Monday 19 March, 2007

What rules you need to follow to create a MIE?

These are excerpts from i4donline.net Centre for Science, Development & Media Studies

A set of guidelines have been developed that enables educators to set up their own MIE kiosk facilities. These include:

General instructions
  • Site selection
  • Architectural plans
  • Purchases required including proprietary pointing and remote sensing hardware and software
  • Electrical installation
  • A portal to help children navigate to sites and applications
  • Downloadable utilities
  • Downloadable games
  • Educational tests and remote sensing data analysis tools
  • Legal and safety related issues

Based on the experience and data gathered over the last four years, it can be argued that such “playground” access points should be a part of every primary school. Where primary schools are not available, such facilities could provide even more vital “emergency” educational inputs. MIE for children through public Internet kiosks should form an integral part of primary education in the 21st century. It has the potential to not only close the “digital divide” rapidly, but also to unlock the creative potential for self-development of children that eminent educationists have sought to do for over a century.

How does Minimally Invasive Education work?

These are excerpts from i4donline.org....

How does it work?Learning process in a Minimally Invasive Environment (MIE)Certain common observations from the experiments reported above, suggest the following learning process when children self-instruct each other in computer usage:

  • One child explores randomly in the user interface, others watch until an accidental discovery is made. For example, when they find that the cursor changes to a hand shape at certain places on the screen.
  • Several children repeat the discovery for themselves by requesting the first child to let them do so.
  • While in step 2, one or more children make more accidental or incidental discoveries.
    All the children repeat all the discoveries made and, in the process, make more discoveries and start to create a vocabulary to describe their experience.
  • The vocabulary encourages them to perceive generalisations (“when you right click on a hand shaped cursor, it changes to the hourglass shape for a while and a new page comes up”).
  • They memorise entire procedures for doing something, for example, how to open a painting program and retrieve a saved picture. They teach each other shorter procedures for doing the same thing, whenever one of them finds a new, shorter, procedure.
  • The group divides itself into the “knows” and the “know nots”, much as they did into “haves” and “have nots” in the past. However, they realise that a child that knows will part with that knowledge in return for friendship and exchange as opposed to ownership of physical things where they could use force to get what they did not have.
  • A stage is reached when no further discoveries are made and the children occupy themselves with practising what they have already learned. At this point intervention is required to introduce a new “seed” discovery (“did you know that computers can play music? Here let me play a song for you”). Usually, a spiral of discoveries follow and another self-instructional cycle begins.

What do kids learn from HiWEL experiment ?

Following are the excerpts from a research finding published in i4donline.org (Centre for Science, Development & Media Studies). Read this impressive list of learnings from MIE. Specially the behavioural changes in kids ( i am more excited about these behavioral changes that enable kids to learn well in school)..

  • An estimated 100 children can learn to do most or all of the following tasks in approximately three months, using the “hole-in-wall” arrangement with a single PC:
  • All windows operational functions, such as click, drag, open, close, resize, minimize, menus, navigation etc.
  • Draw and paint pictures on the computer
  • Load and save files
  • Play games
  • Run educational and other programs
  • Play music and video, view photos and pictures
  • Browse and surf the Internet, if a connection is available
  • Set up e-mail accounts
  • Send and receive e-mail
  • Chat on the Internet
  • Do simple troubleshooting, for example, if the speakers are not working
  • Download and play streaming media
  • Download games

In addition to the above task achievement, local teachers and field observers often note that the children demonstrate improvements in:

  • School examinations, particularly in subjects that deal with computing skills
  • English vocabulary and usage
  • Concentration, attention span and problem solving
  • Working together and self-regulation

Few Projects undertaken by HiWEL till date

Am posting this stale data since it contains projects undertaken untill 2004. Several projects have been initiated since then and are not included in the following list:

  • The Shivpuri (1999) experiment- one computer in the state of Madhya Pradesh, funded by NIIT Limited
  • The Madantusi experiment (2000)- one computer in the state of Uttar Pradesh, funded by Dr. Urvashi Sahni and NIIT Limited.
  • The Madangir project (2000)- 30 computers in six locations in Delhi funded by the Government of Delhi and NIIT Limited.
  • The Sindhudurg project (2001- 10 computers in five locations in the state of Maharashtra, funded by the ICICI bank and NIIT Limited.
  • The IFC project (2002)- a plan for 66 computers in 22 locations spread throughout India, of which 33 computers in 11 locations are currently functional, funded by the IFC and NIIT Limited.
  • The Alexandria project (2003)- a plan for 90 computers in 30 locations spread throughout Alexandria, Egypt. The first kiosk is scheduled to be opened on October 12, 2003. The project is funded by the Bibliotheca Alexandrina.
  • The Cambodia project (2003)- a plan for 10 computers in 5 locations in Cambodia. A gift from the Prime Minister of India to the Cambodian government. The project is funded by the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR), Government of India

Tuesday 13 March, 2007

10 line limit....

