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What is reasonable to expect from information and communication technologies in education?

Oscar Becerra, M.Ed.

olpc in peru

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Two months ago a heated discussion took place in Educational Technology Debate after an article by C. Derndorfer described what seemed to be a hopeless outlook for the Peruvian OLPC program. What Derndorfer described were not problems with a particular ICT strategy but the daily problems you face when trying to improve an educational system in which many things have been failing at the same time for decades.

You simply don’t get three hundred thousand well educated, passionate, committed teachers overnight, nor you overhaul ninety thousand schools in two or three years. This article describes one possible way to face the challenge of improving the Peruvian public education system by using a mixed strategy:

Let children and teachers have ICT available and explore it in a non threatening way, try not to get involved in the quasi religious discussions between those who “believe” in the Wintel approach and those who interpret Negroponte as an enemy of teachers, and face what happens in the real world where there is no easy way to 100% Internet access, there is no money to give every child one computer, there is no way to “train” teachers who haven’t been properly prepared to teach, and teachers’ salaries will not improve overnight.

This article outlines the considerations for implementation of massive computing access projects aimed at systemic low impact long term improvements through what we call “Technology Resource Centers”, where teachers and students may have access to ICT and additional technologies at their own pace and in their own terms.

Several authors: Holt (1983), Kozol (1993) and Conroy (1987), have suggested that school education, as we know it, has lost its value as an instrument in the development of the individual. With different arguments and perspectives, they point out how the interest in processes and methods has shadowed the required genuine concern for the personal growth of students, transforming the educational system in a purposeless organism where everybody pretends: Teachers pretend to teach by delivering information according to established methods, students pretend they are learning by passing tests requiring repetition of the information received and society as a whole pretends this is good.

Some authors, Perelman (1992), Holt (1964) even suggest that there is no possibility for improvement in school education and the only hope for improving it is to replace traditional education with a completely new mechanism.

Gardner (2000) is more hopeful, he advocates for an Education aimed to the teaching of truth, beauty and morality and questions theorists who focus in the instrument rather than the purpose of Education. What can we do in an educational system where even the traditional is poorly performed and we are not able to attain even the modest aspirations of traditional educational settings? How can we prepare our new generations to cope with the challenges of the XXI century in a system where many want us to believe good teachers are the exception, infrastructure is poor and society as a whole seems to have been ignoring Education (in spite of discourse and writings about it) for decades? Guggenheim’s movie “Waiting for Superman” seems to be documentary aimed to demonstrate how poor is the American Public Education but has been severely criticized (also read R. Weingarten and G. Stager) for its lack of objectivity and biased point of view.

A few days ago I attended the opening of a demo center where a supposedly ideal ICT4E setting was showcased. It was really impressive in terms of the technology available: Fully wireless connected computers of all sizes, interactive networked whiteboards, etc . etc. I really got some really good ideas and information of what is available, my only objections were:

  1. It was all conceived based on children and teachers as consumers of content; and
  2. In order for the wonderful things described to happen great teachers in charge were needed.

I am not against consuming good contents, my concern is children usually learn more when they are producing contents than consuming it, unless it is really interesting for them, which takes me to the ideas R. Bao and myself wrote about in 2004: the lack of meaning crisis in the educational system. A crisis happening in spite of a well thought sensible curriculum designed and validated to be a tool for development of competences preparing children to succeed in the XXI century. Some specific characteristics define that meaning crisis:

  1. Students do not perceive the educational system, as useful, or having a purpose, and conclude education is meaningless. In many cases, failing students regard formal education as useless.
  2. School curriculum requires what Spiro calls oversimplification (Spiro, 1990, 1991, 1992) or reductive bias in order to be taught in the required periods. The result is that students usually forget most as soon as they pass tests. This can be easily demonstrated by asking simple questions about any school subject to adults who have been disconnected of the school environment for a while.
  3. Teaching methods emphasize memorizing and repeating information. Even when teachers try to change these methods they are not concerned about giving students reasons why it should be important for them (the students) in their real lives to acquire any piece of knowledge. Teaching should emphasize a key factor in knowledge construction: cognitive flexibility (see Boher-Mahall paper)
  4. The constructivist approach, which aimed at transferring control from teachers to students and set the foundations for learning in the students’ willingness to learn, can also fail if the teacher lacks the required knowledge to become an informed guide in the quest for knowledge construction. An ignorant constructivist teacher can be as negative as a well informed behaviorist one as described by Cromer (1997).


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Let’s try to describe the educational reality of Peru: There are 8.6 Million students: 75% public, 25% private; 80% urban, 20% rural, 200,000 children attend almost 10,000 one teacher schools. Of a total o 490,000 teachers 65% are public school and 35% private; 83% urban and 17% rural. There are 75,000 Schools, 75% Public 25% Private; 52% Urban, 48% Rural. Pre-K & K coverage is 66.3% . Primary (1-6) coverage is 94.4 and 76.5% for secondary school. According to 2009 reports almost 80% children 12-14 have finished primary school (6th grade) and over 60% of 17-19 youngsters have finished school (11th grade). In all cases the trend is growing.

