What do you think about this approach to ICTD courses?

Harnessing Mobile Tech and Students to Promote Development in Kenya
Stanford University (03/19/12)

Stanford University professors Joshua Cohen and Terry Winograd teach a
course that brings interdisciplinary teams of Stanford students
together with students from the University of Nairobi and local
nongovernmental organizations to design new uses for mobile platforms
that promote human development in Nairobi's informal settlements.
Cohen says the course, called Designing Liberation Technologies, is
premised on the idea that mobile tech is a promising means for
providing jumpstarts in human welfare. He says the reason the class
focuses on using mobile applications in areas of health, education,
and economic development is because mobile is the most rapidly growing
technology, especially in the developing world. The students use a
problem-solving process that involves starting with the potential
users themselves, and then developing insights about how their needs
can be solved with mobile applications, Cohen notes. The projects have
involved locating malaria drugs and checking them for counterfeiting,
helping health workers collect patient information and control patient
workflow, and helping pregnant women save money for prenatal care. The
group is readying the launch of a six-month pilot for the M-Maji
project in five villages in Kibera, which is designed to help people
find clean water, especially during water shortages.

http://www.gsb.stanford.edu/news/headlines/cohen-mobile-kenya.html

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