and Dornod aimags.

Completed upgrade to website

E-mail Print PDF

We have successfully completed “web 2.0” technological upgrade to our website for the purpose of providing more opportunities to work together, share lessons and experiences and increase participation for parents, teachers and other users.

Front-end workshop of the Project

E-mail Print PDF

The front-end workshop was conducted on October 12-13, 2011 in Ulaanbaatar by Educational Wave NGO. In this workshop, David Porter who is the international consultant and executive director of BCcampus in the University of British Columbia in Canada participated in to make a series of presentations on relevant issues and to provide us recommendation on project process.

“Deciding age” handbook opening ceremony and its dissemination

E-mail Print PDF

One of the outputs that have to be done in report period is certainly “Deciding age” handbook. We took considerable time for developing activities including finalizing handbook materials, taking photos, editing and designing.

Using OER to Improve Parents’ Knowledge and Abilities To Work with Early Aged Children

E-mail Print PDF

Abstract
With this proposed project, we aim to study the behavioural impacts of parents and kindergarten and primary school teachers when they use and adapt early childhood education learning materials from open educational resource (OER) repositories worldwide, localizing them to the Mongolian context, and making them freely available for use by kindergartens, schools and parents. We propose do this work based on research relating to issues that are commonly observed among Mongolian parents. For example, some questions we would raise are: Are the adapted OER resources pedagogically better in terms of content, pedagogy, engaging and interesting for the child?
1. Were they able to create such learning resources quicker than they would have otherwise experienced?
2. Do communities of parents and teachers come together and continuously add, revise, improve the resources?