Education

Communication and Power: Reflect Practical Resource Materials

Submitted by admin on 28 October 2006 - 11:52pm

Author

Kate Newman & David Archer

Synopsis

This is an international resource pack for practitioners, which pulls together practical ideas and experiences from people using the Reflect approach around the world. The resource is split into 5 sections: the written word, the spoken word, numbers, images and the last section provides some examples of Reflect in action.

Currency

UK Sterling

Date Entered

26 Aug 2004 - 00:00

Download URL

http://www.reflect-action.org

Illustrations

Issues per Year

0

Resource ID Number

111

Resource Publisher

Special Needs

Editor

Language

English

Price

Producer

Address

Address 2 (optional)

Address 3 (optional)

Distributor

International Education Unit

Publisher

ActionAid

City

County

Publication Year

2003

Video Format

Colour/B&W

Country

Postal Code

Publication Place

UK

Email

Fax

Pages

0

Running Time

Telephone

Website URL

http://www.reflect-action.org

Volume

ISBN

ISSN

Resource Type

Printed Matter

Pictures, People and Power: People-centred visual aids for development

Submitted by admin on 28 October 2006 - 11:52pm

Author

Bob Linney

Synopsis

This title is designed for people who want to make and use pictures for development. It provides guidelines to enable non-artists to make their own visual aids such as discussion starters, picture cards, flannel boards and community maps. It includes sections on: common pictorial conventions; how to draw and use colour; how to copy and adapt pictures; how to make and use a range of people-centred visual aids; and how to plan and conduct workshops on visual communication. The book looks at ways in which visual aids have been designed and used in the past, and shows how the authoritarian approach to communication has failed to promote a more equal distribution of power among people. The author proposes a different approach to work with educational visual aids - a "people-centred" approach - which goes beyond mere participation towards fuller involvement of local people in their own development. The traditional perspective of research studies of visual literacy among non-literate people is shown to be essentially neo-colonial. In this text, by contrast, visual literacy is viewed as a skill that is easy to acquire, rather than as a handicap to overcome by outsider professionals trying to develop a top-down "pictorial language".

Currency

Date Entered

26 Aug 2004 - 00:00

Download URL

Illustrations

Issues per Year

0

Resource ID Number

49

Resource Publisher

Special Needs

Editor

Language

English

Price

£9.50

Producer

Address

Address 2 (optional)

Address 3 (optional)

Distributor

Macmillan Education Ltd.

Publisher

Macmillan

City

County

Publication Year

1995

Video Format

Colour/B&W

Country

Postal Code

Publication Place

Email

Fax

Pages

0

Running Time

Telephone

Website URL

Volume

ISBN

0 - 333- 600 004 - 4

ISSN

Resource Type

Printed Matter

Dula Sentle

Organisation

Dula Sentle Trust - Orphan Day Care

Project Focus

The aim of the project is to enlarge and strengthen a sustainable community based program for orphans and vulnerable children in Otse, a small village in Botswana, severely affected by the HIV epidemic. This community based program does provide social, emotional and educational support for orphans and children referred by social workers from the Ministry of Local Government.

Background

Target Groups/Participants

Children/Young People

Project Activities

Provision of orphan day care, recreation, education, social work services, finance generating activities, for example wood work.

Outcomes

Individual and Family: It has provided support for families and orphaned and vulnerable children. Community: Established a model orphan care project for rural Botswana, which is duplicable. The project has so far been able to keep the fabric of our community project together. To provide children with the continuity of their lives, to keep them in their cultural setting, attached to families, schools, churches, friends e.t.c Lessons Learned & Problems Encountered: The approach although so clear and feasible to us, often has been misinterpreted by others , mainly international organisations. Applications for funding for specific projects being perceived as impossible or not relevant, while for us they are very real and often crucial to our success.

Problems Encountered

The approach although so clear and feasible to us, often has been misinterpreted by others , mainly international organisations. Applications for funding for specific projects being perceived as impossible or not relevant, while for us they are very real and often crucial to our success.

Stakeholder Comments

Beneficiary Comments

Community Impacts

Established a model orphan care project for rural Botswana, which is duplicable. The project has so far been able to keep the fabric of our community project together. To provide children with the continuity of their lives, to keep them in theor cultural setting, attached to families, schools, churches, friends e.t.c <br /><br /> This is a test.

Family Group Impacts

It has provided support for families and orphaned and vulnerable children.

Individual Impacts

Lessons Learned

Other Impacts

Evaluation

Evaluation Type

Composed by the sponsor organisations e.g ACHAP-means funding from Gate Foundation / Merck. Format not lined with the rural development language.

External Evaluation

Donors

ACHAP, Belgian Sponsers, Embassies, consulates and small donations

Project Cost

$340,000

Project Start Date

1 January 2001

Project End Date

1 January 2020

Creative Exchange Projects

HIV/AIDS: The Creative Challenge

Subjects

Education
HIV/AIDS

Creative Activities

International Region

Africa

UK Region

Date Entered

14 July 2004

Skills

Case Study ID

1

International Contact ID

531

Level of Culture

Needs Assessment

More financial support to cover future costs