G-3168

Digital Interactive Classrooms

Description

Financing

Documents

Photos

History Logs

Project Description

Region: Central America

Country: Panama

Location: 8 of 10 provinces Panama

Total Budget: $407,640

Area of Focus: Basic education and literacy



Two successful GG's (1638881 & 2095630), 10+ years of club service in rural schools brought clarity and potential to scale our program. Well-intended teachers lacking digital or collaborative teaching expertise resulted in schools lacking modern technology, disengaged students and societal issues of disengaged youth. GG1638881 implemented 2 interactive classrooms in Veracruz. Results showed that ALL previously disengaged students became actively engaged in learning and wanting to attend digital classrooms. For sustainability, the project was taken to the main teacher training college, La Normal. GG 2095630 unified RCs of Santiago, Playa Coronado & Panamá Norte to implement the program in Santiago and at 2 satellite schools, used for student teacher professional practice. Outcomes reinforced enlarging the project and addressing the digital gap in public schools. This scale up proposal will leverage the presence of Rotarians and Rotary Clubs participating in the proposal from the 8 provinces where the project will be scaled up. Public education accommodates 88% of Panama's student population, of which only 40% have access to internet and 30% access to computers. In private schools (only 12% student population) 90% have access to internet and 75% have access to computers. Meduca stated that during the pandemic 45% of public schools were totally disconnected so students did not receive classes, unlike private schools where students adapted readily to virtual lessons. This program of scale will increase the reach and impact of teaching methodologies using TICs in classrooms to ensure that new generations of students from public schools will have the competencies and access to technology (eg laptop computers) to function effectively in the modern world. This scale up program proposes a model of accessibility to technology where internet (or digital devices) will not be available soon, thus reducing the difference between remote schools that are not currently included in the technological world. Panama has 3106 public schools, 40%+ have difficult access, internet is not available. This program considers two different proven models of bringing teaching methodologies to these schools. According to a CIEDU* study this digital gap translates to 7 out of 10 children not having access to computers in their home and 4 out of 10 not having internet access. Teachers' lack digital competencies compounds the difference between the private and public schools. Panama consistently scores poorly in the two comparative studies that measure educational outcomes, 71 out 79 in PISA (2018) and ERCE (2019) that measure the learning outcomes in maths, reading and writing in children of 3rd & 6th grade. Panama is committed to the UN's SDGS 4, that by 2030 the country will "ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all'. This program will contribute to reaching this goal by working with the Ministry of Education in the 8 selected provinces and the main teachers training college and to the implementation of the law on digital transformation in the education system enacted in April of 2022.

The proposal has developed a comprehensive program that deals with 4 major pillars:- 1. Implementation of digital interactive classrooms, mobile and fixed, in 8 of 10 provinces in Panama by a scaling of the infrastructure in technology. 2. Organizational development that includes all the coordination mechanisms with all stakeholders ensuring an institutionalization of the interventions and development of educational policies contributing to the digitalization of the education system of Panama. 3. Training of Teachers and Students in digital competencies. For a better use of developed infrastructure and use of software for a better teaching environment. 4. Development of a CENTER PRO EDUCATION contributing to the continuing training of teachers and students in digital competencies plus a repository of digital educational material for further use by teachers. The program will be accompanied by a well-structured monitoring and evaluation system plus a strategy of program communication to allow a strong buy-in of the stakeholders and general community. Infrastructure development consisting of the implementation of the hardware with the necessary student and teacher furniture for more collaborative teaching. The RACHEL system will be implemented into areas where there is no internet, as mobile classrooms. These mobile classrooms will be linked to a fixed classroom - with digital boards - where there is appropriate connectivity facilitating the updating of the educational material for the RACHEL system. An extremely important pillar in our model is the continuing training in digital competencies as well as digital methodologies that facilitate a more creative and motivational learning experience for the primary beneficiaries, children in the basic public schools in Panama. The pilot projects have already proven that where we had demotivated students, now all the children want to participate in classes, where children were not completing their work, now they are the first ones to finish. Together with applications for teachers to create their own content, there has been the identification of applications with adequate content accessible to teachers like Khan Academy, Edmodo, Geogebra, ESTER and others, all accessible free to teachers, and students. A CENTER PRO EDUCATION, based on evolutionary psychology and neurosciences, inserted in the UTP structure, will provide the necessary elements for continuing training processes and updating of knowledge by teachers and students alike. Coordination mechanisms, together with the monitoring and evaluation system will ensure that the program is able to maintain momentum and influence future decisions by administrations to use their own resources in the expansion of the digital interactive classroom, as it has been demonstrated by the schools that received the benefit of the classroom in the first global grant implemented.

Primary Host Partner

District: 4240

Rotary Club of: Panamá Norte

Primary Contact: Enedelsy Escobar-King

Email: eescobar_king@hotmail.com

Primary International Partner

District: 5300

Rotary Club of: Las Vegas WON

Primary Contact: Chehab Elawar

Email: shabdg201415@gmail.com

Project Status

Need $290,200
This project needs to receive some pledges to go to the next level. Please check the "Financing" tab to see the list of current pledges. Once the amount pledged is equal to the project budget, the status of the project will be automatically changed to "Fully Pledged".
Click here to pledge support for this project.

Project listed for the 2024-25 Rotary Year.