In spite of the above the Latin-American average coverage ratios, quality remains an issue: Peru rated among the worst in Math reasoning and Reading comprehension in 2001 PISA (the last reported year available). Irresponsibly, Peru opted out of PISA and returned in 2009 (results to be reported in 2010). A census evaluation applied to 180,000 teachers in January 2007 showed 62% were below primary school level reading comprehension with 27% at 0 level; also, 92% were below primary school level in Math reasoning. Since then US$ 300 Million have been spent in teacher in-service education.

Test results on entry evaluations to teaching positions show dramatic increases since then. DIGETE alone has trained more than 80,000 teachers but it should be easy to understand these teachers need much more than training, they need to be completely re-educated. The Peruvian response is being developed in several simultaneous fronts:

  1. We have developed a curriculum structure which aims to develop skills and competencies and is not based in specific items of certain disciplines to be covered (Ministry of Education, 2004);
  2. A massive initiative to improve quality of teachers is being put in place;
  3. Information and Communications Technology is being distributed to students and teachers to saturate the system with learning and teaching tools that are simple to use and available in a nonthreatening environment and long term.

The 1 to 1 One laptop per Child approach has been described and is being discussed globally, I will try to describe what we call the Technology Resource Centers as a first step towards 1 to 1 that allow us to get the benefits of ownership without waiting for the computers, connectivity and great teachers to arrive. We will show how this strategy can actually be a leap to better teaching and learning.

The whole idea was born one day Walter Bender entered my office and transformed my personal computer in a Sugar based machine just inserting a memory stick and downloading his Sugar interface into it. He actually transformed my workstation into his computer.

I wondered what would happen if we could find a way of making a child’s own personal computer to reside somewhere in such a way anytime they got hold of any computer it may turn into his or her computer. By then we had already developed the “portable Internet”: a 2GB memory stick with enough content from educational portals to give primary teachers and students the actual feeling of navigating the web without connectivity and more educational contents than would have been expected for their whole lives under their “normal” conditions.

We had also found that children loved to share interesting things like building artifacts with Lego bricks, making videos or solving puzzles (with or without computers). Of course these are not new ideas but would allow us to share resources in such a way that four children working with one Lego robotics kit and one laptop will have the feeling of having all the computers they need. The same thing happens when one teacher shares with the class some interesting contents using one laptop and a multimedia projector for as many as 36 children: Everyone feels they have all the computers they need.

The whole idea was to allow children and teachers to get involved in the construction of personally meaningful artifacts, whether they are graphic presentations, video pieces or computer programs as advocated by Seymour Papert.

Our approach to the project differs with most educational computing initiatives which have not necessarily helped answer the basic question: What purpose does Education serve for students? If we take into account the way Viktor Frankl (1959) quoted Nietzche in his book Man’s Search for Meaning, “He who has a why to live for, can bear with almost any how”, we may conclude that the educational system fails because it is more involved in supplying how’s and lacks the ability to provide why’s.

This also reinforces the findings by De Volder and Lens (1982), because seeing education as instrumental in reaching personally significant goals in the future is providing students with an answer to the basic question of why should I learn what I am expected to.

Systematic observation of schools’ outcome shows that, even for students with high GPA, most of the information acquired during school years, is lost and has to be relearned when it becomes necessary. During a series of meetings with parents associations, school boards, teachers training seminars and educational computing conferences from 1988 to 2001, Becerra and Bao (2004) attendees were asked some simple questions about concepts, facts and figures that are part of the school curriculum. The result was invariably they did not remember anything. On the other hand, skills and information not lost by students share certain characteristics:

  • They were acquired in a natural learning process, what Gardner (2000) describes as apprenticeship or Stone-Wiske (2006) calls Teaching for Understanding , and we will call the natural way, i.e. the amount of time involved in learning is short, when compared with the time spent using the abilities acquired during the learning process.
  • The role of the teacher during the learning process was to contextualize knowledge, i.e. provide examples of ways to use the new knowledge in solving meaningful problems or to accomplishing personally meaningful goals.
  • Students had positive attachments to teachers and viewed them as resources in reaching their personal goals (Bandura (2007).

In most development economies’ school environments it is not unusual to find 45 and even 50 or 60 student classrooms which severely limit the options for school teachers to develop participatory approaches where students can use information to do things, instead of just hearing about them. Lowering the class size has not significantly impacted quality of Education in the developed economies, in spite of huge investments made towards attaining that goal.

The situation is especially critical in multi-grade one-classroom/one-teacher schools in rural zones. Peru has almost ten thousand of such schools where an average of 22 children from first to sixth grade share a classroom and one teacher. As a consequence, the perception of school education as non-instrumental in reaching personal goals for the future is reinforced.

The consequences of this situation are critical for development: Students drop out rates climb, discipline problems increase, teachers commitment decreases, community frustration reaches levels that threat social peace, just to name a few.

In a situation like this, when Information Technology is introduced in the classroom, the results are what Forrester (1971) called the counter intuitive behavior of complex social systems, with the result that the attempt to reform education using technology makes worst what it aimed to improve. 20 years of multiple educational computing projects in Peru does not seem to have improved the system as a whole, in spite of promising, but isolated, results.

