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University of Brighton lecturer helps set up Syrian refugee school

The school was launched by four students who met on an online course at McGill University

Published on
February 25, 2016
Last updated
July 24, 2023
Syrian refugee girl, Domiz camp, Northern Iraq
Source: Alamy

A lecturer who helped to set up a school for Syrian refugees after participating in an online course has spoken of how children have been 鈥渜ueuing up outside鈥 to learn.

Julie Pratten, visiting lecturer in English for academic purposes at the University of Brighton, established a school in a camp near Dohuk, Iraqi Kurdistan, along with three other online students from Morocco, Canada and Iraq. They met last year on the Social Learning for Social Impact course, run by McGill University in Canada. The free course is a GROOC, which is a type of massive open online course centred on group learning.

Ms Pratten told 探花视频 that she received a Facebook message asking for help from a logistics officer at the camp after she had discussed how to assist Syrian children with other teachers on a Facebook group. She then launched a to raise money for a school, which was subsequently seen by others on the course.

One of the groups on the course was focused on 鈥渉elping Syrian kids鈥, and Ms Pratten said she joined as team leader.

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She was told by the logistics officer that 鈥渕ost of the people who work in the camp are so busy dealing with health issues that nobody is engaging with the kids鈥, she said. 鈥淭hey don鈥檛 have a computer, they don鈥檛 have craft supplies, they don鈥檛 even have a room.鈥

She said that they were given permission to turn a 鈥渕obile unit, full of old stuff鈥 in the camp into a classroom, which was filled with donated craft supplies and furniture borrowed from a local school. The new Heart ELT school is run by a local English teacher, who is also a refugee. So far, the project has raised 拢2,000.

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鈥淭he kids were just queuing up outside to get in,鈥 Ms Pratten continued. 鈥淲e can teach about 100 kids. A lot of them have lost their parents. A lot of them are not in a good situation psychologically. At this stage they just need to play and sing and have a bit of engagement. For three years they鈥檝e been in that camp and their lives have been on hold.鈥

She said she is hoping to set up internet access in the camp, which would enable teachers in the UK to provide online training to refugee children and adults. She is raising money to launch more 鈥渟afe learning spaces鈥 for children in other camps.

Leslie Breitner, co-creator of the GROOC, which ran for three months from September 2015, said the course included seven fortnightly sessions focused on how to create, design, scale, fund and evaluate a social initiative.

鈥淲hat we were amazed at is these folks [who set up the school] didn鈥檛 know each other before and they weren鈥檛 in the same part of the world, but they used their similar interests to come up with a course and the conceptual material to help them along,鈥 she said.

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ellie.bothwell@tesglobal.com

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Print headline: UK lecturer helps to set up refugee school

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