KUCHING – Ninety Swinburne University of Technology Sarawak Campus students were involved in the university’s collaboration with non-profit organisation Breakthrough Network Centre Berhad, which focused on installing online learning facilities at Breakthrough Stutong Learning Centre to cater to the learning needs of children in the community.
The need for online learning facilities arose from the Covid-19 pandemic, where school closures adversely impacted many children who faced a lack of facilities and guidance at home in attending online classes. Breakthrough Stutong Learning Centre is a lifeline in this education crisis faced, serving as an important venue where computers and internet access can be made available for the children’s use.
Through Swinburne Sarawak’s Social Innovation Project unit during Winter Term 2021, the students were involved in producing short educational videos as learning materials for children and youth; assessing the learning needs of children and youth living in conditions of poverty; and providing consultancy to Breakthrough in establishing and sustaining an online learning hub at its Learning Centre located at Kampung Stutong Baru. This endeavour was apt and in line with Swinburne’s Horizon 2025 vision, ‘people and technology working together to build a better world’. The unit convenor was Dr George Ngui Kwang Sing and the teaching staff member was Dr Voon Mung Ling.
Along with the students’ involvement, Swinburne Sarawak contributed RM10,000 and 10 PCs to Breakthrough. This donation was used mainly to equip the Learning Centre with online learning facilities and materials based on the recommendations and joint-planning by Breakthrough as well as Swinburne Sarawak students and staff.
The donation was vital in ensuring that the centre is adequately equipped so that the educational videos produced by the students could reach the children and thus fulfil
With online learning expected to be the mainstay in the current and future education arena, Breakthrough anticipates that its Learning Centre will be highly utilised by children and youth in the community to access online tutorials and skills training workshops.
To further enhance the students’ experience and achievement of the unit learning outcomes in engaging with the stakeholders, the students conducted presentations covering recommendations on how Breakthrough could address the learning needs of children and youth living in conditions of poverty as well as establish and sustain an online learning hub at its Stutong Learning Centre.
The faculty also organised a live virtual session between the students and the children, allowing the students to learn how to manage a range of stakeholders in a social enterprise setting by receiving first-hand feedback from Breakthrough and the children on the effectiveness of the videos and also room for improvement.
Established in 2008, Breakthrough provides welfare support to persons with limited means. Its key areas of service are home building for the needy, youth centre, family care and education. Its Stutong Learning Centre aims to assist the learning of poor and needy students from the immediate area of Stutong Resettlement Scheme, providing a conducive environment equipped with classrooms, library, internet access and teachers to facilitate the children’s learning. The centre can accommodate up to approximately 60 students from various age groups and study subjects coming in on different days of the week.
Since 2014, students of Swinburne Sarawak’s Social Innovation Project unit have engaged in social projects with Habitat for Humanity Malaysia (2014-2015), Wishesland (2016) as well as Sarawak Cheshire Home and Breakthrough (2017-2019).