Examples of the above mentioned situation are classes where students learn the parts and components of a personal computer, or spend one school year learning numberless functions of a word processor or spreadsheet or programming language, without ever having the opportunity to produce something useful with the knowledge they are supposedly acquiring.

In many development economies, this situation is aggravated by the fact that computer courses in schools are taught by technicians with little or no background in Education. It is a hopeful symptom, however, that teachers are increasingly taking control of Computer Lab’s as was the case with project “Huascarán” whose driving factors were pedagogical rather than technological.

There are almost 36,000 public primary schools. Prior to 2007, as many as 3,000 schools have been receiving computers, as part of different government programs. In 1987 there was a National Committee for Educational Computing who developed a program to introduce computers in education. The emphasis was on CAI (Computer Assisted Instruction) packages and teaching programming languages.

During 1988 and 1989 a group of 200 public school teachers were given sabbatical time, to attend a program developed between the Ministry of Education and the National University of Engineering. As in most programs, the results were never evaluated or published. From the original 200, just 50 teachers concluded the program. It is very probable most of them are now working as computer programmers, since that was the emphasis of the whole program.

In 1989 the Ministry of Education announced a national contest for teachers to design CAI packages. The results were never reported, the packages were of dubious quality, mainly because the schools didn’t have the tools to make the development of such packages possible and the whole program for computers in education faded until the committee was dissolved.

During the nineties Peruvian teachers involved in ICT4E felt in love with Seymour Papert’s ideas. Constructionist projects mushroomed and the seeds of many projects still alive were sowed. G. Ruiz, who had founded INEDIC, an education research group, organized a live video conference with Seymour Papert; and the local representative of Lego Education translated the robotics software into Spanish and Quechua. Many of the kits acquired by the Ministry of Education back then, are still in use, which was an incentive to think of Educational Robotics as an important component of a Technology Resource Center.

Since those initial efforts, the number of computers in public schools by 1997 was estimated by the Ministry of Education, to be any number between 10,000 and 15,000. It was not known how many were operative and/or used. The configuration ranged from 8086 diskless machines with monochrome monitors, to some 486 processors with multimedia, the later ones acquired during 1995. There had also been a public effort to formalize the software licenses for all the computers since most of them were acquired with no software.

There was no evaluation of the official programs to provide schools with computers, but it was generally accepted the results had been poor or null. The main reason for this was the lack of support to the program, from the educational point of view. Most teachers had to improvise what to do with the computers; many of them took courses at local training centers, just to be able to use the computers for word processing and to be able to teach some programming.

In the 6 years of Huascaran, there was a strong will to improve the situation but it was not initially clear how this could be accomplished, since the results obtained had led many people to the conclusion that computers were of little or no use in education and it seemed there was evidence to support this idea.

There were also private initiatives aiming to improve the situation; in 1995, the Catholic University in Lima was the first Higher Education institution to introduce Technology in Education as part of the curriculum in the Faculty of Education and established a Research Laboratory for Computers in Education. It was expected this laboratory would be instrumental in the development of policies to improve the support for the use of technology in education.

The University Of San Martín De Porres put in place an Educational Computing strategy, which allowed a cadre of university professors to obtain their Masters’ degrees in Educational Computing and Technology at the University of Hartford, Connecticut. This seminal group served as an internal motor to transform ICT usage at the university and led to the creation (December 2003) of a Master’s Degree Program in Educational Computing in Peru. Eventually one of the members of that initial group of professors was appointed as the highest Education government officer in Peru (Mr. Jose-Antonio Chang, current Minister of Education since July 2006).

During the late 90’s, the Ministry of Education, supported by the World Bank, established several pilot programs to evaluate different approaches to integrate Information and Communications Technology in Education under an umbrella project named National Program to Improve the Quality of Education. The main approaches chosen were:

  • Lego-Dacta material for primary schools
  • Internet access for secondary schools

Each approach had some variations, which developed into sub-projects. This time the driving force behind the project was mainly educational not technological and the results seemed to be more rewarding. Evaluative studies showed the projects were yielding better results than their predecessors. But there still seems to be ample room for improvement, especially in the training of teachers which seems to be the critical success factor to those approaches.

It is becoming clear that a constructionist approach as the one suggested by Papert (1980, 1993) and others (Harel, 1991; Kafai & Resnick, 1994), by helping rethink the role of Technology in Education, may in fact do to Education what Reengineering has done to Business Administration (Hammer & Champy, 1993). Technology can be a powerful resource for the improvement of education, specially the development of critical thinking skills (Jonassen, 2000), and if it hasn’t yet it is because its use has not been properly directed and supported.

The emerging and increasing role of INTERNET in building school and classes networks (Lucena, 1997, 2002) with its almost infinite capacity for sharing and accessing information, paired with the availability of ever faster and more powerful computers and communications facilities is rendering the role of teachers, as sources of information, obsolete.

This of course does not mean, as some naively think, there will be no place for teachers in the schools of the future; teachers are the key success factor for learning in the classroom if they are prepared to assume a new role in the knowledge building process, because it is becoming equally obvious that students need informed guides to survive in the avalanche of information of dubious quality now available. Postman (1996) quotes several examples of utopian views of teacher-less education making it clear the proposed remedy could be even worse than the problem.

