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Study criticises laptops for children scheme

June 27th, 2009 | Categories: Featured  |  2 Comments

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia ( Reporter ) — The “One Laptop per Child” (OLPC) scheme, which has sent over a million US$100 laptops to children in the developing world, has been criticised by researchers who found that, unless they are introduced with care, they become little more than distracting toys in the classroom.

The study, conducted in Ethiopia, revealed that students wanted more content on the laptops and teachers were not adequately trained on how to make use of them.

The OLPC scheme was launched in 2005 to provide each child in the developing world with a low-cost laptop to encourage “self-empowered” learning. More than one million laptops have been distributed.

David Hollow of the UK-based ICT4D Collective at Royal Holloway, University of London, and his team evaluated the OLPC initiative in Ethiopia by observing classroom sessions and interviewing students and teachers.

They told Africa Gathering – an information and communication technology and social networking conference organised by the London International Development Centre in April – that students tended to play with the machines, largely for taking pictures with the built-in digital camera.

Teachers were left frustrated because the students were better at using the laptops and played on them during lessons instead of listening to the teachers, Hollow told the conference.

“If I had the money, I would not spend it on laptops,” Hollow told SciDev.Net. “It will cost about US$3 billion dollars to give every [Ethiopian] child a laptop. And as a proportion of the national budget for education, that’s just ridiculous.”

The approach “doesn’t actually empower people in the way that we’d like. It just undermines the teacher … It’s impossible to integrate it”.

The ICT4D team worked with Swiss educational software provider BlankPage to develop Akili, a textbook reader that was used to download books and increase the educational content on the laptops.

“We felt that Akili was something of a bridge because it enabled the children to explore and engage with their own learning but, at the same time, they were still based within the national curriculum and the teacher’s authority was not undermined.”

Hollow said that in Ethiopia many children only attend school for a year or two so the priority is to give them good basic literacy and numeracy skills.

He suggested that introducing laptops in secondary schools would be more appropriate “because you’ve got a smaller group of people, which is far cheaper, and you’ve got a group of people who are actually more likely to be the decision-makers of the future”.

But Matt Keller, OLPC’s director of Europe, the Middle East and Africa, rejects the criticisms. He says that when children take the laptops home they extend the school day. “When a child uses a laptop, he constructs and engages with it in a way that is far more dynamic and interactive than anything that he does at school.”
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He disputed Hollow’s recommendation to focus on secondary schools: “By the time most kids [are older], they’ve lost complete interest in school … And that’s partly because school is rote, you sit there and you’re taught to memorise what [you ought] to know”.

“What technology can do is pique a child’s curiosity and engage them at an interest level that’s far greater than what a bricks and mortar school can do.”

With regards to integration, Keller said that teachers in Ethiopia had been a “little bit slow to come around” in comparison to other countries. “But from what I’ve seen already, after a few months they’ve adapted quite nicely.”

Hollow told the meeting that, for ICT4D projects to work, it is essential to take a long-term view and assess the impact of the project afterwards. This should involving talking to beneficiaries to discover their perceived needs. (Naomi Antony, SciDev.net)


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2 Responses to “Study criticises laptops for children scheme”

  1. Yama Ploskonka says:

    Teachers can be empowered to make effective use of these tools. “Can” doesn’t mean they are. If teachers were empowered, if the XO computers could deliver relevant, localized content that is connected to what is required as learning, maybe we could all celebrate success and actual improvement in learning.

    Sadly, OLPC decision-makers (including Mr. Keller) do not see empowering the teachers or providing relevant learning materials as a priority. Teachers are mostly told what to do, and the Internet is supposed to be enough as to content.
    There are limited examples of volunteers and teachers doing it, outside of OLPC, in Uruguay and other places – this gives us some hope.
    Right now, however, Mr. Keller is 100% right in implying that using the XO computers is disconnected with what children do in school, “…far more dynamic and interactive than anything that he does at school…”, and it is highly doubtful that children used to incoherent and unstructured access to the Internet will in any way become more interested in Secondary education. More so, as international studies demonstrate, the distraction of home use of computers actually makes for worse grades, as children spend even less time doing homework.

    Yes, ICT4E can be done right, and Mr. Hollow and ICT4D have some valuable ideas. Before dismissing OLPC, however, it would be fair to ask Mr. Keller to show us objective positive learning results from any deployment directed by OLPC, anywhere in the world.
    All of those of us connected with the initiative for the last couple years would love to hear about those.

    June 27th, 2009 at 8:42 pm

  2. Agree with you says:

    Hello to all!

    Tonight, I would like to say a couple of things which should be useful for all Ethiopian students onward.

    To reduce the lesson subjects for all students would be better to have a great future life, as a person with dignity. Unless, they abandon the school and go back to country side and die by famine.

    For example, At U.K all the student have 4 subjects according to his wishes and desire to study the career that he would think it is better for him.
    As an example, if one boy /girl have ten subjects, he does not have enough time to study them at the same time; even if he/ she could they basically forget soon that subject. Because they, imagine that its obligation for the moment but not for long time.

    I beg by the name of all my poor country in this subject, or by 82% of an alphabet to think about this to find the solution soon.

    International help will end maybe one day, but till then please, please let’s take the advantage of this aid to develop this country.

    Thank you.

    July 23rd, 2009 at 4:52 pm

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