I pledge not to go beyond 10 lines in one post.....
and a beginning with two liner is as good as it gets

Thursday 8 March, 2007

How is Hole-in-the-wall different from Computer aided learning(CAL) efforts of Gov,NGOs & private sector

As usual, unless i get a hang of basic questions, i feel uncomfortable about the thing.

and this is one of those basic questions buzzing in my mind now. Not that i have no idea about it but need to crystalize my thoughts a lot on it. I guess understanding CAL more would certainly help.

for one, CAL is a teacher-assisted learning program which precludes some of the basic outcomes of HITW like self learning, fun, working in team, leadership traits, invoking the curiosity of children etc. So although CAL and HITW both in the end train kids in using computers and internet, the means of doing that are quite different. I think, the HITW doesnot really aim at computer training. Computer training is just incidental outcome. The gains from HITW interventions actually happen in the overall development and accelerated learning capacity of kids.
Secondly, carrying on from first argument, since CAL requires teaching computers in a controlled and teacher assisted environment, given that teachers are reulctant to move in to rural areasm I am not sure about its scalability into deep rural pockets. HITW on the other hand, can reach the deepmost area since it is minimally invasive and completely unassisted program.

Tuesday 20 February, 2007

another very good and short article on HITW

The hole in the wall
No, this is not about a dutch guy who put a finger in a wall to save his town from flooding. Or about Israel and Palestine. It's about India and India. I mean uptown hyperlinked pseudo-impressive India and the real India. The Hole-in-the-wall experiment was started by Sugata Mitra, head of research at NIIT. The videos on that site (and also here) are mind-blowing; Sugata decided to put a computer (connected to the Internet) on a wall of his office building in Delhi which adjoins a slum. Only the screen was visible through a layer of some thick glass; and there was a touchpad and some coloured buttons next to it. No keyboard, no instructions.Kids from the slum were instantly attracted; That was Sugata's aim really, to see if anyone would use it. Note that these kids have little knowledge of computers, and a second hand computer would cost as much as their parents make a year. The experiment went beyond the obvious. Not only did the kids figure out the mouse tricks instantly, they soon realised how they could go on to the internet, and soon were found googling for search terms like "Aishwarya Rai but not with so many clothes". Just kidding. (I don't like the idea of kids getting unbridled internet access so I hope they have a porn filter out there)Seriously, the kids figured it all out! Soon they were visiting disney.com and playing games online and all that. Amazing, I say. We need one of these boxes in Bangalore, preferably with only links to sites like:1) How to drive.2) How to drive without having to honk incessantly.3) Running over pedestrians is a bad thing.4) Stopping at red lights: The glamour of people who do.And people should have to do this before they get a licence, renewable every year.But I digress. We need the boxes for the under-privileged in Bangalore. And in all sorts of villages - perhaps as a movable van, with a phone link on a cellphone for providing internet access. I think the video opens many eyes. And tells you the story of a real India. Lots of talent, little opportunity. Open the opportunity, and you'll suddenly see a much bigger market for both employment and for selling to. The big guys do not get it - other than Reliance. The future is in todays castaways.

rumbing from a MS windows lover :) on Hole-in-the-wall

Hole-in-the-wall
Filed under: random ramblings — sukrit @ 1:32 am
Came across this neat project based in India. It’s called Hole-in-the-wall. Started by Dr.Sugata Mitra, Chief Scientist at NIIT, this is an experiment is helping underprivileged kids learn to use computers. It began at a slum in New Delhi in 1999, and has come along quite nicely by now, with HiWEL (Hole-in-the-Wall Education Limited) setting up more than 23 Learning Stations across the country. In 2004 they also ventured into Cambodia.
For those curious, yes, unfortunately they are using Microsoft Windows for this purpose. But I’m sure we could get in touch with them and exchange notes on why they could/should be using open source stuff instead. I’d like to hear the reason they chose Windows, and I sure as hope it’s not because the Bill and Melinda Gates are funding their project.
This project looks rather similar to the Ubuntu Bus project [61] from Brazil. Methinks it might be a good idea to mail them and see how they respond

[61]What is that

the $100 laptop and Hole in the wall

The $100 Laptop
"Studies have shown that kids take up computers much more easily in the comfort of warm, well-lit rich country living rooms, but also in the slums and remote areas all around the developing world." -Nicholas Negroponte
And we know that Nicholas is right on the ball. Sugata Mitra with his 'Hole In The Wall' experiment confirmed the very same thing.
The $100 laptop is being developed by One Laptop per Child (OLPC), a Delaware-based, non-profit organization created by faculty members from the MIT Media Lab to design, manufacture, and distribute laptops that are sufficiently inexpensive to provide every child in the world access to knowledge and modern forms of education. OLPC is based on "constructionist" theories of learning pioneered by Seymour Papert and later Alan Kay, as well as the principles expressed in Nicholas Negroponte's book Being Digital. The founding corporate members are Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), Brightstar, Google, News Corporation, Nortel, and Red Hat.
OLPC wants to distribute 100 millions of these laptops to underdeveloped countries where is not no network access and electricity. Technical breakthroughs have already driven the prototype design, but every technical breakthrough in the next five years would mean costs would continue to fall. These laptops would benefit primarily from mesh networking, as a way of sharing scarce net connections.
Although children will be able to interact with each other through the machines, education was still the priority for the laptops. But by using mesh networking, the vision is for children to interact while doing homework, and even share homework tips on a local community scale.
"Every single problem you can think of, poverty, peace, the environment, is solved with education or including education. So when we make this available, it is an education project, not a laptop project. The digital divide is a learning divide - digital is the means through which children learn leaning. This is, we believe, the way to do it." - Nicholas Negroponte
Endgadget has put up this pic which supposedly shows the 'winning designs' for these machines.

