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The purpose of this study is to explore the status of the creation, use and/or management of open education resources (OER) in Kenya. OER, which to a large extent depend on access to Information Communication Technology (ICT), are seen by proponents as offerring certain opportunities to improve access to and quality of education.

Author
A. Atieno Adala

Quality education should be delivered in the language spoken at home. However, this minimum standard is not met for hundreds of millions, limiting their ability to develop foundations for learning. By one estimate, as much as 40% of the global population does not have access to an education in a language they speak or understand.

Author
Global Education Monitoring Report
Publisher
UNESCO

National language policy mandates use of the language of the catchment area as the medium of instruction in Grades 1 to 3; in practice, however, English is used extensively as the medium of instruction even in Grade 1 classrooms. The national education agendas are motivated by economic progress and social advantage.

Author
Barbara Trudell
UNICEF

This report assessed school- and community-based reading. The Stanford-led team conducted a randomized control trial of a literacy intervention in Rwanda to determine whether programs aimed at families and communities had an impact on children's reading --above and beyond-- the traditional approach of training teachers.

Author
E. Friedlander & C. Goldenberg (eds.)

This study was conducted as part of the OER for Skills Development project of Commonwealth of Learning (COL), supported by The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation. The objective of the study was to collect baseline data from Commonwealth institutions with respect to the development, use and reuse of OER; the availability of support; and challenges faced in fostering the use of OER.

Author
B Phalachandra and Ishan Abeywardena

Open Educational Resources (OER) offer a powerful means of expanding the reach and the effectiveness of education worldwide. For this reason, COL and UNESCO co-organised the World OER Congress in 2012 in Paris, which resulted in the OER Paris Declaration: a statement urging governments around the world to release, as OER, all teaching, learning and research materials developed with public funds.

Author
Fengchun Miao
Sanjaya Mishra and Rory McGreal (eds)

The language environment in the Eastern and Southern Region of Africa is rich and dynamic. Many African languages, including Amharic, Kirundi, Swahili, isiZulu, Kinyarwanda, Chichewa, Luganda, Kikuyu, Malagasy, Oromo, and Somali are spoken as mother tongues by millions of African citizens. Some may also serve as regional and national languages.

Author
Barbara Trudell
UNICEF
Publisher
United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF)

To teach young children to read, teachers and students need textbooks, lesson plans, and reading materials that are aligned with each other and with the science of reading. Books should also be procured at reasonable costs, and delivered to every classroom before the start of the school year.

Author
World Bank Group
Publisher
World Bank Group

Most classrooms in low-income countries lack sufficient instructional resources, despite substantial investment in textbooks and other teaching and learning materials (TLM) over decades. One major cause of this continuing scarcity is that complex, costly, and opaque supply chains cause books to go missing or be delayed. Past attempts at developing distribution management solutions have been overly complex, too project-specific, and/or too expensive, making broad-scale adoption impossible.

Read@Home’s Track and Trace (R@HTnT) app is a revolutionary low-cost platform designed to bring transparency and efficiency to the TLM supply chain. Whether it’s a school textbook, teacher guide, book for reading practice, or tablet, ensuring TLMs get from the production point and into students’ hands is crucial. The open-source app, funded by the World Bank’s Read@Home initiative, can ensure that every stakeholder has real-time visibility into the journey of their TLMs and allow them to solve problems and correct issues that arise along the way.

Author
World Bank Group

La plupart des salles de classe des pays à faible revenu manquent de ressources pédagogiques suffisantes, malgré des investissements importants dans les manuels scolaires et autres matériels d'enseignement et d'apprentissage (TLM) au cours des dernières décennies. L'une des principales causes de cette pénurie persistante est que les chaînes d'approvisionnement complexes, coûteuses et opaques entraînent la disparition ou le retard des livres. Les tentatives passées de développement de solutions de gestion de la distribution ont été trop complexes, trop spécifiques à un projet et/ou trop coûteuses, ce qui a rendu impossible leur adoption à grande échelle.

L'application Track and Trace (R@HTnT) de Read@Home est une plateforme révolutionnaire à faible coût conçue pour apporter transparence et efficacité à la chaîne d'approvisionnement des TLM. Qu'il s'agisse d'un manuel scolaire, d'un guide de l'enseignant, d'un livre de lecture ou d'une tablette, il est essentiel de s'assurer que les TLM parviennent du point de production jusqu'aux élèves. L'application open source, financée par l'initiative Read@Home de la Banque mondiale, permet à chaque partie prenante de suivre en temps réel le parcours de ses TLM et de résoudre les problèmes qui surviennent en cours de route.

Author
World Bank Group

This updated primer discusses challenges and issues faced by content creators, such as publishers, authors, illustrators, and teachers, all of whom have a stake in producing high-quality and cost-effective materials for education. This version includes lessons learned from the COVID-19 lockdowns, technology challenges that still impede access to digital content, and the tradeoffs between digital access and print.

Author
Neil Butcher
Lisbeth Levey
Kirsty von Gogh
Publisher
Neil Butcher & Associates

This note outlines the World Bank’s Read@Home initiative’s recommendations for a “first collection” of children’s
literature. It is intended for Read@Home and other early reading programs involved in the development and/or
selection of books to support children’s pre-reading and early reading skills.

Author
World Bank
Publisher
World Bank Group