Proposed Financing

Existing Contributions Towards This Project

Date

Cash

DDF

Total

District 4240 DDF

14-Jun-23

-

$15,000

$15,000

Las Vegas WON (5300)

14-Jun-23

$1,000

$1,000

$2,000

District 7780 DDF

14-Jun-23

-

$1,000

$1,000

Yarmouth (7780)

14-Jun-23

$1,000

$0

$1,000

West Palm Beach (6930)

29-Aug-23

$3,000

$0

$3,000

Madras Mount (3232)

24-Oct-23

$1,000

$0

$1,000

District 4240 DDF

24-Oct-23

-

$15,000

$15,000

District 6960 DDF

13-Jan-24

-

$15,000

$15,000

Santiago de Veraguas (4240)

13-Jan-24

$5,000

$0

$5,000

Chitré (4240)

13-Jan-24

$3,000

$0

$3,000

Panamá Norte (4240)

13-Jan-24

$5,000

$0

$5,000

Canton (6910)

23-Jan-24

$2,000

$0

$2,000

District 6910 DDF

23-Jan-24

-

$2,000

$2,000

District 4240 DDF

11-Feb-24

-

$1,800

$1,800

Oakville (7080)

20-Mar-24

$5,000

$0

$5,000

Remaining Amount to Raise

Additional Club Contribution (Needed) - Add a contribution

$290,200

-

$290,200

Amount Requested from The Rotary Foundation

-

$40,640

$40,640

Total

$407,640

Note: as of July 1, 2015 there is a 5% additional support fee for cash contributions. This fee does not appear in the financials above because it does not apply if the funds are sent directly to the project account (without going through TRF, and therefore without Paul Harris credit). Clubs sending their cash contribution to TRF must be aware they will have to send an additional 5%.

Project Supporting Documents

Project Photos

History Log Entries

14-Jun-23

System Entry

System Entry: Creation of project page.

14-Jun-23

by Enedelsy Escobar-King

System Entry: Pledge of $1,000 DDF by Carolyn Johnson of District 7780.

14-Jun-23

by Enedelsy Escobar-King

System Entry: Pledge of $1,000 by Carolyn Johnson of the Rotary Club of Yarmouth, District 7780.

26-Jun-23

by Enedelsy Escobar-King

System Entry: Pledge of $5,000 DDF by Steve Bender of the Rotary Club of Newport Beach, District 5320.

29-Aug-23

by Enedelsy Escobar-King

System Entry: Pledge of $3,000 by George Morales of the Rotary Club of West Palm Beach, District 6930.

24-Oct-23

System Entry

System Entry: Pledge of $1,000 by Ram Ramamurthy of the Rotary Club of Madras Mount, District 3232.

24-Oct-23

by Ram Ramamurthy

System Entry: Pledge of $15,000 DDF by Alexei Oduver of the Rotary Club of Panama Nordeste, District 4240.

16-Nov-23

by Enedelsy Escobar-King

System Entry: Pledge of $3,000 by Anu C. Narula of the Rotary Club of Canton, District 6910.

16-Nov-23

by Enedelsy Escobar-King

System Entry: Pledge of $5,000 DDF by Anu C Narula of District 6910.

13-Jan-24

by Enedelsy Escobar-King

There has been adjustment to the budget of the project to reflect the knew thinking by the project team. It includes changes on the total budget of the project as well as funding received so far. It also includes adjustments on the scope as a result of the budget adjustment.

13-Jan-24

by Enedelsy Escobar-King

System Entry: Pledge of $15,000 DDF by David Lusty of District 6960.

13-Jan-24

by Enedelsy Escobar-King

System Entry: Pledge of $5,000 by Fernando Dolande of the Rotary Club of Santiago de Veraguas, District 4240.

13-Jan-24

by Enedelsy Escobar-King

System Entry: Pledge of $3,000 by Baselisa Alonso of the Rotary Club of Chitré, District 4240.

13-Jan-24

by Enedelsy Escobar-King

System Entry: Pledge of $5,000 by Enedelsy Escobar-King of the Rotary Club of Panamá Norte, District 4240.

13-Jan-24

by Enedelsy Escobar-King

System Entry: Pledge of $5,000 by Enedelsy Escobar-King of the Rotary Club of Panamá Norte, District 4240.

13-Jan-24

by Enedelsy Escobar-King

System Entry: Pledge of $5,000 by Enedelsy Escobar-King of the Rotary Club of Panamá Norte, District 4240.

23-Jan-24

by Enedelsy Escobar-King

System Entry: Pledge of $2,000 with $2,000 DDF by Anu C Narula of the Rotary Club of Canton, District 6910.

23-Jan-24

by Enedelsy Escobar-King

System Entry: Pledge of $2,000 DDF by Anu C Narula of the Rotary Club of Canton, District 6910.

11-Feb-24

System Entry

System Entry: Pledge of $295,200 with $1,800 DDF by Odilia Delgado of the Rotary Club of Aguadulce, District 4240.

11-Feb-24

System Entry

System Entry: Project is now "Fully Pledged".

11-Feb-24

by Odilia Delgado

System Entry: Project reverted to "Published".

11-Feb-24

by Enedelsy Escobar-King

System Entry: Pledge of $1,800 DDF by Odilia Delgado of the Rotary Club of Aguadulce, District 4240.

20-Mar-24

by Enedelsy Escobar-King

System Entry: Pledge of $5,000 by Hart Jansson of the Rotary Club of Oakville, District 7080.

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