Another BBC article on HITW

A Hole In The Wall
Via the BBC:
Teach-yourself computing for kids[...]The digital divide seems at its greatest in India. On one side you have some of the most advanced work in IT taking place in cities like Bangalore or Delhi.On the other you have children who have little or no access to new technology and live in conditions where clean water and electricity are still luxuries.It is this divide that one man, Sugata Mitra, intends to bridge.He was first struck by it looking out of his office window.Breaking barriersInside his IT compound he could see the young techno-savvy professionals, belts hung with electronic gadgets.Beyond the perimeter fence, he could see the dispossessed children sleeping rough in a shanty town.He decided it was time to break a hole in the wall and give the children outside a chance to see what a computer was.He cut a hole and hooked one up. What happened next amazed him. They taught themselves how to use it.Sugata took his experiment further and set up computers amongst the underprivileged communities of Delhi.He built special kiosks where only children could reach the keyboard, and left them connected to the internet. In each case the results were the same.Without adult intervention, the children got to grips with the technology, even with their limited understanding of English.Sugata was able to make some important but controversial observations."Groups of children given adequate digital resources can meet the objectives of primary education on their own - most of the objectives."

A detailed interview with Dr Sugata Mitra

An Indian physicist puts a PC with a high speed internet connection in a wall in the slums and watches what happens. Based on the results, he talks about issues of digital divide, computer education and kids, the dynamics of the third world getting online.
New Delhi physicist Sugata Mitra has a radical proposal for bringing his country's next generation into the Info Age
from a Businessweek Online Daily Briefing,March 2, 2000.
Edited by Paul Judge


