{"id":496,"date":"2009-10-16T09:48:52","date_gmt":"2009-10-16T13:48:52","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/edutechdebate.org\/?p=496"},"modified":"2012-09-27T10:37:34","modified_gmt":"2012-09-27T14:37:34","slug":"designing-a-sustaining-and-sustainable-ict4e-initiative","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/edutechdebate.org\/ict4e-sustainability\/designing-a-sustaining-and-sustainable-ict4e-initiative\/","title":{"rendered":"Designing a sustaining and sustainable ICT4E initiative"},"content":{"rendered":"

\u201cRegime change from without has not been very successful.\u201d \u2013Dick Gordon, host of American Public Media\u2019s The Story, discussing Iranian history with a guest.<\/i><\/p>\n

In my opening position<\/a> I made the case that the traditional tools of policy and financing can help develop and sustain Opportunity and Capacity but that they are not effective tools for addressing Motivation. <\/p>\n

And it is this final component \u2013 Motivation \u2013 that I believe is the key to sustainability in ICT4E initiatives. In order to be successful and sustainable these initiatives must meet the needs and desires of the ultimate end users. They must \u201cnourish\u201d teachers and students. They must be sustaining before they can be sustainable.<\/p>\n

We can find the evidence to show that non-financial motivators lead to better performance (for example, see \u201cHealth worker motivation in Africa: the role of non-financial incentives and human resource management tools<\/a>\u201d but intuitively we know this to be true. We all can easily recall situations in which we have spent more time and effort on a project we weren\u2019t being paid for or that wasn\u2019t deemed a priority by our supervisors or leadership. <\/p>\n

We do this because we are motivated. And in our development context, we need look no further than the global explosion in mobile technology and services for examples of people\u2019s willingness to devote significant percentages of household income on connectivity \u2013 whether to support income generation and entrepreneurship or to strengthen family and community ties.<\/p>\n

So how does one ensure from the very beginning that they\u2019re designing an ICT4E project that is sustaining and that meets the needs and desires \u2013 the motivations \u2013 of teachers and students?<\/p>\n

<\/a>
Talking w\/students @ KSDACON<\/span><\/div>\n

Good design starts with analysis<\/b><\/p>\n

Any standard design process \u2013 architectural, instructional, policy, product, software \u2013 starts with analysis. This up-front analysis needs to produce a clear and shared understanding of the ultimate goals of the project and the context in which it will be carried out. <\/p>\n

The context in an ICT4E initiative obviously includes the political, financial and technological environments but it also includes the cultural environment. And one needs to understand individual attitudes, beliefs, interests, needs and desires not only as they apply directly to technology but also in relation to their work and how all of this impacts their personal lives, too.<\/p>\n

So what\u2019s the easiest way to elicit information about individual motivations? Just ask and observe them directly, of course!<\/p>\n

At Jhpiego we have developed a comprehensive, holistic process and related set of tools that help us conduct what we call a Learning Technology Readiness Assessment<\/a>. We use this assessment to explore the people, processes and technologies in place in an educational setting at the outset of any ICT4E project. And there are a number of other tools available for gathering similar information including:<\/p>\n