A recent report by McKinsey&Company (2007) shows how the best educational systems in the world are those with the best teachers and the best teacher selection processes. At the same time information is available, the need for critical judgment becomes a crucial necessity, in face of the vast amount of information now at the students’ fingertips. The paradox of being thirsty and unable to drink from the firemen’s pipe exemplifies the new kind of needs that education must satisfy.

As Stone Wiske (2006) explain there is a growing need to define the new role of teachers, as guides and counselors in the students’ quest for understanding; and also the role of schools as places where students will share and construct positive images of their personal futures and find ways to acquire the skills and competencies necessary to make them possible.


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Our initial experience in Arahuay as reported by Carla Gomez (Arahuay Chronicles) and Businessweek journalist Gerry Smith (slide show) showed how lives of children could change if we provided them an environment where they could work with tools allowing them to reach personally meaningful objectives whether they were recording their favorite singer from the scarce radio receivers available in town, making digital pictures of their families, reporting the local festivities in video or finding out the meaning of words in the “Real Academia Española” dictionary available in Internet. Even the apparently trivial task of copying what teachers wrote for them in the blackboard acquired a new meaning because all involved felt their school was getting into the future. This kind of feeling and improved self esteem is the first step of any growth project.

The One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) program in Peru responds to the growing demand for quality and equity in education. It is aimed to provide one laptop to each child living in areas of extreme poverty countrywide. These are mostly rural areas with high rates of illiteracy, social exclusion and human development in general. An April, 2010 study published by OECD (Are the New Millennium Learners Making the Grade?) has found a positive correlation between frequent home use of computers and no positive correlation between frequent school use of computers. This finding was a really welcome boost to our approach of letting children and teachers use the computers in “their own ways” and gave more confidence to the team who had worked on the framework for the Technology Resource Centers.

The pedagogical approach is Constructionist as described by Papert (1980, 1993). Students have access to a set of technology components, much in the way kindergarten teachers set their classrooms in special interest areas (“rincones de interés” is the Spanish name). The Technology resource Center is comprised of:

  • A group of XO laptops enough to allow individual work by children at least two hours a week during class time and free access during off school hours. The XO is a versatile tool that enables them to use individual learning styles, offering a variety of learning applications, ranging from visual tools (still-image and motion camera with sound recording) to advanced programming environments of easy usage, to sophisticated music production software that is accessible to children as young as 5 years old. The laptops’ collaborative tools and immediate networking capabilities foster cooperation among students and between them and their teachers, thus contributing to raise students’ self-esteem and social skills. As mentioned earlier each of the 1.7 million students in connected schools will have an individual environment defined in the Internet Cloud (we use Google Apps and Microsoft Life@edu). Non connected students will have their environments defined at the “local cloud” residing in a school server.
  • One Educational Robotics module enough for a group of 16-20, allowing children to work in teams of 4-5 kids sharing one computer. The idea is children will enjoy building models while learning teamwork and curriculum matters will be built into the construction process. Sensors will allow to explore science in a recreational way.
  • One server to function as the “local cloud” and access point to Internet where connectivity is available. The offline portal is loaded at the server where there is no connectivity.
  • One conventional laptop and a multimedia projector to allow teachers to project contents when required.

The strategy is completed with Technology Resource Centers being provided to every public higher education institution in order for them to provide pedagogical and technical support. The Technology Resource Centers will also leverage local government initiatives, like the one in place at Los Olivos where children produce TV programs that are broadcasted through Internet. By mid 2011, more than 800,000 XO laptops equipped with webcams will have been deployed so the 1,7 million children in connected schools, the Los Olivos pioneering experience of learning through video producing will be expanded nationwide.

The Technology Resource Centers will allow the integration of ICT taking into account fundamental capacities: development of creative thinking, critical judgment, problem solving and decision making, as established in NCD.

The initial experience which began in May, 2007 with ten schools around the country will by 2011 have expanded to 100% of K-11schools countrywide. By then, the longer running school will be “Apostol Santiago” in Arahuay, at 2,600 meters above sea level in the Andean mountains 4 hours from Lima. In general terms there is a new work dynamics at the school: teachers’ attitudes have moved from resignation to enthusiasm and development of new teaching strategies.

The sense of self control given by the ownership of laptops helped teachers plan more carefully and better organize class time. Of course this is not a panacea; the complete overhaul of the Peruvian education system will take 10 to 15 years of multiple strategies consistently put in place, meanwhile there will probably be many schools where the impact will be far from expected but we like to compare our strategy to Loren Eiseley (1907-1977) The Star Thrower story.

Perhaps the most surprising and unexpected result was the impact on the community as a whole as reported by Associated press journalist Frank Bajak in the Herald Tribune, where a wide commitment to support children development has emerged and a inner sense of proud can be noticed widely.

