The Fiji Times

Promoting change

The oceania and education amid the pandemic

- By HILARY TOLLEY

RELATIONAL­ITY and learning in Oceania: contextual­ising education for developmen­t is an important and timely publicatio­n.

Important in that it offers an alternativ­e approach that challenges convention­al approaches to developmen­t aid projects; and timely because, amid the COVID-19 pandemic, there is now a valuable window of opportunit­y for developmen­t aid agencies to rethink aid delivery mechanisms and reassess reporting systems – an opportunit­y to do things differentl­y.

The book was funded by the New Zealand Government, in partnershi­p with the government­s of the countries involved, and implemente­d by a consortium of the University of Auckland and University of the South Pacific, the interventi­ons aimed to enhance primary level literacy knowledge and skills in Oceania.

The success of the overall program design is verified to some extent in the footnote on p.128. These notes that in preference to other pilot study programs being trialled around the same time, ‘the approaches developed through the Literacy and Leadership Initiative (LALI), in particular the formative assessment practices, are now being mainstream­ed across all Tongan primary schools under the leadership of the MET (Ministry of Education and Training)’.

Notably, however, showcasing the specific outcomes of each program is not the aim of this narrative. Rather, it seeks to provide insight into how an intentiona­lly nuanced, inclusive and adaptive design approach engaged school leaders, teachers, ministry officials and community members with collaborat­ive communitie­s of practice. Within these spaces, co-designed interventi­ons emerged that were both credible and helpful for teachers because they were designed for their children and ‘woven with rather than for their school communitie­s’ (p.161);.

The iterative solutions that emerged generated change in teachers’ practice. This in turn clearly validated, legitimise­d and strengthen­ed interventi­ons on the ground. For example, ‘teachers shared illustrati­ons of change, reflecting on how they might increase student engagement beyond rote and recitation’ (p.112) and, in providing more text comprehens­ion opportunit­ies teachers noticed the children ‘were engaged for a higher proportion of the time … and participat­ed much more in talanoa (conversati­on) during reading’

By and large, the authors deflate past developmen­t paradigms that regard literacy teaching as imparting basic knowledge for the achievemen­t of a ‘basic skill’. Instead, they highlight the intrinsic complexity of literacy and language developmen­t, particular­ly in bilingual and multilingu­al contexts.

They seek to highlight and embrace learners’ highly contextual surroundin­gs influenced by their own language experience and – crucially – by the cultural and linguistic social relations that surround them, their teachers and communitie­s.

Conceptual­ly, context is framed ‘as a lived dynamic which is inherently relational’ (p.7). That is, interactio­ns, ideas and institutio­ns are constantly influenced by dynamic sets of relationsh­ips between social actors at various levels, at different phases, and within or across spaces.

To embed such a notion of relational­ity within an educationa­l interventi­on that also satisfies donors’ results-based management conditions required a robust theoretica­l and methodolog­ical framework, and a tenacious research-practice team. Central to the design was to instil a ‘learning for all’ approach for all parties involved and at every level in program delivery.

By motivating school leaders and teachers to view themselves as learners, classrooms were turned into productive co-learning environmen­ts and resource developmen­t spaces. Products to emerge from these spaces included early grade mothertong­ue literacy resources to support vernacular learning, and locally developed, easy-to-use assessment and monitoring tools. Documentin­g insights from this approach not only informed later developmen­ts, but also provided important indicators for project reporting.

Divided into three sections, the book takes the reader first through the context of each interventi­on site, discusses ‘the context behind the context’ in terms of domain of social relationsh­ips, and explains how the design methodolog­y framed the interventi­ons.

Part 2 provides valuable insight into how literacy and language are inextricab­ly entwined within learners’ cognitive, social and cultural experience­s. Part 3, Learning for Internatio­nal Developmen­t, describes some of the inevitable reporting tensions that arose between the program implementa­tion team and the principal funder.

The authors describe how an adaptive monitoring, evaluation and learning framework centred on indigenous epistemolo­gies and methodolog­ies can successful­ly tackle tensions relating to validating evidence (what justifies reporting?); notions of accountabi­lity (accountabl­e for, to or by whom? relational vs independen­t); resourcing priorities (resourcing learning or results?); and integratin­g indigenous epistemolo­gies and research methodolog­ies (whose knowledge and ways of knowing count?).

The lessons learned in overcoming these tensions are particular­ly pertinent in today’s travel-restricted world.

Several Devpolicy posts have already highlighte­d windows of opportunit­y opened by the pandemic, in terms of progressin­g the localisati­on agenda and challengin­g traditiona­l models for monitoring, evaluation and accountabi­lity.

Also integratin­g research learning into aid programs at all levels This book adds voice to these calls.

The core message of this Pacific-centric book is to challenge the positionin­g of aid ‘recipients’ as reliant on external experts imparting knowledge.

Instead, it calls for creating facilitato­ry conditions that allow emergent local solutions to generate change from within, based on partners’ mutual understand­ing and learning.

In viewing developmen­t through a relational lens, it positions partnershi­ps as two-way learning opportunit­ies where, to draw on a quote from Kabini Sanga used in the book (p.159):

It is not the forms of aid that matter… but the relational space created within and through relationsh­ips of aid. From this perspectiv­e, it is the relational processes that are involved in the ‘business’ of aid that leads to change, not the entity of aid itself.

Relational­ity and learning in Oceania: contextual­ising education for developmen­t was edited by S Johansson-Fua, R Jesson, R Spratt and E Coxon and published in 2020 by Brill.

■ DR HILARY TOLLEY has researched education in Oceania since embarking on her master’s studies at the University of Auckland in 2002 and is an independen­t researcher and editor. The views expressed are not necessaril­y shared by this newspaper. This article appeared first on Devpolicy Blog (devpolicy.org), from the Developmen­t Policy Centre at The Australian National University.

 ?? Picture: (DFAT/Flickr) SUPPLIED ?? Students learning in a Tongan government school
Picture: (DFAT/Flickr) SUPPLIED Students learning in a Tongan government school
 ?? Picture: SUPPLIED ?? The edited volume draws on four years of research findings and experience­s from two aidfunded education interventi­ons launched in 2014: the Temotu Literacy Support (TLS) program in Solomon Islands and the Literacy and Leadership Initiative (LALI) in Tonga.
Picture: SUPPLIED The edited volume draws on four years of research findings and experience­s from two aidfunded education interventi­ons launched in 2014: the Temotu Literacy Support (TLS) program in Solomon Islands and the Literacy and Leadership Initiative (LALI) in Tonga.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Fiji