Some 2700 academics, students, school pupils and their teachers
converged on the University of Nigeria on 17 to 21 June for a week
of hands-on learning in science and engineering.
Separate workshops targeted university students, university
instructors and over 2000 school pupils between 13 and16 years old,
three-quarters of them girls. The workshops had three core tracks:
mobile learning, engineering and microscience.
The mobile learning workshops demonstrated how teachers could work
with students to design applications for mobile phones. The
course was run by Clement Onime from the Abdus Salam International
Centre for Theoretical Physics, along with experts from Pakistan,
Saudi Arabia and Trinidad and Tobago, as well as UNESCO's own Mark
West. Dr. Fareeha Zafar from Pakistan designed an application for
smartphones which was donated to the university once the workshop
was over.
Susanna Ackermann, of Intel, demonstrated an innovative
'eye-patch' lens that transforms the cameras on laptop and tablet
computers into a powerful microscope which can be used to detect
motion and take time-lapsed imagery. According to Intel, the lens
supports up to 60 different experiments and is currently being
marketed in South Africa.
Instructors were introduced to augmented reality, a process by
which a digital device allows a user to manipulate items that are
not in the physical world. Clement Onime demonstrated how students
could, for example, create a virtual circuit board by manipulating
objects under the web camera of a tablet computer.
The objects are moved across a piece of patterned paper but appear
on the screen of the tablet as transistors and wires. This
technology opens up numerous avenues for learning, particularly in
contexts where access to actual circuit boards and materials are
unavailable or prohibitively expensive.
The University of Nigeria has a new physics and chemistry
laboratory but experimentation in engineering is uncommon for lack
of modern equipment. One aim of the fair was to demonstrate that
you can perform experiments without expensive equipment and, above
all, that you cannot teach science and engineering without hands-on
learning.
The engineering workshops were a blend of experimentation and
lectures on four themes: shelter, transportation, water filtration
and micro-hydro power generation. In one experiment, students were
given a plastic bottle and cup, cork, copper wire and magnets and
asked to build a micro-hydro turbine. The idea was for the magnet
to turn the rotor (copper wire) and turbine (the plastic cup cut
into a coil shape), thus generating a small current when water was
passed over it. On the second day, one student replaced the cork in
his apparatus with the rubber sole of his sandal, an improvement
subsequently incorporated into the experiment.
These workshops were run by Engineers Without Borders (EWB) in the
UK and Rovani Sigamoney from UNESCO, who were accompanied by
Nigerian representatives of EWB and the Institute of Electrical and
Electronics Engineers.
In the microscience workshops, school pupils tried their hand at
filtering water and mixing chemicals, under the watchful eye of
Imteyaz Khodobux and Osu Otu from UNESCO. The teenagers were shown
how to use miniature plastic kits promoted by UNESCO within its
longstanding Global Microscience Experiments programme.
The week wouldn't have been complete without a talk by Professor
Francisca Nneka Okeke from the University of Nigeria, one of this
year's five l'Oréal-UNESCO laureates for Women in Science.
Professor Nneka Okeke studies the ionosphere situated between 50
kilometers and 1000 kilometers above the Earth's surface. She spoke
of her career and her passion for science to a spellbound
auditorium.
Participation in the science fair was funded entirely by the
International Institute for Biotechnology, which operates under the
auspices of UNESCO. Hosted by the University of Nigeria, the
institute opened its doors earlier this year.
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Promoting Education in Nigeria
ICTP participates in science and engineering fair hosted at the University of Nigeria
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