Annual Report 2012

Annual Report 2012

To mark IkamvaYouth’s 10th Anniversary, we’re celebrating the Superheroes who’ve helped us to achieve the landmark successes worth celebrating. Read all about them and our super achievements in the latest IkamvaYouth 2012 Annual Report.

If you want to download the file, click below

Annual Report 2012

Among superheroes, lessons learned and our vision for 2030, you’ll find a board game where you can play the highs and lows of IkamvaYouth’s first decade. Download the Game tokens here. 

 

Tutoring in Grahamstown.

Tutoring in Grahamstown.

On the morning of the 16th of February IkamvaYouth; practically; began the process of changing lives. As hordes of excited learners trooped into the hall there was a tangible sense of expectation in the air; the stakes are high; we had a brilliant Open Day and now it’s time to deliver.

One cannot help but be humbled by the commitment levels of the schools; parents and learners. The Nombulelo Senior Secondary School principal left the comfort of his home on a Saturday morning to make sure that the school hall was ready for our use. The Ntsika Senior Secondary School principal continues to transport the learners in a taxi to make sure they are not late for sessions. Learners from Khutliso Daniels Senior Secondary School know that the principal has taken a very active interest in their progress while they are in our programme and this gives them that extra push. It is indeed the beginnings of greatness for the learners in this Joza Township of Grahamstown. IkamvaYouth is in operation.

This would not be possible without the selfless involvement of our volunteer tutors. From both Rhodes University and the township community they came; responding to a call of helping youth succeed by fully utilising education as a tool for success. We look forward to a year of exceeding expectations!!!

Orange is the colour, North West is where we @.

Orange is the colour, North West is where we @.

IkamvaYouth continues to grow; a new branch has been established in Ikageng Township, Potchefstroom, in the North West. This branch has been honoured with an Orange IkamvaYouth logo, a warm and inviting colour, the colour associated with the gentle warmth of the sun.

Our new Branch Coordinator, Zanele Mdletye is putting the IkamvaYouth print in the North West. We are pleased to announce that ground work in establishing a new branch in Ikageng has begun! IkamvaYouth has since received a warm welcome from the community of Ikageng. Four schools are on board with the programme, learner recruitment forms have been issued. The learner response has been awesome. We are on the verge of securing office space as well as tutoring venue, negotiations are in progress. 

The North West University, Potchefstroom Campus recently gave us a platform to recruit for tutors. We are still navigating our way with Vuselela College and Agricultural College. Our mission is to recruit a dedicated army of volunteers to start tutoring learners by the end of February.

We are looking forward to working together with the community of Ikageng to achieve better results.

 Those inspired by Orange are always on the go!  Watch this space.

Numeric and Khan Academy

Numeric and Khan Academy

Just over a year ago I was approached by Andrew Einhorn, a UCT grad student, who was interested in implementing an online maths program at Makhaza. All he needed was access to the lab, access to a class and a tutor. A year down the line not only he has completely revamped two of our branches labs in Makhaza and Nyanga, established a formal Khan Academy program in these branches (as well as other locations in Cape Town and rural Eastern Cape), but has produced results at very low costs, and is piloting in schools for 2013. 

His passion for creating high impact and stimulating learning environments in township and rural locations often only privy to the wealthy few has seen him start Numeric, an NGO interested in finding ways to bring Khan Academy to South Africa and make it a useful resource to both teachers and learners. He presented an inspiring TEDxUCT talk last year outlining the background, as well as the impact and results Numeric has had. He also posted the following blog on the Khan Academy website:

 

A little over 15 months ago, we started an experiment.  We wanted to know if Khan Academy was viable in township (slum) areas in South Africa and if so, what type of impact it might have on numeracy.   Numeracy in South Africa is astonishingly weak, with just 2% of Grade 9s scoring over 50% on the annual national assessments in 2012. 

And so we set out to see if Khan Academy might be used as a catalyst for change.  But before I expound on the results of this experiment, I ought perhaps give a little more background on the environments we’re working in.

Townships in South Africa are not unlike the favelas of Brazil or the slums bordering Delhi and Calcutta in India.  They are urban areas that were, until the end of Apartheid in 1994, reserved for non-whites, but have now become residential hubs for the urbanizing masses.  They are typically built on the periphery of cities and tend to be characterized by high population density, poverty and unemployment.  Picture a ramshackle of makeshift houses constructed out of corrugated iron, wood scraps and cardboard, jigsawed together into a gigantic maze 5 miles wide and 10 miles across.  At the risk of generalising grossly, that’s more or less the picture I want you to have in mind as you read this article.

Now, townships in South Africa get a bad rap.  They are viewed as ‘dangerous’ places and it is considered unwise to visit them unless you know someone there, or visit them as part of a ‘township tour’.  Yet while crime rates in these areas are often high, the reputation does not do justice to the vibrant and persevering people who inhabit them.  In particular, townships are YOUNG!  On any given day, around two o’clock in the afternoon, the streets flood with uniformed, backpack-toting children on their way home from school.  And despite having barely two pennies to rub together, they are meticulously dressed – shiny black shoes, starched white collars – and have aspirations to match.   Most of the children in South Africa live in some form of township, which means that children growing up in these environments constitute the better part of the future of our country.

