Teachers Without Borders Canada Annual Report 2007

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Teachers Without Borders Canada Devoted to Closing the Global Education Divide Teachers Without Borders - Canada 1541 Mahon Avenue North Vancouver, BC Canada V7M 2S6 Phone: +1-778-996-9900 Email: info@twbcanada.org The World is Our Classroom! www.twbcanada.org

Dear Education Advocate and Supporter: Closing the global education divide through teacher professional development and community education the mission of Teachers Without Borders Canada may seem a lofty goal. As educators and advocates for education, it is in our nature to want to make a difference and with over 59 million teachers worldwide working to help each other, this goal does not seem so unattainable. In this our first year of operation, some questions naturally seek to be answered. Why is there such a global divide in education? Despite its crucial connection to economic and social development, teacher training is often uneven, protracted, or unsupported. In addition, teachers are rarely included in educational policy change or significant decision-making. Teachers are not just a resource for our children; they are the key to development. They know who is sick, who is missing, who has been abducted into the sex trade or conscripted into a military gang, who has been orphaned by AIDS, who is achieving and who is not. In short, teachers are society's glue, and they certainly deserve our assistance; otherwise, we are all left with a gaping digital, educational, and economic divide. If the key to economic development and our young people's future is education, then teachers should have resources, tools, and access to the Internet, as well as each other. Those who CARE, teach! How far has TWB-Canada come? Teachers Without Borders Canada (TWB-Canada) became incorporated as of February 23 rd, 2007 and achieved charitable status effective April 4 th, 2007. The first order of business in our first year (actually 10 months) of operation was to build an infrastructure and spread the word of who we are and what we do. The moniker, Without Borders is well known and brings with it a certain level of respect. But almost always the response after finding out about our organization was never knew it existed, but excited that it does. I want to know more! With the help of email and the Internet, it wasn t long before our volunteer base of educators grew to over 500. After establishing 15 provincial/territorial coordinators to help spread the word, making presentations and attending conferences in various cities, and the launch of the website www.twbcanada.org, we are now seeing our volunteer base increase by approximately15 to 20 people a month. We also have had Canadian student leaders in four universities: U of Toronto, U of Western Ontario, U of Alberta and U of Sunshine Coast-Brisbane, Australia) start TWB On Campus. The University of Toronto and the University of Western Ontario have lead the way in this concerted effort to make education borderless by founding Teachers Without Borders On Campus groups. It is TWB s new focus to expand throughout university and college campuses across Canada and the U.S. Through this new initiative, students will now have the opportunity to partake in this movement to bridge the education gap. TWB-Canada 1

By expanding the demographic from certified educators to include student leaders, we are creating a stronger and more inclusive network for TWB. This, at the core of our beliefs, is what fuels the passions and desires to fulfil our social responsibility to the world. Check out their facebook group: www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=2247823676. Who are our members? All teachers and advocates of education worldwide who share our philosophy and values are intrinsically part of our organization and can take the role of either facilitator or participant. The majority of participants of our projects (teacher/education development workshops) have been educators but may also include: community workers, NGO employees, government employees, student leaders, etc. Facilitators of projects are certified educators but may also include trained professionals in various fields. What does a member get for joining TWB-Canada? Principally, TWB-Canada members receive the benefit of affiliation. They sign up because they want to be a part of something, make a difference, and cause change, and TWB- Canada allows them to pursue those objectives. Many teachers join because they want to learn and make a contribution to the world, not to get something from us. Beyond the intrinsic desire to work towards change, members join to gain opportunities that will help them connect, create and collaborate immediately with their colleagues worldwide. Members play a central role because each member possesses an important voice that guides TWB-Canada s efforts as a demand-driven organization. How does TWB-Canada empower its membership worldwide? TWB-Canada asks its members what they need and does its best to meet those needs. If a community of teachers requests particular curricula, TWB-Canada will connect this group of members with another group of members that has experience in developing and using such curricula. If TWB-Canada members experience a national disaster that hinders teachers ability to serve students, TWB-Canada will solicit help from other members to address the challenge as a team. We now have a database of hundreds of educators from across Canada eager to volunteer to create and deliver best practices workshops to their colleagues in developing regions. We base all our workshops on the needs of the host communities and the curriculum of that nation. Though our existing projects have focussed specifically on delivering best practices workshops in the areas of math and science and recently information technology and professional development (assessment strategies, etc.), our membership have expertise ranging from early childhood literacy to adult education and health, nutrition, and Hiv/AIDS education. TWB-Canada 2

