In 2021, the Ministry of Education and Sports launched an Emergency
Response Plan (ERP) for School Practice (SP) in the five National Teacher's
Colleges (NTCs) to allow three cohorts of students (2019, 2020, and 2021) to
graduate while the COVID-19 epidemic was still in effect. The graduation of
students was delayed because there were no pupils in secondary schools for the
young teachers to gain teaching experience. Students had to complete their
teaching courses by doing school practice as part of their final assessment.
In order to reduce the spread of COVID-19 and remove the 3-year backlog,
the emergency response school practice plan was developed. Three requirements
were included in this plan to add up to the final grade needed for each student
to graduate:
- Complete
the General Teaching Methods course
online successfully,
- complete
a peer teaching session and;
- avail
their Continuous School Practice files for review and assessment.
The challenge was that it was something new and unique. Colleges had
followed a set procedure for conducting school practice, which involved sending
students to various secondary schools to teach under the supervision of their
trainers. Given the challenge at hand, it was time to make a shift.
Colleges rapidly welcomed, adopted, and implemented the new school
practice plan as a substitute. The plan was a success as it relieved the
institutions from the costly burden of facilitating many students for
School Practice enabling 3500 students to graduate. Additionally, it allowed
students to obtain their teaching certificates, some of which were used to
secure jobs.
Former student at NTC Unyama Amanya Isaac who is now a Maths and
Physical Education teacher at St Marys’ Lacor in Gulu District said that the ERP
was a blessing to him. He said that the emergency plan created a variety of
opportunities for him including his job and a chance to further his studies in
the teaching profession. Without this plan, Amanya said none of that would have
happened.
Alezoyo Lydia a former student of NTC Muni, pursuing a bachelor's at Muni
University hailed the emergency SP plan for bailing her class of 286 students
out of a desperate situation. She said, “We were stranded in our final school
year with no hope to do school practice. I thank the Ministry of Education and Sports
and NTC Muni for rescuing us and enabling us to complete our studies on
time.”
Likewise, NTC Mubende’s former student Asiimwe Mary appreciated the
emergency school practice plan for the abundance of knowledge she received from
it. She said that through the peer teaching experience, she was able to pick up
new methods of teaching which she now applies in her classroom.
For Peter Masette an Academic Registrar at NTC Mubende, the ERP provided
an opportunity to efficiently assess all the students in a limited time. He
said, “With the emergency response school practice plan, all students and
teachers gathered at the college. This considerably lowered our operational
costs on transport and living expenses for the students. In a short amount of
time, we were able to provide instant feedback to the students making it easy
for us to assess them. We are happy that 299 students
at NTC Mubende graduated as instructors thanks to this strategy.”
In 2021, Enabel, the Ministry of Education
and Sports and the National Teachers Colleges partnered to advocate for
alternative ways to do School Practice which resulted in the Emergency Response
School Practice Plan. Today over 3000 students are happy that the hurried
response enabled them to complete their studies during the COVID-19 pandemic.
For more information In Uganda, the Ministry of
Education and Sports re-strategizes School Modalities:
https://bit.ly/3whKTqm