communities

Courses tagged with "communities"

Partial or total loss of sight affects millions of people worldwide. Many cases are preventable or curable, but simple interventions are not available in some poorer countries. The 15 video tracks in this album explore the impact of visual impairment and corrective treatments. Derek Child explains how he learned to adapt to losing his sight and the training that helps him stay mobile and independent. Experts from Contamac reveal the science behind lens production. The Good Health Train brings basic health care to poor communities in rural South Africa, where locals live without access to treatments for common problems like cataract surgery.

This material forms part of The Open University course SDK125 Introducing health sciences: a case study approach.
Issues surrounding care and welfare affect people in many different ways - it may depend on individual circumstances or on the location and nature of the community. The tracks on this album look at welfare issues faced by different communities across the UK, focusing mainly on care of the elderly, and people with physical or mental disabilities. The album also explores how care and welfare in the community has changed over the years. This material was part of The Open University course K202 Care, welfare and community.
Explore the personal side of climate change with Tina Sheng's diary entry.
Bart Cope reveals the challenge of being in the right place at the right time to film events with the residents of Lovat Fields.
Category: Health
Tom Heller wonders if prevention might not be better than cure
Category: Health
Listen to Radio 4's Today programme discussing the BBC/OU television series Silverville, about life in a retirement village
Bart Cope, reflects on his time living with the residents of Lovat Fields while researching Silverville.
Bart Cope finds a sense of community amongst the residents of Lovat Fields, his temporary home during the filming of Silverville.
As he lives with the residents of Lovat Fields Bart Cope considers age - from both ends of the spectrum.
This extract from Care Welfare and Community Workbook 4: Resourcing Care explores why the 1990s saw a move to shift elderly patients from hospitals to social care
How will the HEAT programme transform the education, training and retention of—and access to—community health care workers?
Category: Public Health
Mia Davies considers the midwife's role in modern childbirth
Many classrooms across Africa have few items of specialist equipment or materials. But imaginative teachers are able to draw on local resources from their communities to enrich their pupils' learning experiences. These short dramas portray how different teachers are using local resources and invite discussion on the advantages and challenges of such approaches.

The clips in this album are designed to be used to support the development of teachers' classroom practice in both formal and non formal learning situations. This material is from the TESSA (Teacher Education in Sub Saharan Africa) initiative.
Category: Education
The coexistence of multiple religious communities has been a source of both opposition and diversity since the very foundation of human civilization. This album explores the interaction of competing communities in compelling depth, highlighting periods and cities that experienced turbulence, and occasionally harmony, from such an intermingling of beliefs and ideas. A huge historical range, from the very beginnings of early Christianity to modern-day Africa, is rigorously examined in cultural, social and ideological terms. This material forms part of The Open University course AA307 Religion in history: conflict, conversion and coexistence.
Emily Cockayne, associate lecturer for the Open University discusses the social changes that have happened over the garden fence
Category: History
Heritage is constantly changing in the light of the present, explains Rodney Harrison.
Category: History
The heart of Glasgow can be found at the People's Palace.
Category: History
Butetown in Cardiff was a crossroads for the world. Not everyone passed straight through.
Category: History
"Alien" Jim Credland has been writing dance music for several years and wanted to get his music heard by a larger audience.
Category: Music
Not short of a bob or two, Ian Hislop must know what it’s like to live in a perfect world. Or does he? Ever Wondered sent him to America with nothing but a copy of Thomas More’s Utopia to find if there is such a thing as a perfect world...
Category: Philosophy