Sugata Mitra has a PhD in physics and heads research efforts at New Delhi's NIIT, a fast-growing software and education company with sales of more than $200 million and a market cap over $2 billion. But Mitra's passion is computer-based education, specifically for India's poor. He believes that children, even terribly poor kids with little education, can quickly teach themselves the rudiments of computer literacy. The key, he contends, is for teachers and other adults to give them free rein, so their natural curiosity takes over and they teach themselves. He calls the concept "minimally invasive education."
To test his ideas, Mitra 13 months ago launched something he calls "the hole in the wall experiment." He took a PC connected to a high-speed data connection and imbedded it in a concrete wall next to NIIT's headquarters in the south end of New Delhi. The wall separates the company's grounds from a garbage-strewn empty lot used by the poor as a public bathroom. Mitra simply left the computer on, connected to the Internet, and allowed any passerby to play with it. He monitored activity on the PC using a remote computer and a video camera mounted in a nearby tree.
What he discovered was that the most avid users of the machine were ghetto kids aged 6 to 12, most of whom have only the most rudimentary education and little knowledge of English. Yet within days, the kids had taught themselves to draw on the computer and to browse the Net. Some of the other things they learned, Mitra says, astonished him.
The physicist has since installed a computer in a rural neighborhood with similar results. He's convinced that 500 million children could achieve basic computer literacy over the next five years, if the Indian government put 100,000 Net-connected PCs in schools and trained teachers in some basic "noninvasive" teaching techniques for guiding children in using them. Total investment required, he figures: Around $2 billion.
On Feb. 25, BW Online Contributing Editor Thane Peterson sat down with Mitra, a stocky 48-year-old with a mustache and a mop of graying black hair, in his tiny, triangular office at NIIT's R&D center on the campus of the Indian Institute of Technology in the south part of New Delhi. Here are edited excerpts of their conversation.
Q: What gave you the idea of giving slum kids access to the Internet?
A: It was a social observation rather than a scientific one. Any parent who had given his child a computer would invariably remark to me about it. I could hardly ever find an exception. Within a very short period of time, the parent would be claiming that the child was a genius with a computer. When I poked a little further, I invariably found that the child was doing things with the computer that the parent didn't understand.
I asked myself whether the child was really doing something exceptional or if what we were seeing was adult incomprehension. If the adult was simply underestimating the child's ability to cope with a computer, then that should happen with any child. And I asked myself, "Why then would we want to use the same teaching methods for children as we use for teaching adults?"
At first, I tested my ideas with children who were easily available -- children at the company here, whose parents are in our executive group ..
Then we tried this "hole in the wall" concept, where we put a high-powered Pentium computer with a fast Internet connection into a wall and let [slum] children have access to it with no explanation whatsoever. To be very brief on what happened, the results have been uniform every time we've done this experiment. You get base level computer literacy almost instantly. By computer literacy, I mean what we adults define as computer literacy: The ability to use the mouse, to point, to drag, to drop, to copy, and to browse the Internet.
The children create their own metaphors to do this. To give you an idea of what I mean, a journalist came up to one of these kids and asked him, "How do you know so much about computers?" The answer seemed very strange to her because the kid said, "What's a computer?" The terminology is not as important as the metaphor. If they've got the idea of how a mouse works and that the Internet is [like a wall they can paint on], who cares if they know that a computer is called a computer and a mouse is called a mouse? In most of our classes here at NIIT, we spend time teaching people the terminology and such. That seems irrelevant to me with these children.
But we also found that they would tend to plateau out. They would surf the Web -- Disney.com is very popular with them because they like games. And they would use [Microsoft] Paint. It's very, very popular with all of them.
Because these are deprived children who do not have easy access to paper and paint. Every child likes to paint, so they would do it with that program. However, that's all they could do. So I intervened, and I played an MP3 [digital-music file] for them. They were astonished to hear music come out of the computer for the first time. They said, "Oh, does it work like a TV or radio?" I said, in keeping with my approach, "Well, I know how to get there but I don't know how it works." Then I [left].
As I would have expected, seven days later they could have taught me a few things about MP3. They had discovered what MP3 was, downloaded free players, and were playing their favorite songs. As usual, they didn't know what any of it was called. But they would say, "if you take this little box, and you drag this file into this box, it plays music." They had found out where all the Hindi music was on the Web and had pulled it out.
Q: What does it mean? What does it say for the potential of these slum kids? After all, being able to download music isn't enough to get them a job.
A: I don't wish to claim that this shows anything more or less than what it has shown, which is that curious kids in groups can train themselves to operate a computer at a basic level. In doing so, they also can get a generally good idea about the nature of browsing and the nature of the Internet ... And, therefore, if they view these things as worth learning, no formal infrastructure is needed [to teach them].
Now, that's a big deal, because everyone agrees that today's children must be computer-literate. If computer literacy is defined as turning a computer on and off and doing the basic functions, then this method allows that kind of computer literacy to be achieved with no formal instruction. Therefore any formal instruction for that kind of education is a waste of time and money. You can use that time and money to have a teacher teach something else that children cannot learn on their own.
Q: What else have you learned?
A: Well, I tried another experiment. I went to a middle-class school and chose some ninth graders, two girls and two boys. I called their physics teacher in and asked him, "What are you going to teach these children next year at this time?" He mentioned viscosity. I asked him to write down five possible exam questions on the subject. I then took the four children and said, "Look here guys. I have a little problem for you." They read the questions and said they didn't understand them, it was Greek to them. So I said, "Here's a terminal. I'll give you two hours to find the answers."
Then I did my usual thing: I closed the door and went off somewhere else.
They answered all five questions in two hours. The physics teacher checked the answers, and they were correct. That, of itself, doesn't mean much. But I said to him, "Talk to the children and find out if they really learned something about this subject." So he spent half an hour talking to them. He came out and said, "They don't know everything about this subject or everything I would teach them. But they do know one hell of a lot about it. And they know a couple of things about it I didn't know."
That's not a wow for the children, it's a wow for the Internet. It shows you what it's capable of. The slum children don't have physics teachers. But if I could make them curious enough, then all the content they need is out there. The greatest expert on earth on viscosity probably has his papers up there on the Web somewhere. Creating content is not what's important. What is important is infrastructure and access ... The teacher's job is very simple. It's to help the children ask the right questions.
