Objective: to share results and experiences with regard to strengthening inclusion in the Finnish-funded HEP higher education partnerships in Sub-Saharan Africa. The focus is on teacher education.
Target groups: higher education stakeholders in Sub-Saharan Africa, Europe and Finland interested and involved in inclusion-related education, research and community outreach activities. Government representatives, local education authorities, HEIs, schools, students etc.
Webinar programme
14.30 – 14.45 Opening by EDUFI, the Finnish National Agency for Education, followed by
A student voice on developing barrier-free learning environments in Tanzanian higher
education, learnings from participating in the BERT partnership
Nasri Ali, University of Zanzibar SUZA, Leader of the BERT peer group of students with disabilities
The input will present the process of inclusion of students with disabilities and the student-led activities in the BERT partnership. Nasri Ali will reflect on his individual learning path and the added value that the BERT project has brought to the university. More information about the BERT partnership Breaking Education Barriers: Inclusion, Rehabilitation and Technology: BERT | Jamk University of Applied Sciences
14.45 - 15.00
How can research evidence lead to practical changes in teaching and research processes in Rwandan HEIs?
Dr. Alice Ikuzwe, Deputy Principal in Charge of Academics and Training, Rwanda Polytechnic, Kigali College
The input explains inclusion as a cross-cutting principle in the HEP-TED partnership, focusing on higher education pedagogy. It shows how results from a student self-assessment survey at Rwanda Polytechnic can feed into the process of policy development as well as concrete changes in institutional practices. More information about the HEP-TED partnership: Higher Education Pedagogies for Teacher Education | University of Helsinki
15.00 – 15.15
Building an inclusive learning process around sustainable development in schools in Namibia
Lydia Amakali, Lecturer, Hifikepunye Pohamba Campus, University of Namibia
The FUTE project explores how mini-projects can broaden students understanding of sustainability, e.g towards social sustainability and inclusion. Mini‑projects enable teacher students and children to take meaningful action in their social environments, strengthening agency and participation. The approach also helps teacher students build connections with parents, collaborators, and community partners. More information about the FUTE partnership: FUTE - Future teacher education for sustainable development -
15.15 – 15.30
Developing inclusive practices at school level in Mozambique
Dr. Paula Alexandra dos Santos Pais da Cruz, Faculty of Language Sciences, Communication and Arts, Pedagogical University of Maputo
The input will outline the collaboration between teacher education institutions and primary & secondary schools through Living Labs and around STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts and Mathematics). What are the take-aways for teacher education? More information about the TIPOTE partnership: Towards inclusive and practice-oriented teacher education - TIPOTE | Jamk University of Applied Sciences
15.30 – 16.00
Questions and answers, discussion, wrap-up
The webinar is also a parallel session on the Education Day in the Nordic-Baltic Rwanda Forum