And yet it is supremely difficult to convince our best teachers to go and work in these areas.  They are offered good jobs in well-resourced schools most often located in the wealthy suburbs of the cities.  Principals at these schools compete fiercely for their skills.  And this is as it should be.  But it also entrenches the educational bias whereby a child’s access to quality education is directly proportional to the wealth of their family (see chart below).  

 

* University exemption rate refers to the percentage of learners who attain the academic marks in their final year of school that are necessary to gain access to South African universities.

So Numeric’s experiment was to see whether we could use Khan Academy, in conjunction with a slightly less skilled (and often unqualified) math coach, to create the high impact and stimulating learning environments enjoyed by kids living in wealthier suburbs.

The opportunity provided by Khan Academy premised on the following:  Videos do not argue about where they are played; they are unaffected by crime and environment. Appropriately licensed, they do not cost anything.  They do not grow weary, skip class, or grow jaded.  Instead, they convey their message enthusiastically, faithfully, clearly – time and time again.  A child may watch just as many videos as he/she has appetite for, and need never feel limited by the dragging on of a boring class or an inept teacher.  For many children in South Africa, a Khan Academy video will be their first exposure to what we might term ‘world class instruction’.  When complemented by the exercises on the Knowledge Map, Khan Academy becomes a powerful tool for turning the tide on numeracy in South Africa.

So what were the results of the experiment?  Well, it’s probably too early to draw any major conclusions, but we do have a few figures we’d like to share.  We currently run 7 Khan Academy classes across 3 different hubs in the Eastern and Western Cape provinces of South Africa.  The first pilot group of 20 Grade 9s has just completed its first twelve months of Khan Academy and their numbers are as follows:

* Total Khan Academy hours delivered:  2220

* Total Problems Solved:  27,988

* Total Problems per learner:  1399

* Total Khan Modules Complete:  1232

* Average Modules per learner:  62

Bearing in mind this is an afterschool programme, these are 27,988 math problems that would not otherwise have been attempted.  The 62 modules completed by the average learner constitute 62 gaps that those learners have filled.   But it’s more about just the numbers; it’s about creating excitement and enthusiasm around learning.  This is hard to convey in words, but perhaps a picture will suffice.

 

As we always say to our coaches, the tragedy in South Africa is not so much that kids don’t want to learn.  It’s that some kids DO want to learn, but can’t.  Khan Academy provides us one way to give these kids a world-class education without having to magically replenish our nation’s supply of teachers.  And who knows, perhaps one day these kids will become the inspirational and talented teachers we have waited for for so long!

—-

Andrew Einhorn is the founder and current CEO of Numeric.org. His TEDx talk on Numeric.org and Khan Academy is available here.

Numeric and Khan Academy

Numeric and Khan Academy

Just over a year ago I was approached by Andrew Einhorn, a UCT grad student, who was interested in implementing an online maths program at Makhaza. All he needed was access to the lab, access to a class and a tutor. A year down the line not only he has completely revamped two of our branches labs in Makhaza and Nyanga, established a formal Khan Academy program in these branches (as well as other locations in Cape Town and rural Eastern Cape), but has produced results at very low costs, and is piloting in schools for 2013. 

His passion for creating high impact and stimulating learning environments in township and rural locations often only privy to the wealthy few has seen him start Numeric, an NGO interested in finding ways to bring Khan Academy to South Africa and make it a useful resource to both teachers and learners. He presented an inspiring TEDxUCT talk last year outlining the background, as well as the impact and results Numeric has had. He also posted the following blog on the Khan Academy website:

 

A little over 15 months ago, we started an experiment.  We wanted to know if Khan Academy was viable in township (slum) areas in South Africa and if so, what type of impact it might have on numeracy.   Numeracy in South Africa is astonishingly weak, with just 2% of Grade 9s scoring over 50% on the annual national assessments in 2012. 

And so we set out to see if Khan Academy might be used as a catalyst for change.  But before I expound on the results of this experiment, I ought perhaps give a little more background on the environments we’re working in.

Townships in South Africa are not unlike the favelas of Brazil or the slums bordering Delhi and Calcutta in India.  They are urban areas that were, until the end of Apartheid in 1994, reserved for non-whites, but have now become residential hubs for the urbanizing masses.  They are typically built on the periphery of cities and tend to be characterized by high population density, poverty and unemployment.  Picture a ramshackle of makeshift houses constructed out of corrugated iron, wood scraps and cardboard, jigsawed together into a gigantic maze 5 miles wide and 10 miles across.  At the risk of generalising grossly, that’s more or less the picture I want you to have in mind as you read this article.