Apostol Santiago School has three levels: Pre-School, Primary and Secondary. 110 students are enrolled in those three levels, 47 of them in primary:

  • First-Second grade: 8 students
  • Third-Fourth grade: 21 students
  • Fifth-Sixth grade: 17 students

Most students are required to help their parents with agricultural chores and this means they miss school several weeks a year when their crops require more attention. Since many of them live more than 4 hours away from school (walking time) a board house has been implemented where children spend from Monday to Friday in order to be able to attend school.

The secondary section of the school participated in Huascarán project and one computer classroom with a VSAT connection is available. It should be noted how technology guided the localization of the classroom because it was placed far away from the school (for technical and security reasons) and its usage is very limited and isolated from NCD.


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From the beginning, OLPC was different from the previous approach:

  • Students would be given the laptops to own them as an educational resource (same as textbooks or notebooks), they would take them home and bring them back to school every day. Intentionally, no special care instructions were given in order to test the laptops ruggedness.
  • Teachers were offered limited and only basic operation training, in order to validate a model that might be easily replicable countrywide.
  • The computers use would not have specially allocated time slots. Each teacher and student will use them as they think it best fitted their style, need or willingness.

The initial laptops used to implement the project were B4 prototypes of the XO laptop which by now have long been replaced by the 1.0 version, designed by OLPC foundation of Cambridge, Massachusetts. 120 units were donated by OLPC to the Ministry of Education in April, after an evaluation visit to their headquarters by a research team of the University of San Martin de Porres. The computers were equipped with several Linux based applications:

  • Abiword (basic text editor)
  • Paint (drawing tool)
  • Video and camera (digital photography and video recording)
  • Web navigator
  • Calculator
  • Tam Tam (music creation)
  • E-Toys (multimedia programming environment)
  • Block Party (logical game)
  • News reader and PDF visualizing software

Prior to the beginning of the project a baseline evaluation test on reading comprehension and mathematical skills was applied. Data on the December 2006 national evaluation to second grade students is also available. A survey on attitudes towards ICT was applied to students and teachers.

The initial teacher training session was one day long and teachers were left with the laptops for one week without supervision. After one week a second session was held and the laptops were distributed to children during a special meeting with parents and authorities present. The principal reported it was the first meeting with 100% attendance in the school history. The objective of the meeting was getting everybody’s commitment to help the project succeed. Each child received a XO laptop and the whole community celebrated the event with a traditional ancient Inca meal. This kind of meetings has been replicated in over 10,000 towns since 2007.

The first day after receiving the machines, students had already explored them on their own and were eager to find out what could be done. Teachers kept on teaching, letting children explore their new laptops and encouraging them to do the class work. The children did all the activities. Some would put away the laptop while writing on the notebooks. Some others would write quickly on the notebook and then start punching here and there on the laptop.

Still others were totally into the laptop and so excited that they would be doing something totally unrelated to the class and calling the teacher to come and see what they had discovered. Teachers were pleasantly surprised by the little attention they had to pay to disciplinary problems so usual before.

The electric layout was not prepared to support so many devices connected simultaneously and some kids got entangled with the cables and some machines felt down, a few of them stopped working but students were able to fix them with their teachers help and the little training teachers received from the deployment team. Eventually, secondary students were trained as “support team” and they learned how to disassemble and reassemble the computers in order to fix minor problems.

Some software and hardware glitches were found and reported to the development team in Cambridge to be fixed in ulterior versions. About a month after the initial deployment, an OLPC server arrived and was installed at the school, making it the first OLPC server installation worldwide. It worked seamlessly and allowed easier communication and smoother Internet access.

Of course the initial enthusiasm has since then faded and the work done has settled to a more nature one with new teachers being trained by the senior ones and their students on the different ways they find the XO’s useful for school work.

Really important and unexpected collaboration came from international graduate and undergraduate students. The OLPC foundation helped the Ministry team to promote support missions to the Andes among American universities. Since 2008, about 100 students have gotten funding to spend 5 weeks in rural communities helping them take advantage of the XO’s received. Among them was former IBM Thinkpad University World Program manager Man Bui and his son who spent 5 weeks travelling through the Peruvian Andes helping students and teachers find their way with the XO. The French Peruvian Mision Andes Foundation has also supported more than 50 French students support missions to Andamarca in Ayacucho. German, Finnish, Spanish and Argentinian volunteers have also participated in support missions throughout Peru.

Some important considerations to engage in a project like the one described that we have found important are:

Students:

  • Absenteeism and dropout rates in rural schools tend to be high. As a result of OLPC projects, a dramatic reduction in these rates should be expected and planned for in terms of machines availability and school service level.
  • Students’ interest level in school matters increase and, as a variety of new class activities emerge, a robust support structure to capitalize on it is required.

Teachers

  • The 24×7 availability of a personal computer will modify pedagogical strategies. Teachers will be able to personalize curriculum development planning. It was important that the new NCD allows for great flexibility in terms of localization and introduction of new resources. A rigid curriculum would definitely jeopardize the outcome of an OLPC initiative.
  • Teachers’ engagement in discovery of new tools will require a support team to help them master them in their classroom settings.
  • Time for student teacher interaction should be planned. The improved communication between teachers and students will require more teacher time than the traditional class schedule. Not planning for it might result in frustration. Rural schools will probably be better of than urban schools where teachers could be part time or have double jobs.
  • Increased attention from students will mean additional pressure on teacher class preparation quality. Teachers should be prepared to expect more questioning and engaged participation in their classes and prepare accordingly.
  • Improved peer to peer communication among teachers will help cope with the challenges posed by the new technology and must be encouraged and supported.

