A new free resource for teachers was created for the Tangible Africa Teacher Support Programme; the WhatsApp Chatbot is helping in so many ways!
South Africa (08 January 2025) – A free tool in the palm of teachers’ hands has been developed to assist teachers in excelling at teaching Coding and Robotics at all primary schools across South Africa.
As part of the Tangible Africa Teacher Support Programme, a WhatsApp Chatbot was launched in December. This innovative tool will play a pivotal role in providing weekly lessons to teachers from Grades R to 7, preparing them for the future implementation of the new Coding and Robotics curricula.
Tangible Africa, an engagement project of Nelson Mandela University Computing Sciences Department and the Leva Foundation non-profit organisation, is known for tangible coding games and training used to teach and encourage computational thinking and problem-solving skills across Africa and many other parts of the world.
Prof Jean Greyling, Tangible Africa Founder and Associate Professor at Nelson Mandela University Computing Sciences Department, said one of the best parts of the new Tangible Africa Teacher Support Programme is that it is designed for teachers by teachers.
“The lessons are developed by a team of qualified teachers with extensive experience. The programme is completely free, tailored to the CAPS Coding and Robotics curriculum, suitable for teachers without prior coding experience and offers opportunities to earn valuable Continuing Professional Development (CPD) points. The easy-to-follow weekly lessons with support is free to teachers from well-resourced and under-resourced schools. Active participation in the programme can also earn teachers tangible resources,” said Greyling.
Kelly Bush from Tangible Africa, who designed the ChatBot navigation, said its functionality provides a seamless interaction platform for registered teachers. In addition to delivering weekly lessons and archives of previous lessons, the ChatBot enables teachers to provide feedback and ask questions.
Designed for Teachers by Teachers
Greyling is excited about the positive teacher response to the Tangible Africa Teacher Support Programme thus far, but the team at Tangible Africa wants as many teachers as possible to try it out.
“We have committed to providing weekly lessons during the first term of 2025. The continuation and expansion of the project will literally depend on how many teachers register and implement the lessons in their classes,” said Jackson Tshabalala, Engagement Manager for Tangible Africa.
Conraad Basson from Shalom Akademie in Ladysmith expressed gratitude for the innovative teaching tools:
“I am inspired by the passionate Tangible Africa team to continue raising a generation of problem-solvers!”
Megan Gratz from Stirling Primary School in East London added:
“Using the WhatsApp platform is wonderful since everyone has WhatsApp. I downloaded all the lessons I needed and think this will specifically be helpful for teachers and schools who do not have resources.”
Alley McPherson, Founder of E.C.D.’s United for Greatness, said lessons are simple to understand and follow:
“The chatbot application is AMAZING. It navigated me through everything I wanted to know with ease. Us as an organisation have been waiting for something like this for years, and it is finally here, without all the intimidation that Coding and Robotics usually comes with!”
Committed to Teacher Support
All initial lessons will be offline and interactive, focusing on introducing coding principles and problem-solving skills. This approach ensures accessibility, especially for schools with limited resources.
Ryan le Roux, CEO of Leva Foundation, explains:
“We believe that this way of teaching has been proven to be the most effective within the country’s environment where many schools do not have computers, internet connectivity, or electricity. The Chatbot will play a pivotal part in all of this, since we have found that emails are not the best way to communicate with our teachers.”