Now, townships in South Africa get a bad rap.  They are viewed as ‘dangerous’ places and it is considered unwise to visit them unless you know someone there, or visit them as part of a ‘township tour’.  Yet while crime rates in these areas are often high, the reputation does not do justice to the vibrant and persevering people who inhabit them.  In particular, townships are YOUNG!  On any given day, around two o’clock in the afternoon, the streets flood with uniformed, backpack-toting children on their way home from school.  And despite having barely two pennies to rub together, they are meticulously dressed – shiny black shoes, starched white collars – and have aspirations to match.   Most of the children in South Africa live in some form of township, which means that children growing up in these environments constitute the better part of the future of our country.

And yet it is supremely difficult to convince our best teachers to go and work in these areas.  They are offered good jobs in well-resourced schools most often located in the wealthy suburbs of the cities.  Principals at these schools compete fiercely for their skills.  And this is as it should be.  But it also entrenches the educational bias whereby a child’s access to quality education is directly proportional to the wealth of their family (see chart below).  

 

* University exemption rate refers to the percentage of learners who attain the academic marks in their final year of school that are necessary to gain access to South African universities.

So Numeric’s experiment was to see whether we could use Khan Academy, in conjunction with a slightly less skilled (and often unqualified) math coach, to create the high impact and stimulating learning environments enjoyed by kids living in wealthier suburbs.

The opportunity provided by Khan Academy premised on the following:  Videos do not argue about where they are played; they are unaffected by crime and environment. Appropriately licensed, they do not cost anything.  They do not grow weary, skip class, or grow jaded.  Instead, they convey their message enthusiastically, faithfully, clearly – time and time again.  A child may watch just as many videos as he/she has appetite for, and need never feel limited by the dragging on of a boring class or an inept teacher.  For many children in South Africa, a Khan Academy video will be their first exposure to what we might term ‘world class instruction’.  When complemented by the exercises on the Knowledge Map, Khan Academy becomes a powerful tool for turning the tide on numeracy in South Africa.

So what were the results of the experiment?  Well, it’s probably too early to draw any major conclusions, but we do have a few figures we’d like to share.  We currently run 7 Khan Academy classes across 3 different hubs in the Eastern and Western Cape provinces of South Africa.  The first pilot group of 20 Grade 9s has just completed its first twelve months of Khan Academy and their numbers are as follows:

* Total Khan Academy hours delivered:  2220

* Total Problems Solved:  27,988

* Total Problems per learner:  1399

* Total Khan Modules Complete:  1232

* Average Modules per learner:  62

Bearing in mind this is an afterschool programme, these are 27,988 math problems that would not otherwise have been attempted.  The 62 modules completed by the average learner constitute 62 gaps that those learners have filled.   But it’s more about just the numbers; it’s about creating excitement and enthusiasm around learning.  This is hard to convey in words, but perhaps a picture will suffice.

 

As we always say to our coaches, the tragedy in South Africa is not so much that kids don’t want to learn.  It’s that some kids DO want to learn, but can’t.  Khan Academy provides us one way to give these kids a world-class education without having to magically replenish our nation’s supply of teachers.  And who knows, perhaps one day these kids will become the inspirational and talented teachers we have waited for for so long!

—-

Andrew Einhorn is the founder and current CEO of Numeric.org. His TEDx talk on Numeric.org and Khan Academy is available here.

IkamvaYouth Eastern Cape

IkamvaYouth Eastern Cape

On the 22nd of October  2012; in Grahamstown; we approached our first school in our quest for partners in the fight against the Education crisis facing our country.  The name of that school is Nombulelo Senior Secondary School; together with two other schools they have come on board to be part of our first branch in the Eastern Cape. The other two schools are Khutliso Daniels and TEM Mrwetyana Senior Secondary Schools. IkamvaYouth is breaking new ground in the Eastern Cape.

The strides we have managed to take in this short period are testimony to the level of support we have received from this community. MOU’s with the schools have been signed; the tutoring venue has been secured; office space is available and educators are ready and willing to render the required support. We are humbled by the warmth and cooperation received from the various community based stakeholders. 

It all began with a visit to the Rhodes University Community Engagement centre. Without their support in helping us navigate our way in a new environment it would have been a steeper climb. IkamvaYouth owes Di Hornby and her team a bucketful of gratitude.

Lloyd Lungu

031 909 3590
lloyd@ikamvayouth.org
2525 Ngcede Grove, Umlazi AA Library, 4031

Lloyd is a self-disciplined and highly goal-driven Industrial Psychology Honours graduate. He is currently a Master's candidate completing his second year of M.Com in Industrial Psychology at the University of the Free State. Lloyd joined IkamvaYouth as a learner in 2012, after matriculating he came back and volunteered as a tutor for the duration of his undergraduate studies at UKZN. He later worked as an Intern in the Chesterville branch. His passion for youth empowerment and inclusion has grown enormously through his time and experience gained within IkamvaYouth and has inspired him to provide career guidance to young township people. He is currently working at the Umlazi Branch as a Branch Assistant.