Technical Aspects

  • Internet connectivity is a very important factor; when not available, a local server or a memory stick with the offline Internet application is used instead. A periodical refresh process is planned based on teachers’ feedback and request. Since most rural school teachers travel periodically to urban centers, their visits are ideal refreshment vehicles we are planning for.
  • Electricity tends to be scarce and poorly reliable in rural areas. Plug outlets are scarce and one per classroom in the best cases. Children are not used to electrical devices and it is important, at least in the beginning, that teachers organize the battery charging to ensure safety. Community involvement in cabling and connectivity improvement is encouraged though there is a long way to go, mainly due to limited resource availability in extreme poverty areas.
  • Solar power is an option for places where regular supply is not available. Location and scheduling becomes critical in this case and require special attention.
  • Rural schools are usually isolated and hard to reach. Maintenance of sophisticated equipment could become a burden to any attempt of improving Education with technology. The special design of the XO laptops deals with this issue by allowing self maintenance service by students and teachers, however, lack of confidence is still a major obstacle in this area which we expect will reduce in time and with the involvement of nearby higher education institutions.

Other factors

  • Many stakeholders’ interests are being affected by large scale project deployment. Lobbying and public arguments take significant amount of time and many times jeopardize the implementation. Hardware and software vendors advocating for particular products may and in fact attempt to affect the outcome of the project. A solid educational and technical deployment team is crucial to cope with these issues. We have to keep working on this matter.
  • Educational theorists and opinion leaders who did not have a direct role during the planning process usually question the pedagogical approach or implementation. A sensible communication strategy is necessary to ensure all genuinely interested parties’ contribution will be capitalized and taken advantage of. So far we have failed on this, the project execution has taken most of our energies, leaving little time for “advertising”.
  • The focus on fixed features and decreasing prices that is behind the XO laptop design guidelines goes against the ICT industry trend of increasing features and more or less constant price. Since these affect major players’ bottom lines, an aggressive reaction from their sales teams has been an important factor. Careful attention to common and conflicting interests between Public Education and commercial enterprises is hard to implement. We have partially succeeded in this, with Microsoft being a specially committed partner whose approach has been able to balance a genuine interest in education support with their logical expectations of market share. We try to work in order to ensure mutual gain whenever possible and minimizing of conflict in other cases.

In summary, the OLPC experience has renewed our hope that school education has not lost its value as an instrument in the development of the individual. Committed teachers can benefit of ICT availability and, without abandoning their concern for processes and methods, they can improve their performance with genuine concern for the personal growth of students, resulting in improved learning outcomes and commitment levels to school.

We are convinced the educational system can abandon the image of a purposeless organism where everybody pretends and get involved in a meaningful system providing not only instruction but the most important ingredient to success: Hope in a better future that may be beginning to be built now. December, 2007 seems long ago now, but we still remember our surprise when we found sixty Arahuay children reading comprehension level had risen 100% above the national average when the base line showed 0% performing at the expected grade level. Initial intrinsic motivation measurements in 139 schools showed dramatic improvement after the first year, though the results are not statistically reliable. The Interamerican Development Bank has committed the funds for an impact study which is underway. As expected no significant results have been found after 6-12 months and we are waiting for the second year evaluation which will be available by March 2011. So far, a more critical student body and increased community self esteem are on the positive side, while need for more teacher training is on the negative side. The last can be explained in the poor quality of teacher education, which has been an endemic problem in Peru for the last decades and cannot be solved with ICT training to in service teachers.

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14 Responses to “What is reasonable to expect from information and communication technologies in education?”

  1. Joice Fernandes

    Oscar,
    very interesting article. t is indeed a subject matter that deserves a deep discussion.
    abrazo
    Joice

  2. Here is a video of Oscar Becerra discussing his ICT in education work in Peru: Proyecto OLPC Perú. Entrevista a Oscar Becerra

  3. Carlos Corzo

    I think it is a masterpiece, and the seed of a future book, I presume.

    Specially remarkable are the sections about the evolution of the use of ICT in Education in Peru since its beginning and the conclusions derived from the OLPC experience in Peru.

  4. Carlos Corzo

    Oscar:

    I think it is a masterpiece, and the seed of a future book, I presume.

    Specially remarkable are the sections about the evolution of the use of ICT in Education in Peru since its beginning and the conclusions derived from the OLPC experience in Peru.

    Carlos Corzo

    • Are you sure? why? I don´t think so. In a next post I will explain why.

      • boredgamergirl

        So you're saying that they are not derived from the OLPC experience in Peru?! Looking forward to that post!

