Building IKhwezi, a digital platform to capture everyday Indigenous Knowledge for improving educational outcomes in marginalised communities

dc.contributor.advisorTerzoli, Alfredo
dc.contributor.authorNtšekhe, Mathe V K
dc.date.accessioned2026-03-04T15:33:28Z
dc.date.issued2018
dc.description.abstractAptly captured in the name, the broad mandate of Information and Communications Technologies for Development (ICT4D) is to facilitate the use of Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) in society to support development. Education, as often stated, is the cornerstone for development, imparting knowledge for conceiving and realising development. In this thesis, we explore how everyday Indigenous Knowledge (IK) can be collected digitally, to enhance the educational outcomes of learners from marginalised backgrounds, by stimulating the production of teaching and learning materials that include the local imagery to have resonance with the learners. As part of the exploration, we reviewed a framework known as Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge (TPACK), which spells out the different kinds of knowledge needed by teachers to teach effectively with ICTs. In this framework, IK is not present explicitly, but through the concept of context(s). Using Afrocentric and Pan-African scholarship, we argue that this logic is linked to colonialism and a critical decolonising pedagogy necessarily demands explication of IK: to make visible the cultures of the learners in the margins (e.g. Black rural learners). On the strength of this argument, we have proposed that TPACK be augumented to become Indigenous Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge (I-TPACK). Through this augumentation, I-TPACK becomes an Afrocentric framework for a multicultural education in the digital era. The design of the digital platform for capturing IK relevant for formal education, was done in the Siyakhula Living Lab (SLL). The core idea of a Living Lab (LL) is that users must be understood in the context of their lived everyday reality. Further, they must be involved as co-creators in the design and innovation processes. On a methodological level, the LL environment allowed for the fusing together of multiple methods that can help to create a fitting solution. In this thesis, we followed an iterative user-centred methodology rooted in ethnography and phenomenology. Specifically, through long term conversations and interaction with teachers and ethnographic observations, we conceptualized a platform, IKhwezi, that facilitates the collection of context-sensitive content, collaboratively, and with cost and convenience in mind. We implemented this platform using MediaWiki, based on a number of considerations. From the ICT4D disciplinary point of view, a major consideration was being open to the possibility that other forms of innovation"”and, not just 'technovelty' (i.e. technological/- technical innovation)"”can provide a breakthrough or ingenious solution to the problem at hand. In a sense, we were reinforcing the growing sentiment within the discipline that technology is not the goal, but the means to foregrounding the commonality of the human experience in working towards development. Testing confirmed that there is some value in the platform. This is despite the challenges to onboard users, in pursuit of more content that could bolster the value of everyday IK in improving the educational outcomes of all learners.
dc.description.degreeDoctoral thesis
dc.description.degreePhD
dc.format.extent223 pages
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf
dc.identifier.otherhttp://hdl.handle.net/10962/62505
dc.identifier.urihttps://researchrepository.ru.ac.za/handle/123456789/8189
dc.languageEnglish
dc.publisherRhodes University, Faculty of Science, Department of Computer Science
dc.rightsNtšekhe, Mathe V K
dc.subjectInformation technology
dc.subjectKnowledge management
dc.subjectTraditional ecological knowledge
dc.subjectPedagogical content knowledge
dc.subjectTraditional ecological knowledge -- Technological innovations
dc.subjectIKhwezi
dc.subjectICT4D
dc.subjectIndigenous Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge (I-TPACK)
dc.subjectSiyakhula Living Lab
dc.titleBuilding IKhwezi, a digital platform to capture everyday Indigenous Knowledge for improving educational outcomes in marginalised communities
dc.typeAcademic thesis

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