martín perna edci6300 spring 2009 university of texas-brownsville

Post on 22-Jan-2016

47 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

DESCRIPTION

Availability and usage of information technology resources by students at BICU and URACCAN universities in Bluefields, Nicaragua. Martín Perna EDCI6300 Spring 2009 University of Texas-Brownsville. Where is Bluefields?. Faces of Bluefields. Research Proposal. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Availability and usage of information technology resources by students at BICU and URACCAN universities in

Bluefields, Nicaragua

Martín PernaEDCI6300 Spring 2009

University of Texas-Brownsville

Where is Bluefields?

Faces of Bluefields

Research Proposal

• To determine the status and usage of instructional technology by students at URACCAN and BICU University

• Identify in what context students use instructional technology

• Identify models used for development of instructional technology by instructors

Research Plan

• No published research accessible through my information resources in US

• Contact rectors, information tech specialists at university (qualitative research)– Determine questions for students

• Create online and print survey for sample population of students (quantitative research)– Conduct research, process and document findings

Research locations

• BICU (Bluefields Indian and Caribbean University)

• URACCAN (Universidad de las Regiones Autónomas de la Costa Caribe Nicaragüense)

Bluefields, Nicaragua• RAAS-South Atlantic Autonomous Region• Became formally part of Nicaragua in 1998• Nicaragua: second poorest country in

hemisphere• Official languages: Spanish, English, Creole

English, Indigenous languages• Ravaged by civil war, US-funded contra war

in 1980s• Suffered massive destruction by Hurricane

Joan (1988), Mitch (1998)

Population demographics

• Creole (Afro-descended-English and Creole spoken at home)

• Miskito (Indigenous, Suma, Rama languages, Spanish, English)

• Mestizo (mixed European/indigenous/African, English speaking)

• Garifuna (Afro-indigenous people with separate language, may speak English and/or Spanish)

Preliminary SourcesCampbell, M. (2006, September 22). In Latin America, new universities for indigenous students flourish.

Chronicle of Higher Education, 53(5), A40-A43. Gershberg, A.I. (Mar., 1999), Education 'decentralization' processes in Mexico and Nicaragua:

Legislative versus ministry-led reform strategies. Comparative Education, 35 (1), 63-80.Gershberg, A.I. (Jul., 1999), Decentralization, citizen participation, and the role of the State. Latin

American Perspectives, 26 (4), 8-38.Gershberg, A.I, Meade, B. (Aug., 2005), Parental contributions, school-level finances and

decentralization: An analysis of Nicaraguan autonomous school budgets. Comparative Education, 41, (3), 291-308.

Modelo Pedagogico del Uraccan (9/2004) retrieved Feb 6, 2009 from http://www.uraccan.edu.ni/documentos/publicaciones/modelo_pedagogico.pdf

Oferta académica. (2009) Retrieved Feb 6, 2009 from http://www.bicu.edu.ni/carreras.htmlRobb Taylor, D (ed.) (2005). The times and life of Bluefields. Managua: Academia de Geografía e Historia

de NicaraguaShapiro, M. (Winter, 1987) Bilingual-Bicultural Education in Nicaragua's Atlantic Coast Region. Latin

American Perspectives, 14 (1), 67-86.Sujo Wilson, H. (1998). Oral history of Bluefields. Nicaragua: CIDCA-UCA

Further reading

• http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bluefields

Image sources

• http://www.dartmouth.edu/~dartlife/archives/17-4/images/nicaragua2.jpg

• http://www.conicyt.gob.ni/ActividadesConicyt/Octubre/Estudiantes_Uracanpre.jpg

top related