  5. I recently experienced a situation like the example you mention – classes where students learn the parts and components of a personal computer – that was funny, if it weren't so sad.The country was very proud of its deployment of computer labs in every school and the IT classes that every 6th grader went through. Each student leaded about CPU, hard drives, even the history of the microprocessor. The teachers boasted to me that students graduated from this call proficient in ICT.I happened to be there during the first week of class, and asked how many students had Facebook. 80% of the students' hands went up, followed shortly by bragging rights on how many Facebook friends each one had. I don't think those students needed a class on computers to be proficient – they already were!By the way, this is why I say that Facebook is an educational tool.

    • Hi Wayan,

      I do agree with you about Facebook being an educational tool …

      Apart from the link posted, is there any more evidence or research that I can use to convince my University to allow access to Facebook for students and staff …

  6. Ante la escasez de la literatura nacional especializada, con respecto a la gestión de las tecnologías de la información y comunicaciones en las instituciones educativas de gestión pública, la adopción de criterios para tomar decisiones asertivas al interior de estas organizaciones es una necesidad prioritaria toda vez que se han invertido cantidades considerables de recursos económicos y los impactos en los aprendizajes aún no son evidentes o significativos.

    Esta apreciación no es arbitraria. El Departamento de Educación de los Estados Unidos de Norteamérica advierte, en el documento, Plan Nacional de Educación Tecnológica, bajo el título de “Transformando la Educación Americana, Aprendizaje empoderado por la Tecnología” que las inversiones realizadas en tecnologías de la información y comunicaciones, en los últimos veinte años, deben articularse en un sistema educativo que se encuentre preparado para usar estas herramientas de manera coherente evitando caer en lo que algunos economistas han denominado la paradoja de la productividad.

    –>Inicio de la cita
    "A inicios del siglo XXI, los economistas concluyeron que las dramáticas mejoras en productividad eran el resultado de innovaciones estructurales y de un reajuste cuidadoso de los procesos de negocio que eran posibles gracias a la tecnología (Black y Lynch, 2003). Lo qué la educación puede aprender de la experiencia del ámbito de los negocios es que necesitamos realizar cambios estructurales fundamentales si deseamos ver mejoras dramáticas en la productividad del sector educativo que pueden ser facilitadas por el uso de las tecnologías de la información y comunicaciones. Aunque tenemos que reconocer que el propósito fundamental de nuestro sistema educativo es equitativo, los roles que desempeñan las escuelas y los educadores al interior del sistema deben cambiar para reflejar los tiempos que vivimos al interior de nuestro país como líder del mundo. Tal revisión no solo alcanza a los procesos de enseñanza y aprendizaje sino también a la infraestructura, los procesos y los aspectos financieros de los sistemas escolares.
    El reajuste de la educación en América, para mejorar su productividad, es un desafío complejo que requerirá que los 50 estados, los millares de distritos y de escuelas a lo largo del país, el gobierno federal y a los otros actores de nuestro sistema educativo, tanto públicos como privados, puedan diseñar y poner en práctica soluciones. Es un desafío para los educadores, líderes políticos, profesores y diseñadores de políticas públicas, así como tecnólogos y expertos educativos que deberán conducir esfuerzos conjuntos para conseguir este objetivo. (U.S. Department of Education, 2010, pág. 64) Traducción: Autor de la tesis asistido por Google Translate." http://www.ed.gov/technology/netp-2010/productivi
    –>Final de la cita

    Para que el sistema educativo de gestión estatal pueda evitar la paradoja de la productividad será necesario que considere criterios técnicos en las decisiones que involucran la integración de las tecnologías de la información y comunicaciones al interior de las instituciones educativas del país.

    –>Inicio de la cita
    "Pese a no existir beneficios claramente mensurables muchos países continúan sus esfuerzos por incorporar las TIC a sus sistemas nacionales de educación basándose en la premisa que los futuros ciudadanos deberían ser capaces de funcionar adecuadamente en una Sociedad de la Información que evoluciona a pasos agigantados. No obstante, a partir de los sugerido por diferente fuentes documentales y estadísticas, parecería razonable inferir que será necesario contar con bastante más evidencia estadística sobre qué beneficios reales aportan las TIC en la educación. Como se desprende de las conclusiones de InfoDev (2005) “Se advierte una gran carencia de metodologías e indicadores estandarizados ampliamente aceptados a nivel internacional que permitan evaluar el impacto de las TIC en educación”. (Instituto de Estadística de la UNESCO, 2009, pág. 16)" http://www.itu.int/ITU-D/ict/partnership/material
    –>Fin de la cita.

    Esta investigación se justifica en la medida que propone la adopción de un marco de referencia (UNESCO, Banco Mundial, GeSCI) para el uso de las tecnologías de la información y comunicaciones al interior de las instituciones educativas de gestión pública con el objetivo de mejorar el aprendizaje de los alumnos.

