Framework for the development and evaluation of educational DVDs and web-based multi-media clips for grade 8 and 9 History.
Abstract
The White Paper on e-Education promotes the use of various information
communication technologies (ICTs) to achieve the expected learning outcomes
in the different learning areas of the school curriculum. Because most teachers
and learners are not yet computer skilled, resource-based learning, supported
by digital versatile disc (DVD) technology, is one of the most cost-effective
and self-contained educational media that involve minimal infrastructural
investment. Educational DVDs provide the opportunity to deliver a
constructive multi-media learning experience to learners in rural areas who
do not have access to libraries and the Internet. This is especially valuable for
history education because DVDs allow learners to "go time travelling" through
history, guided by different learning media and artefacts such as historical
photographs, illustrations, film material, music, speeches, newspaper reports,
political cartoons, maps, etc. Multi-media learning tools stimulate different
learning styles and broaden the range of the learning experience in general.
This paper provides a research framework for the development and evaluation
of educational DVDs and Web-based multi-media clips for grades 8 and 9
history in the social sciences learning area. These clips are currently being
developed at the Faculty Education Sciences of the North-West University.
These educational media, with accompanying teacher manual and learner
word-cards, are intended as inexpensive support of quality education and
sustainable social development in South Africa.