Hi Changers,

I'll be giving a public seminar at the Institute for Health Metrics
and Evaluation (IHME) this Wednesday (Feb 27th at 4pm) and would love
to see all of you in the crowd.

The talk will be about collecting data at scale with smart forms on
phones and tablets. I'll show how the standard ODK tools have worked
at scale and show a few of the new ODK tools that Gaetano and the rest
of the UW-CSE team have been building. I will also talk a little bit
about the work I've been doing at Nafundi building software for
challenging environments.

I've provided the abstract and details below. Please come by and ask
hard questions!

Yaw


# Synopsis

Open Data Kit (ODK, http://opendatakit.org) replaces paper forms with
smart forms on a phone or tablet. ODK is great for mobile field
workers (e.g., census enumerators, community health workers, and
forest monitors) who need to collect data accurately and report
results instantly. The free and open-source ODK platform has tens of
thousands of users who use it to measure indicators, track
performance, and maximize their impact. Examples include:

Kiva: gathering borrower demographics and repayment information
The Carter Center: monitoring elections in young democracies
The Jane Goodall Institute: documenting the health of forests
AMPATH: supporting HIV testing for over half a million people

Besides collecting text and numbers, ODK can be used to take pictures,
capture GPS locations, scan barcodes, get signatures, and even play
videos. Additionally, ODK forms support branching logic, repeating
sections, multiple languages, data encryption, and working offline.

In this seminar, Yaw Anokwa, one of the designers of ODK, will discuss
how his doctoral research on building technology for low-income
regions motivated the creation of ODK. He will also describe a few of
the ODK tools being used at scale and demonstrate how they enable data
collection with smart forms on mobile devices.

# Bio

Yaw Anokwa first realized the impact technology could have on the
world's underserved while deploying a medical record system in Rwanda.
That experience inspired his PhD work addressing the limitations of
paper-based systems using smart phones and "cloud" servers.

Dr. Anokwa founded and runs Nafundi (http://nafundi.com), a technology
company with expertise in creating software for challenging
environments (e.g., rural Kenya, war-torn Afghanistan, and
post-hurricane New Jersey). He holds a PhD in Computer Science from
the University of Washington. A more detailed biography of Dr. Anokwa
and his curriculum vitae can be found at http://anokwa.com.

# Details

Place: 2301 Fifth Ave., Suite 600, Seattle, WA 9812
Date: Wednesday, February 27th, 2013
Time: 4:00 p.m. coffee reception; 4:15 p.m. lecture

http://www.healthmetricsandevaluation.org/news-events/seminar/collecting-data-scale-smart-forms-phones-and-tablets
_______________________________________________
change mailing list
[email protected]
http://changemm.cs.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/change

Reply via email to