Q: Are you saying that if we put computers in all the slums, slum kids could become literate on their own?
A: I'm saying that, in situations where we cannot intervene very frequently, you can multiply the effectiveness of 10 teachers by 100 - or 1,000 - fold if you give children access to the Internet.
Q: This is your concept of minimally invasive education?
A: Yes. It started out as a joke but I've kept using the term ... This is a system of education where you assume that children know how to put two and two together on their own. So you stand aside and intervene only if you see them going in a direction that might lead into a blind alley. That's just so that you don't waste time ... That would create teachers who are experts at composing questions.
Q: What are the business applications of all this?
A: I get asked this question all the time. It's kind of ironic that a company that makes [a big chunk of its sales from running computer-training institutes] should invent a method where no teacher is required. The answer is that just because a method is economically viable, doesn't mean you shouldn't look for alternatives. A good business is one which provides more and more for less and less. The cost of your goods and services should spiral downwards.
The second point is that we are going to have an e-commerce boom. But what happens when an Indian businessman puts his shop up on the Web? Where's he going to get customers from? If someone lets me do this experiment for five years, with 100,000 kiosks, I reckon that I could get 500 million children computer-literate. It would cost $2 billion. But if you had to pay to educate the same children using traditional methods, it would cost twice as much.
Q: If this were to become a business, would it require government funding?
A: Advertisers like Coca-Cola might be interested. But it would absolutely have to have government funding. I can't think of a company that would put $2 billion into this. The governments will have to realize that the problem of the haves and have-nots is about to [become] the problem of the knows and knows-not. Do we want to create another great big divide where the problem of illiteracy will come back in another context? In a very short period of time, adults who do not know how to deal with a [computer] mouse will have a very difficult time dealing with almost everything in life.
Q: But most of the information on the Internet is in English and the people you're talking about don't speak English.
A: We had some very surprising results there. We all have great misconceptions about what these children know and don't know. At first, I made a Hindi interface for the kids, which gave them links for hooking up with Web sites in their own language. I thought it would be a great hit. Guess what they did with it? They shut it down and went back to Internet Explorer. I realized that they may not understand the dictionary meaning of [English] words, but they have an operational understanding. They know what that word does. They don't know how to pronounce F-I-L-E, but they know that within it are options of saving and opening up files ...
The fact that the Internet is in English will not stop them from accessing it.
They invent their own terminology for what's going on. For example, they call the pointer of the mouse sui, which is Hindi for needle. More interesting is the hourglass that appears when something is happening. Most Indians have never heard of an hourglass. I asked them, "What does that mean?" They said, "It's a damru," which is Hindi for Shiva's drum. [The God] Shiva holds an hourglass - shaped drum in his hand that you can shake from side to side. So they said the sui became a damru when the "thing" [the computer] was doing something.
Q: Of all the things the children did and learned, what did you find the most surprising?
A: One day there was a document file on the desktop of the computer. It was called "untitled.doc" and it said in big colorful letters, "I Love India." I couldn't believe it for the simple reason that there was no keyboard on the computer [only a touch screen]. I asked my main assistant -- a young boy, eight years old, the son of a local betel-nut seller -- and I asked him, "How on earth did you do this?" He showed me the character map inside [Microsoft] Word. So he had gotten into the character map inside Word, and dragged and dropped the letters onto the screen, then increased the point size and painted the letters. I was stunned because I didn't know that the character map existed -- and I have a PhD.
Q: So what you're talking about is a different sort of literacy, a sort of functional literacy ...
A: Yes, it's functional literacy. There are two examples I'd like to give you from the recent past. It's already happened in cable TV in India. There are 50 or 60 million cable-TV connections in India at this point in time. The guys who set up the meters, splice the coaxial cables, make the connection to the house, etc., are very similar to these kids. They don't know what they're doing. They only know that if you do these things, you'll get the cable channel. And they've managed to [install] 60 million cable connections so far.
Example No. 2 is the bicycle. I think we have the biggest bicycle-manufacturing industry in the world. The bicycle is ubiquitous here, and it's much the same in Malaysia, China, Africa. But you don't ask how the population became bicycle-literate. They just use it. So what I'd like to see is an India in which a large part [of the population] treats the computer that way.
The other thing is [how the Internet will change when most Indians gain access to it]. We have the analogy of cable TV in India. Originally, it was all in English. It took exactly four years for all the programming to become Hindi. Star TV is now almost all in Hindi. If you go to Bangkok, they hate it.
Q: You're saying that a lot of Hindi content will appear as more Indians surf the Net?
A: Exactly. Let me go on record as saying it's not a question of what the Internet will do to India. It's a question of what India will do to the Internet ... If rural India goes onto the Internet, there will be an absolute flood of Indian-language content from people trying to sell to them.
Q: Has the Indian or any other government expressed interest in funding such a project?
A: Several government agencies, several state governments, and several world agencies have expressed an interest. Unfortunately, I don't want to name them because I need to get the funds first.
Q: You say that only the children used the computer, not adults. What does this mean for adult education?
A: I'm not even going to suggest that we use this [technique] for adults. The only reaction we got from adults was, "What on earth is this for? Why is there no one here to teach us something? How are we ever going to use this?" I contend that by the time we are 16, we are taught to want teachers, taught that we cannot learn anything without teachers.
There are two points I'd like to make about the adults. One is that the adults asked the children to do things for them. For example, to read their horoscopes on the Hindi news sites. The second thing is the reaction of the women. I would ask them why they didn't use [the computer], and they would say, "I don't have enough brains to understand all this." I would say, "What about your daughters?" And the answer was, "They have lots of brains." So I said, "Do you think I should just remove this thing?" The answer was always, "No, no, no." I asked why not. And they said, "Because it's very good for the children."
Now, if the mothers have realized that, I'm happy. I don't care if they don't come [to use the computer]. Because all we have to do is wait one generation. Not even that. In five years, a 13-year-old is going to be 18 and be an adult.
Q: Where do you go from here?
A: There is one experiment that scares me. These children don't know what e-mail is. If I gave them e-mail, I don't know what would happen. I'll probably try it anyway. But remember the stories one used to hear about people finding lost tribes and introducing them to Coca-Cola? I'm really seriously scared about what would happen if suddenly the whole wide world had access to these kids. I don't know who would talk to them for what purpose.

