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Monday, December 29, 2014

ICT long overdue in improving learning

Diana Wanjiku of Thunguma primary school in Nyeri using a laptop on June 13, 2013. PHOTO | FILE |
Diana Wanjiku of Thunguma primary school in Nyeri using a laptop on June 13, 2013. PHOTO | FILE |   NATION MEDIA GROUP
By ESMOND SHAHONYA
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I recently had the chance to interact with pupils and teachers at a Rwandan primary school and saw how the one-laptop-per-child (OLPC) initiative was transforming the learning process.
The children in lower primary school and their teachers were equipped with XO customised laptops designed to cater for learning in developing countries.
In Rwanda, ICT is supported at all levels in line with the government’s policy and allows integration of technology in all institutions and at all levels.
Certain non-governmental organisations are carrying out a similar mission of institutionalising OLPC in Kenya and Intimigom Primary School in Kilgoris is a beneficiary.
As thousands of Standard One pupils wait for the government to fulfil its promise to provide free laptops, those in Intimigom Primary School have been equipped with e-readers and Kindles, courtesy of Worldreader, a non-profit organisation whose professed mission is to bring digital books to every child and their family with the aim of improving their lives.
Teachers from three other schools in the area are also beneficiaries of the e-reader technology and it is hoped that the project will expand. According to Worldreader, the Kindles have improved the reading culture among pupils.
One Kindle or e-reader can carry as many as 300 books compressed as electronic or e-books. This means that technology has helped to put whole libraries in the hands of children. Many more books are available as downloadable documents in e-libraries either on the web or in customised networks.
Worldreader has over 6,000 educational books in 41 languages readily available for students in 37 countries where it has operations. Properly implemented, technology has the potential of transforming the learning environment and promoting literacy.
Customised laptops and e-readers can be useful learning tools for children if they are used properly. Technology can help solve a number of problems.
LACK LEARNING RESOURCES
Many public schools lack learning resources and most cannot even afford well-stocked libraries to cope with the changing syllabus. It is now possible to set up a mobile library of soft copy books that a child can take home or read anywhere at their convenience.
E-books solve most problems in the production and distribution of teaching and learning materials. However, there are challenges to establishing ICT in education.
These include infrastructure, technical empowerment of teachers, cyber security, and the minimal conditions in schools needed for technology to work. The solution lies in providing well-equipped ICT incubation centres with up-to-date systems and sufficient content.
To re-boot Kenya’s stalled laptop programme, it would help to look beyond the political promises surrounding the introduction of ICT in lower primary school.
Attention should focus on finding ways to make the programme sustainable, the customisation and maintenance of the gadgets, and the hurdles to the success of the initiative.
Perhaps the focus of the programme should be expanded to include other pupils in primary schools if the State intends to extend ICT learning beyond Class One.
The Kilgoris and Rwanda projects have shown that this can be done and can help cement the dream of ICT in primary schools.
Mr Shahonya is an ICT specialist and a telecommunication engineer. (shahonya76@gmail.com)

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