  7. Oscar Becerra

    Sugiero ver estos videos, I suggest watch these videos: http://www.ted.com/talks/sugata_mitra_the_child_dhttp://www.ted.com/talks/sugata_mitra_shows_how_k

    • Manuel Vargas Alegria

      Es cierto que los alumnos tienden a enseñarse a si mismos cuando no encuentran un adulto quien les pueda dar una pauta de como usar y demostrar que pueda emplear una computadora tan rápido como ellos lo harían tan pronto hayan superado su curva de aprendizaje.
      Si existiesen profesores (y por suerte si existen en el Perú y varios lugares del mundo pero son pocos) con las capacidades y competencias para enseñar a los alumnos a su mismo ritmo el argumento de que los niños se enseñan a si mismos cae por su propio peso.
      Cuando los alumnos no encuentran un adulto a quien recurrir para encontrar una explicación o ver una demostración recurren a sus compañeros de carpeta o a "quien más sabe" o cree saber. Este fenómeno natural, que se presenta en los niños con más naturalidad, es enfatizado por que existe una población adulta que no se encuentra familiarizada con la producción de contenidos digitales ni con el dominio de juegos de vídeo, ni mucho menos con los lenguajes de programación.
      Por lo tanto, este argumento de que los niños "aprenden solos" el uso de una computadora puede tener sus detractores y no ser del todo cierta en la medida que los niños, en edad escolar, no se encuentran solos, tienen adultos a su lado, que si bien pueden o no manejar computadoras, enseñan y ayudan a resolver otro tipo de problemas que pueden proporcionar insumos para encontrar respuestas en otras situaciones, entre ellas, las relacionados con el uso de las computadoras.
      Me parece más bien que seria mucho más provechos invertir el dinero (de todos los peruanos) en capacitar a los padres de familia en el uso de las tecnologías de la información y comunicación en las instituciones educativas publicas empleando para ellos la infraestructura de las aulas de innovación pedagógica, (es decir no se tiene que gastar más dinero) que en su mayoría ha sido mantenida y renovada por la participación de los mismos padres de familia en varias instituciones educativas del país; para que ellos se puedan acercarse y aproximar a un entendimiento de como aprenden sus hijos a usar las computadoras y el Internet; y colaboren en el hogar con las "tareas" que lleva el niño.
      Con lo que no estoy de acuerdo es aprovecharse de la desidia, desconocimiento, dejadez, pereza e indiferencia de algunos docentes para manifestar que los alumnos se pueden enseñar entre ellos a usar programas de computo. Esta situación ha existido y existirá, siempre y cuando la persona adulta que tiene que enseñar no conozca usar una computadora ni Internet.
      El caso más elemental sucede entre los adolescentes cuando aprende a usar la tecnología anticonceptiva del condón. ¿Cuantos padres le enseñan a sus hijos a usar un condón? Deben haber muy pocos. Un adolescente, hombre o mujer, lo más probable es que aprenda con sus amigas o amigos en algún espacio que no necesariamente es el domicilio, sino la esquina o el colegio.
      Por otro lado, argumentar que el niño aprende solo, excluye la figura del docente, o en todo caso, el rol que se le ha conferido por varios cientos de años, como recolector, repositorio y transmisor de la información necesaria para producir un aprendizaje. He seguido con mucha atención la evolución del uso de las computadoras y el Internet en las instituciones de educación publicas en Perú y me parece que a nivel del magisterio no se tiene claridad del cual es el rol actual del docente. Mientras por un lado se afirma que el docente es el principal actor del proceso de enseñanza y aprendizaje por el otro se le excluye de manera tacita exponiendo que el alumno puede aprender solo inter actuando con su computadora portátil (de cualquier marca). Me imagino que por razones políticas (políticas partidarias) la exposición explicita de un cambio radical en el rol del docente, a partir del uso de las computadoras y el Internet, ha sido dejado de lado en su gestión al frente de la DIGETE por las consecuencias que semejante afirmación puede generar entre los profesores y que solo puede ser discutida en espacios más especializados.
      Por lo tanto, quiero insistir, en el hecho que lo que se puede esperar del uso de las computadoras y el Internet en las instituciones educativas del país dependerá de los maestros y si no hay maestros capacitados recurriremos a los alumnos con lo cual ya no serán alumnos sino maestros de sus propios compañeros. Y si esta esta afirmación es compartida por otros, ¿por que no hace explicita? a todo el magisterio para quede claro cual es el reto que enfrentan los docentes que no asumen el aprendizaje de una nueva tecnología.

  8. All interesting and extremely challenging aspects to running a program. The dilemma I see from a development perspective is that regardless of what might be reasonable to expect, unless the yield can be better than a conventional program e.g vs. the same amount spent on alternatives (lego blocks, lab equipment, revamped books, conventional teacher training, etc) then it doesn't seem to make sense to do it on a large scale until one has a formula that provides a return on investment superior to the conventional alternative.

    Also given the resources expended however one is structuring your objectives – be it abilities to create or abilities to consume and regurgitate, that can be measured before/after. One could try a certain set of logical problem tests before having the XOs and then at set periods there after to see if using tools have improved these abilities.

  9. Introduction of ICT to students at elementary school will be much more effective in my experience when I asked their accompanying parents (father/mother) who used to be with them during the whole morning class. It has happened like that because learning together about new things, especially with simple instruction to get interesting images or practices, has also made them as co-learner of this subject and most of them have improved themselves with more and simple things with their home computers. In so condition, learning ICT will likely run faster than I have expected before, though it takes a greater energy, of course!

InfoDev UNESCO

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