LIFT coverage of the HITW experiment

LIFT07: Sugata Mitra and outdoctrination
Running notes from the LIFT07 conference in Geneva.
Sugata Mitra heads research at an Indian software company, but he is known for the Hole in the Wall project which is about what he calls "outdoctrination": self-organization in education. Remoteness influences the quality of education. By remoteness I mean geographically remote (rural villages) but also socially and economically remote (in slums). Everybody assumes that schools in remote areas do not have good enough teachers and infrastructure. Is that true? We drove out about 300 km from Dehli and wherever we found a school we did a test, and the basic result was that the more remote the school was, the worst the results of the pupils. But this did not correlate with the size of classrooms, the quality of infrastructure, the level of poverty, etc. But we asked also a question to teachers, asking whether they would like to move to a metropolitan area, and those just outside of Dehli said yes, then a bit farther away they said no, and starting from 200 km on they consistently said yes. So: teachers' motivation and teachers' migration was a powerfully correalated variable with the school results.
Education technology is always introduced first in the best (urban) schools, where it is perceived as overhyped and upder-performing, while when education technology reaches the underprivileged it makes a big difference -- so it should reach them first. Sugata proposes an approach for an alternative primary education, for places where schools don't exist or are not good enough, where teachers are not available or are not good enough: children and self-organization.
The Hole in the Wall experiment started in 1999 in New Dehli. I have an office which borders a urban slum. We put a PC in a hole in the wall, high-speed Internet, a browser, and just left it there. And what we saw (he shows a video) are kids from the slum teaching each-other how to browse. Sugata took the experiment out of Dehli, to other cities. Other kids discovered the computer in the wall and they started teaching each-other (in one city, the first kid figured out how to move the trackpad and click within 8 minutes, and by that evening 70 kids had used the computer, with no teacher, no manual, just self-teaching and passing on the information).
I took the experiment to a village where kids had not learned English. Left the computer there, with CDs inside (no Internet connection). Came back weeks later, and found kids there playing and the first thing they told me is "we need a faster processor and a better mouse". And: "you left this machine that speaks only English so we had to learn English" -- and noticed that they were using English words among themselves.
Finally I tried the experiment on a bigger scale, choosing a cross-section of society, in all regions of the country. We found that 6 to 13 year old can self-instruct in a networked environment irrespective of what we measure (educational background, English literacy, economic level, etc), if you lift the adult intervention. What would they learn to do? Basic functions, browsing, painting, chatting and e-mail, games and educational material, playing videos. And they do this in groups: one child uses the computer and two or three others are "advising" him/her, and all of them are learning.
So the conclusion was that primary education can happen on its own. It does not have to be imposed. It could perhaps be a self-organizing system:
Remoteness affects quality of education.
educational technology should be introduced into remote areas first.
Values are acquired, doctrine is imposed.
Learning is most likely a self-organizing system.
Educational technology and pedagogy that is digital, automatic, fault-tolerant, minimally invasive, connected, and self-organized. Call it outdoctrination.

BBC coverage of 'Hole-in-the-wall'

What is the best way to teach someone about computers who has never seen one before? What about simply providing children with a PC and seeing what happens? Dan Simmons reports on just such a project taking place across India.
Children teach themselves to use technology, without even realising it

Something new has arrived at this slum on the outskirts of Delhi and it is exciting the locals.
Most people at Vivekananda Camp had never touched or used a computer. Then three came along at once.
It is part of a scheme called Hole in the Wall. Over the past six years more than 40 sites have been established across India - all with similar results.
The researchers behind the project gave no explanations. They just wanted to see what the children would make of them, as Manas Chakrabarti, the head of Hole in the Wall Education Ltd, explained.
"There were hundreds of children who wanted to take a look at this new toy that had come up. Our approach is that we don't really intervene at that time. We let them realise that if they take turns and organise themselves it works out very well for them."
Far from being baffled, children from all sorts of backgrounds, it appears, can work out how to use many of the applications for themselves.
Shiffon Chatterjee, a researcher for the project, says: "Nine months on, what we observe is that the initial chaos seems to have subsided, and the children now are doing a variety of things - lots of things in word processing, paint, using the internet for a variety of purposes, making their photos on the computer."
Huge positive impact
Down the road the local school offers more traditional computer classes. But this is expensive and not an option open to those in the slums or in some rural villages.
Open access to the public computers, for up to 10 hours a day, means more children get hands-on experience here than at the school.
Children are not very gentle with computers. They hammer on the keyboard, they pull the mouse. So we found the regular mouse did not work
Manas Chakrabarti
With no teachers around, the children have formed their own groups, sharing what they discover with others: how to make the window larger or smaller for instance.
And the interface does offer specially designed educational tools to help with applications like e-mailing.
The project team's own research suggests that around eight out of 10 people who live in a deprived area like this one believe the computers are having a positive impact.
But the scheme has its critics too, some of whom argue that the cost of putting in a system like this would be much better spent on providing clean water and healthcare.
Try telling that to Raj. He was born deaf and dumb. His parents proudly explain how Raj has now found something he is good at.
"He's more confident now, and even teaches some of the older children how to use the computers", they say.
Overcoming problems
Conditions in the slum are tough, both for those living here and for maintaining PCs.
The computers have to be able to withstand a pounding from users
Temperatures can climb to 45 degrees. So the computers are self-regulating, automatically switching off if it gets too hot or humid.
And fluctuations in electricity are regulated by an uninterrupted power supply unit.
Allowing for the kids' playful behaviour, though, was a little more tricky, says Manas Chakrabarti.
"Children are not very gentle with computers. They hammer on the keyboard, they pull the mouse. So we found the regular mouse did not work. We changed it first to a touch-pad, but found that didn't work because children scratch it with a stone. We moved to a joy-stick, but that didn't work very well because it jammed up with dust.
"Now we've designed a touch mouse which has no moving parts and is virtually indestructible.
"They actually started opening up as many windows as they could, and were exploring the computer, and soon the computer would just hang and stop working. To stop that we created a little utility, called anti-hang, which stops the number of windows at five and doesn't allow a sixth window to open up, so virtually it stops the computer from hanging."
The challenging conditions and power cuts mean the PCs are operational for around 75% of the target 10 hours a day.
At a nearby lab, records are kept on what they are being used for, including which internet sites the children are visiting.
Movie and sports pages are most popular, although a few of the older children have discovered internet dating. That is being discouraged, and in extreme cases sites can be blocked.
The Hole in the Wall company does not claim this is a perfect replacement for structured learning, but believes it is a cost effective way of introducing computers to many communities in the developing world. If you are a technophobe, you could do worse than look to these children for inspiration.

