In
October and November 2021, Annoncer La Couleur and Kruit - the French and
Flemish-speaking global citizenship education programmes from Enabel in Belgium
- and Enabel’s Teacher Training Education project (TTE) organized two intercultural knowledge sharing exchange visits between
lecturers from the NTCs in Uganda and teacher trainers in Belgium.
The
purpose of this year’s Annoncer La Couleur visit was to improve intercultural
competences of both Belgian and Ugandan lecturers; strengthen relations between
Enabel in Uganda and Belgian partners; anchor Global Citizenship Education in
the NTCs; and, share the good practices related to Technology Enhanced Learning
and Active Teaching and Learning.
Likewise,
for the Kruit exchange visit, the aim was to share how colonial history is
addressed in both the Flemish and Ugandan education systems; reflect on lessons
learnt from colonial history in terms of decolonisation and work collectively
on interesting topics about colonial history.
Annoncer La Couleur exchange visit for GTM lecturers
The
Annoncer La Couleur was a return of last year’s visit of teacher trainers from
Belgium to the National Teachers’ Colleges in Uganda in March 2020. It was a weeklong
event filled with activities directly linked to pedagogy in the National
Teachers Colleges such a; classroom observations, an introduction to the
Belgium teacher education system, understanding the Global Citizenship
Education program, and understanding Belgian culture through site visits.
While in Belgium, the team
of General Teaching Methods’ lecturers kicked off their visit at Henallux in
Malonne, a teacher training institution. While there, they discovered flexible
learning spaces, learnt about the Henallux library, observed a Physical
Education lesson and shared good practices on ICT in teaching and learning.
They
were then hosted at the Enabel Headquarters and introduced to workshops on
Global Citizenship Education, and an insightful framework for ethical global
pedagogy, called ‘HEADS UP’. Later on, the team was welcomed at Helha college
and La Maison des Phenix secondary school where they came across various ICT
tools used for teaching and learning and observed English, Music, Geography and
History lessons.
To
conclude this visit, the GTM lecturers toured the great city of Gent and
explored historic architecture going as far back as the 1700s. They also had an
opportunity to visit Krook library, a wonderful space for interaction, research
and knowledge building.
Kruit exchange visit for history teachers
The
Kruit exchange visit was focused on bringing history teacher trainers together
to share knowledge on how the colonial past is addressed in history education
in both the Ugandan and Belgian education contexts.
The
key activities of this exchange included field visits and workshops
particularly focused on teaching colonial history in contemporary times with a
specific emphasis on adopting multiple perspectives on decolonisation.
During
the visit, the team spent some time at Enabel Headquarters and participated in
a workshop on Ethical Global Issues pedagogy from which they gained skills on how
to think through and apply critical literacy in teaching. They were further
challenged to use the HEADS UP tool during a session on teaching about history in
a post-colonial context. A very sensitive but interesting topic on teaching
about slavery in a post-colonial context and its impact was also explored at
the workshop. As part of this session, the team was presented with research
findings from the shared colonial past in Belgian and Congolese school text books
and their evolving representations by an expert team in Global Citizenship
Education at Enabel HQ.
Towards
the end of the trip, the NTC history lecturers interacted with Belgian teacher
trainers connected to the KUL (Catholic University of Leuven) and BimSem
secondary school in Mechelen. While at these institutions, they were introduced
to various colonial history teaching practices through lesson observations and
discussions. The two teams also participated in a brainstorming session on lesson packages to
develop together on a selected history topic applicable in both contexts and discussed
the criteria for a manual on colonial history education for which they will co-create
in March 2022 when the Kruit team visits Uganda.
The
trip was topped with an exciting guided tour to the Royal Museum of Central
Africa in Tervuren- formerly known as the Belgian colonial museum for Congo
used for propaganda to justify King Leopold II’s colonial rule over Congo.
All in all, the exchange
visits were exciting knowledge-sharing experiences for the teams from Uganda
and Belgium for which they hope to share with the rest of the NTC Community.
Visit
the sites provided for more on the exchange visits:
Annoncer
La Couleur: https://bit.ly/3nBBEgX
Kruit: https://bit.ly/3xm7rH1
To
access last year’s exchange visit: https://bit.ly/3dHX9Iq
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