Assignment 4
Due August 2025
,HED4802
Assignment 4
Due August 2025
Question 1: Critically Analyse the Benefits and Challenges of Using OERs for South African
Classrooms
Contextual Focus: Rural Eastern Cape
1. Introduction
Open Educational Resources (OERs) refer to educational materials that are freely
available for use, adaptation, and distribution under open licenses. These include
textbooks, videos, assessments, and interactive media designed to support teaching
and learning across all levels of education. In South Africa, where educational inequality
persists—particularly in rural and historically marginalised regions such as the Eastern
Cape—OERs offer a potential solution to resource shortages, curriculum gaps, and
professional development needs.
However, while the promise of OERs aligns with democratic access and inclusive
education, their effective implementation is constrained by structural, technological, and
pedagogical challenges. This analysis evaluates both the enabling and limiting factors
of OER use in Eastern Cape classrooms, engaging with underlying theoretical
assumptions and broader implications for educational transformation.
Benefits of Using OERs in Rural Classrooms
✓ Expanding Access and Promoting Equity
OERs provide cost-free alternatives to expensive textbooks and materials, which are
often lacking in rural Eastern Cape schools due to underfunding and poor distribution
systems. By removing financial barriers, OERs create opportunities for all learners to
access the same content, regardless of their socio-economic status.
, This aligns with the social justice perspective, which views education as a public good
that must be equally accessible (Walker, 2012).
In practice, teachers in Mthatha and Lusikisiki have utilised Siyavula Science and
Mathematics resources—freely aligned with CAPS—to compensate for missing
textbooks, thereby ensuring that learners are not left behind.
✓ Curriculum Flexibility and Local Adaptation
OERs can be adapted to suit local linguistic and cultural contexts. In multilingual
environments like the Eastern Cape, where isiXhosa is widely spoken, teachers can
translate or contextualise resources to increase relevance and learner engagement.
This flexibility challenges the assumption of a one-size-fits-all curriculum and supports
constructivist learning approaches that value local knowledge systems and learner
identity.
✓ Professional Development and Teacher Empowerment
OER platforms promote teacher autonomy by allowing educators to choose, adapt, and
even co-create materials. This fosters professional agency and supports collaborative
learning networks. In areas where access to formal development programmes is limited,
teachers have formed online communities via platforms like OER Africa and Teaching
Commons to share best practices and reflect on classroom strategies.
This model aligns with adult learning theory, which emphasises peer collaboration,
experiential learning, and reflective practice (Knowles, 1980). It also shifts the teacher’s
role from passive implementer to active curriculum designer.
✓ Promoting Learner-Centred and Self-Directed Learning
OERs support interactive, digital formats that encourage inquiry-based learning. In
some Eastern Cape pilot projects, learners have accessed OERs via mobile phones or
tablets to complete science simulations or view multilingual instructional videos. This
approach empowers learners to take ownership of their learning, fostering digital
literacy, critical thinking, and self-regulation—skills vital for 21st-century education.