What is Hole-in-the-wall about?

This is an article I picked from blog of Fred Destin - explains in a very lucid terms what is Hole-in-the-wall experiment about.


LIFT07: minimally invasive education
Friday, February 09, 2007, 9:19:25 PM FredDestin
I was a LIFT these past few days even though a bad flu meant a lot of time in my hotel room (thankfully a nice room at Les Armures). For great coverage check out Bruno Giussani. Of what I did see, I was fascinated by the extraordinary educational experiments of Prof. Sugata Mitra of HIWEL.

Dr. Sugata Mitra, Chief Scientist at NIIT, is credited with the discovery of Hole-in-the-Wall. As early as 1982, he had been toying with the idea of unsupervised learning and computers. Finally, in 1999, he decided to test his ideas in the field. On 26th January, Dr. Mitra's team carved a "hole in the wall" that separated the NIIT premises from the adjoining slum in Kalkaji, New Delhi. Through this hole, a freely accessible computer was put up for use. This computer proved to be an instant hit among the slum dwellers, especially the children. With no prior experience, the children learnt to use the computer on their own.
The original "hole in the wall" being installed
In a nutshell, this is what happens:
a hole in the walll computer is installed in a village or slum
within 10 minutes, some entrepreprising child has taught himself to surf
within hours, a collaborative surfing experience is under way
in months, children teach themselves IM, email, gaming, online music and video, general surfing, English
like any good grassroots network, this is one is self-organisational and so efficient because it does not impose a way of functioning on its members
Children teach themselves collaboratively with minimum outside intervention, hence the term minimally invasive education. Skills picked up include problem solving, collaboration, sharing. In remote areas where no English was spoken, children would teach themselves basic English (badly pronounced but correctly conceptualised) from using the computer.It also seems that as a complement to traditional educaction, the programme has a real impact on a child's academic results, as you can see in detail here.

It's really fascinating stuff. The interaction between the children is best appreciated by watching the HIWEL videos, but unfortunately I could not locate any on the web. Some of the great moments include the boy who learns to surf in a few minutes, the little girl who teaches the older boy (she has knowledge that he cannot "take" from her, so collaboration is the only way for him to progress) and the formation of "circles of knowledge" (3 kids operating the PC, another circle of 8 kids providing expert comments, another circle 16 kids providing completely useless comments, all learning from each other).
Chanchal (Girl, 12): "I love solving Maths problems. I find that very interesting. I have learnt it from my sister Raj. I have taught my friend Shilpa."