The next order of business in the development of our organisation was to participate in our first project. During June and July of 2007, TWB-Canada volunteers were part of a team from Hawaii that has been delivering teacher development workshops in South Africa since 2001. This joint project helped us see the potential of our mission and to better understand the process involved in implementing a project. During this time we visited three sites Vaal University Technical near Johannesburg, Port Shepstone High School and Trinset Teacher Training Centre in Mthatha on the Eastern Cape to deliver best practices workshops in math and science (and for the first time computer use/integration) to rural teachers. Other than presenting the computer workshops, I took a behind the scenes role in the program this year to assist and to learn. I found, though short (half day), the computer workshops were very well received and something that the teachers so desperately want more training. Though this was not my first experience working with my peers in South Africa, I was still able to get a better appreciation of their circumstances with each person I talked with. You never get de-sensitized and you always come back with a greater appreciation for your own life. It is life changing every time. It was the first time to South Africa for my colleagues from Vancouver and it was an amazing feeling to watch them experience what I cannot put into words. It is hard to do justice to the experience in discussions with those who have not done this kind of work. Being able to: immerse ourselves in the history, environment and the culture, visit rural classrooms in session, see some of the most beautiful and the most impoverished sites, and talk to the locals only helped to better understand and appreciate our experience. We are very humbled by the struggles of our colleagues. These volunteers are now global education advocates and very active in their schools. Which only solidifies our belief that the greatest accomplishment volunteers will gain through this experience will be what they learn about themselves and how it will benefit their schools and communities when they return home. How do we decide where to go and who to help? TWB-Canada s strength is its membership base. New members bring with them the desires and the experiences to assist their colleagues in developing or needy communities at home and abroad. Members keep TWB-Canada informed of needs in their communities and schools and work with us to develop strategies to address community challenges using local knowledge, strategic geographic position, and individual experiences to enhance the educational infrastructure of their countries. Members communicate with each other and form alliances to strengthen their connections to other communities. They are committed to the field of education and possess a wide range of interest and skills to contribute to TWB-Canada s mission. The number of new projects is only limited by the energy and commitment of our members who want to make a difference. TWB-Canada 3

Last fall one of our members, while working in the Naivasha district of Kenya, was also sourcing out a new TWB-Canada project. While another member continued to source out project opportunities in South Africa. As a result, there will be a group of five or six educational technology specialists doing workshops on computer use and integration for three weeks at the beginning of July, 2008 and immediately after a team of twelve educators doing teacher development workshops in Math, Science and English for four weeks in the Naivasha district in Kenya. Kenya We have eleven highly experienced Canadian teachers in Math, Science, English (& English as a Foreign Language), and Special Needs who have paid their own way (through fundraising and personal funds) to volunteer their time to work with teachers of Naivasha district to improve teaching practices and build lasting connections with Kenyan schools. The intention of this experience is to allow Canadian teachers to work alongside Kenyan teachers, to walk in their shoes. We know that the connections established in this year s journey to Kenya will continue well beyond 2008 and well beyond the few teachers involved. With the recent political unrest experienced by all Kenyans, the community we will be travelling to has been impacted with an onslaught of refugees that has overwhelmed their educational resources. Being able to help our colleagues in this area will not only provide them resources to make their jobs easier, but ultimately help to build success in the hundreds of students they teach. South Africa As many rural schools are now receiving donated computers and getting connected to the Internet, they are becoming increasingly frustrated with the added administration and lack of skills to effectively implement and integrate computer use in their schools. A group of about five Information/Educational Technology specialist from Canada will be travelling to some of the townships surrounding Cape Town to deliver three oneweek workshops to discuss and train administrators and educators on the issues around computer use and integration and seek to create relationships between schools in North America and South Africa for mutual learning on global issues and mentorship. We will also be working to build capacity within a local NGO to develop trainers and implementation models that will be put into practice for continued development. TWB-Canada 4

Already there have been discussions with potential partners and members to start new projects in other nations in Africa, Central America, South America, and Asia. While it is important to expand to reach more colleagues in need, it is also important to sustain those projects that exist and commit to building capacity for the long run. This is a balance that is restricted by resources, both financial and human. How does TWB-Canada support its projects? We seek to create cooperative partnerships with those organizations that recognize education as invaluable to the economic and social development of the community and that reflect our philosophy, values and non-discrimination policy. TWB-Canada s partners are local and international, for-profit and non-profit, from diverse sectors, and represent an array of visions and missions. TWB-Canada trades its expertise with partners and invests time and diplomacy to creating durable networks. We look to developing a creative model that succeeds in forming productive and effective partnerships, thus limiting our need to compete for scarce funding resources. We are also greatly appreciative of our individual donors and very proud of our low administrative expense percentage and to boast that, in 2007, 92% of funding went directly to the implementation of our projects. The highest reward for a person's work is not what they get for it, but what they become because of it. - John Ruskin TWB-Canada 5

It's easy to make a buck. It's a lot tougher to make a difference. - Tom Brokaw TWB-Canada 6

I remember back to my first experience in South Africa working with abandoned and orphaned boys and then soon after their teachers. The satisfaction was immediate! But so much more had to be done. With the effects of HIV and AIDS now hitting the level of society that includes health care workers and educators and an education system that cannot fully support its teachers or students, a majority of under-privileged children find themselves in poor and over-crowded conditions and dropping out of school at young ages. It is hard to try to be motivating as a teacher when you are underpaid, overworked and have no resources. This is the growing reality in too many developing nations. As educators and students it can be easy to take what we have for granted. I sincerely believe that education is the one thing that can better lives, provide opportunities and give hope. It is the one thing no one can take away from you. Noble Kelly, President Teachers Without Borders Canada www.twbcanada.org TWB-Canada 7

Teachers Without Borders - Canada 1541 Mahon Avenue North Vancouver, BC Canada V7M 2S6 Phone: +1-778-996-9900 Email: info@twbcanada.org Web site: www.twbcanada.org