a 'hole in the wall' helps educate India

A 'hole in the wall' helps educate India
By Pat Orvis Contributor to The Christian Science Monitor
NEW DELHI – Free computers placed where children play could help bring basic education to India's 200 million boys and girls under age 15. That's the hope of the man behind an Internet learning experiment called Hole-in-the-Wall.
Sugata Mitra, physicist and chief scientist with India's international software giant NIIT Ltd., launched the experiment in 1999 by embedding a kiosk housing a high-speed touch-screen computer into the wall that separates the company's headquarters from New Delhi's biggest slum. Dr. Mitra was surprised to see how quickly the children had mastered navigating the Internet - within hours.
Since then, Mitra has installed more than 150 computers - with keyboards, touch pads, and Web cameras - in some 50 locations from New Delhi slums to points in rural India. In each location, with no supervision or instruction, the children "download and play audio and video, send and receive e-mail, chat, and so on," he says. They quickly move on to learn some English from English-language websites, read Indian newspapers, and even "look for jobs for their fathers," Mitra says.
Widespread implementation of his experiment could help bridge the gap between India's 600,000 primary schools and the 1 million it needs, observers say.
"In India, this has not been achieved and is not expected to be achieved in the near future," Mitra says. "There are not enough schools and not enough teachers."
Hole-in-the-Wall has already helped thousands of previously nonliterate boys and girls teach themselves not only about computers but also "several pieces of primary education," Mitra says. Within nine months, the boys and girls achieve, "the proficiency level equivalent to the skills of most modern office workers."
During a recent visit to the slum's cyber wall, a group of boys took turns, two and three at a time, at each of the wall's four computer kiosks. A group of girls nearby quickly volunteered their reasons for coming here. Rubina, a tall teenager with a heavy braid and no head scarf, explains that, from the day the first computer was installed, she wanted to know what it did. Once she reached the age when Muslim girls are supposed to stay cloistered and well covered, she says, her mother bought her a computer to use at home. "But I still come here with the other girls," she admits.
Mitra is unfazed by western skeptics who suggest that his computers will expose young children to pornography. In five years, across all locations, he says, Hole-in-the-Wall computers have experienced "less than 0.5 percent pornographic access," adding that the computers "are clearly visible to passing adults." The fact that both boys and girls have access "completely eliminates pornographic or other undesirable access," he says.
To western parents he advises: "Don't lock up your child with a computer in a study. Keep the computer in a public place, like where the TV is, and most of the evils associated with isolation, addiction, and pornography will disappear."
As for the possibility of vandalism, Hole-in-the-Wall's design is such that one "would need a sledge hammer to get at the computers or the keyboards," Mitra says. He cites just one case of vandalism at its 23 rural sites.
Despite this unconventional, unstructured setting, Mitra claims that, in the past five years, participants have been tested in controlled studies "many times," and passed the government board examination with no other assistance, with the results documented in scholarly journals like the Australasian Journal of Educational Technology.
Another positive note: These children seem to take sharing for granted, which cuts down on competition for the keyboard as it becomes, in Mitra's words, "very apparent to them that the ones who are the quickest to learn are the ones that should get time and be teachers to others." Thus, "teachers and leaders eventually emerge."
Hole-in-the-Wall has awakened new aspirations in some participants, who have gone on to take courses in preparation for high-tech careers, Mitra says. Many have changed their goals from say, rickshaw driver to engineer, and most now want to go to college.
Another fan of the experiment is Robert Hetzel, a Milwaukee, Wisc., native who directs the American Embassy School here. Like Mitra's company, the school shares a wall with New Delhi's biggest slum.
"What is being learned with Hole-in-the-Wall is how much kids can just figure out without adult assistance. The question remains as to whether the rate of learning could be accelerated with the aid of a teacher," Mr. Hetzel says. "At the same time, I am in awe of how much these poor kids have taught themselves about computers."
But for quality education, some experts insist the focus should be in having trained teachers for every class, not high-tech tools. "All the gadgetry in the world cannot equal the impact that a skilled and dedicated teacher has on a child, even in the most rural or slum of settings," contends Abraham George, a native of India and founder of The George Foundation, a not-for-profit organization in Bangalore that seeks to eradicate poverty in India. "Is this computer on the concrete wall near a slum area going to do something for the kids that the teachers have failed to do in conventional schools in India?"
Such remarks, whether in praise or condemnation of Mitra, are all just business as usual, suggests Ritu Dangwal, a young psychologist who serves as Hole-in-the-Wall's head of research. "People either think he's crazy, or become fanatic fans," she says.
Mitra holds numerous awards for such Internet innovations as NIITNetVarsity, the first virtual university, which went online in 1996.
The World Bank gave $1.6 million for Mitra's initial experiments in 23 rural locations around India, with various Indian government agencies, an Indian Bank, and one international agency offering additional assistance. Mitra estimates that Hole-in-the-Wall could go nationwide in less than five years at a cost of $1.2 billion for computers, miscellaneous expenses of $120 million, and recurring annual costs of another $120 million - or, as he puts it, less than 2 cents per child per day.
While the World Bank showed "some interest" in helping meet those costs, Mitra says he doesn't believe that the money, "if it ever comes, will be from the United States," as "primary education is not a priority in the US at the moment."
Equally scathing about the Indian government, Mitra speculates that, "in its slow and ponderous way, it may one day think about it."
Meantime, as a result of his success here, the innovator has been asked to bring Hole-in-the-Wall to Cambodia and South Africa, which means that, altogether, it has "been verified by 40,000 of the world's poorest children."

solar energy: revolutionizing the computer education in rural areas

This is a story published in indian express about how solar energy can help in taking computers to last mile.

Solar power takes Rajasthan schools to IT highway
PALAK NANDI

Jaipur, January 7: Dhund is a small village on the Jaipur-Delhi Highway. The government school — Rajakiya Uchch Prathmik Vidyalaya — here is like most others in Rajasthan except for one difference. In other schools the computers installed, as part of the Computer Aided Learning Programme (CALP), seldom work. In Dhund’s school, they always do. The reason: solar panels.
In a state where power cut is more of a norm than an exception, particularly in rural areas, the CALP under the Rajasthan Education Initiative (REI) is facing serious roadblocks. For, no power means computers cannot run. Complaints about power shortage have been flooding the authorities from all sides — not just from the school authorities but also from representatives of the big corporates who are partners in the REI and have set up computer labs in more than 1,000 schools.
Realising the problem, the state education department decided to generate power through solar panels to run computers and included the Dhund’s school in its pilot project. Now, happy with the success, the department is all set to install similar panels across 514 schools in all 32 districts by February-end.
The Rajasthan Electronics & Instruments Limited (REIL) has provided the solar panels and the cost incurred is supported by the funds provided under the Sarva Siksha Abhiyan by the Central Government. While the REIL will maintain them for three years, the battery comes with a 10-year free maintenance warranty.
The solar panels store the power generated in a battery bank, which in attached to the computers. The bank has enough power to run three computers for a duration of four hours each.
“The solar panel has worked wonders. Ours is probably the only school in the area where the computers are used uninterruptedly. There are several occasions when there is power cut but thanks to the panels, classes continue as scheduled. This has also led to a few parents from nearby villages getting their wards enrolled here,’’ says AK Sharma, principal of the school in Dhund.
Shagufta Bajpai, Deputy Director of REI, said Dhund was taken up as an innovative pilot project, which is now being extended to more than 500 schools across the state. “One cannot deny that there is a power crisis in the rural areas and providing them computers without a means to operate them was useless. The solar panels are just the right choice,’’ she added.
http://www.indianexpress.com/story/20357.html