-----Original Message-----
From: Paperless Homework <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, October 05, 2008 2:32 PM
To: The Digital Divide Network discussion group 
<[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [DDN] PhD research on OLPC


Hello steve,

I do generaly agree with your views except that I would like to change this 
little bit..

You said  " The real choice is between online learning or
no learning."

It would be more appropriate to rephrase it as
 The real choice is between online/offline learning throug ICT or
no learning."

This is because to say online learning is the only choice for ICT in Education 
is not exactly right. More learning today are learnt through offline than 
online... in many homes and schools around the world. More people are offline 
at anyone time than online.

Another thing, having a computer or two in a telecenter does not mean only 1 or 
2 students may benefit.  That is the old model. Today telecenters can make use 
of 1 or 2 computers to serve entire class of students using projectors etc.  So 
it depends on how you use the computers.

Having one computer for each(as originally intended in the OLPC) is good but in 
more cases than not ...impractical in third world countries (in fact I really 
doubt any third world country).

The real issue of the digital divide as far as schools are concerned today is 
the inabilities to
reach out to the unreached anytime any place and any cost.

We can talk until the cows come home about other issues highlighted by many 
contributors here, without this being solved first, we are like trying to teach 
the rural folks to run before they able able to walk.

Hence to really close the digital divides among nations around the world, look 
into issue of reach... then we can start talking about pedagogy.

Read an article about our initiative here and perhaps most will understand what 
the world is doing and what she lacks as far as trying to reach the unreached 5 
billion.
http://www.govtech.com/dc/articles/270167

Meanwhile we should not forget about the environment impact our current schools 
are contributing to the deteriorating environments filling land fills with 
millions of tons of paper wastes. This in spite of all the high techs.

Read about about a Practical tech not high tech article by a 14 years 
experieced ICT journalist.
www.paperlesshomework.com/surf

Regards
Alan
www.paperlesshomework.com
An elearning solution for rural areas where online/CDs cannot reach.

Get the latest happenings through paperlesshomework tool bar 
www.paperlesshomework.communitytoolbars.com

--- On Sat, 10/4/08, Steve Eskow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

From: Steve Eskow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: [DDN] PhD research on OLPC
To: "The Digital Divide Network discussion group" 
<[email protected]>
Date: Saturday, October 4, 2008, 3:55 AM

Hi Tom,
Sorry to be so slow in responding. For some reason I missed this message of
yours when it arrived.

Perhaps it would be useful to put the matter of moving out of what Bourdieu
called
"the scholastic enclosure" into the new spaces of communication
technology
into an action research mode.

For example: we know that the poor nations aren't going to meet the
Millenium Development Goals for education by erecting buildings to teach and
house those now left untaught. The real choice is between online learning or
no learning.

One question, then, for research is how to bring computers and students
together.

 Sarah talked about "community computers." I've used the term
"social
computers," to contrast with the taken-for-granted rich country assumption
of the "personal computer." The "telecentre" is one
approach to the "social"
computer, and it has clear limitations. We can put a computer in a school, a
church, a kiosk, a cafe and it can serve one, three, five students.

Will such an approach do the job? We don't know for sure, but we can try,
keep careful records and report results.

On the matter of pedagogy: perhaps we need a transitional strategy, rather
than insisting that all existing syllabi and curriculum materials and
instructional strategies are hopelessly inadequate, an approach guaranteed
to frighten or threaten or anger many of the faculty whose support we need.
I, for one, would rather make existing instructional strategies made
available via ICT  than nothing at all. Again, we encourage an action
research approach, and we report on how well the traditional pedagogies do
when compared to the new ones that seem more authentic and relevant to us.

Steve


On Tue, Sep 23, 2008 at 9:19 AM, tom abeles <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>
> Hi Steve
>
> You are right, there are transitions and there are different models. What
> might be appropriate today in Ghana might be different, today in the US.
The
> approach of education planners is to want to eventually find the one
global
> model. Yet with technology, as you suggest, there are many models for
> learning including different approaches from didactic, sage of stage, to a
> problem-based-learning model as examples.  The difference, today, seems to
> me to revolve around the ability of the knowledge to come to those that
need
> it when and where they need it. Information packages nicely and
doesn't
> necessarily require paved four lane controlled access roads. It is strange
> and wonderous to see how knowledge travels in dispersed rural communities
> where everyone knows everyone's business and problem solving knowledge
> travels across fields almost by magic. The issue is one of scarcity and
> control. That we learned, in the west from the Church who had a problem
when
> the Vulgate appeared.
>
> Just go to the iTunes store and go to podcasts and search for a subject
and
> see what is available, free. And we are just starting
> Think about motivated home school students in the US and students eager to
> learn, around the world but who have to work so the family can eat.
>
> How long before we figure out that brick-spaces dedicated only for
> educational purposes need to be repurposed in order to better meet what
they
> are delivering almost like zombies walking down the street. What virtual
> larning options do is to point out that the current model is like the
> consumptive in Poe's short story of Valdemer. A snap of the fingers
will
> break the trance and the system will plunge into chaos. The people who
have
> a vested interest in the status quo and the idea of mapping technology in
> the schools are the schools of education who have no other model. They are
> like the brakemen in the caboose or the last flight engineer in the 3
person
> cockpits of modern airliners.
>
> thoughts?
>
> tom
>
> tom abeles
> ----------------------------------------
> > Date: Mon, 22 Sep 2008 09:47:55 -0700
> > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > To: [email protected]
> > Subject: Re: [DDN] PhD research on OLPC
> >
> > In a message here filled with much good sense Tom Abeles says this:
> > < thinking about mapping click space technology into brick space
> thinking.>>
> >
> > We might begin by trying to understand why radio, television,
film--all
> the
> > earlier technologies that promised to reform education--have failed
to
> make
> > a difference in what goes on in those "brick spaces" that
Tom talks
> about.
> >
> > Winston Churchill said this: "We shape our buildings, and then
our
> buildings
> > shape us."
> >
> > That is: the school building and its classrooms and lecture halls is
not
> > merely a container that can house instruction organized around the
> computer
> > or radio or television as easily as it can accommodate teacher-led
> > instruction: the building--Tom's "brick space"--shapes
what goes on
> within
> > in it. Anthony Giddens says spatial arrangements are
"constitutive". The
> > school building, then, is not a neutral container that can house any
kind
> of
> > instruction, but is a decisive and determining factor in the shaping
of
> > teaching and learning.
> >
> > Tom proposes abandoning the present building-centered school.
> >
> > We may need a transitional strategy.
> >
> > One possibility might be a 3-2 system. Children go to the school
building
> > three days a week to learn from teachers and each other through
> > conversation, dialog, and the older pedagogies, without technologies,
or
> > perhaps with the help of radio and television if the teacher is
> comfortable
> > with them. The other two days might be spent with computers: at home,
if
> the
> > home has a computer--perhaps using a pen drive, as
"Paperless"
> suggests--or
> > using a "community computer" which might be in a
telecenter, or a
> library,
> > or in the school building.
> >
> > The growth of "open universities," with all instruction at
a
> > distance,suggests that some day Tom's vision of a "school
without walls"
> may
> > be  practical. We might want to go there in stages rather than all at
> once.
> >
> > Steve Eskow
> >
> > On Sat, Sep 20, 2008 at 9:03 AM, tom abeles  wrote:
> >
> >>
> >> We are in a transition period where multiple solutions make sense
rather
> >> than one size fits all.
> >>
> >> One of the issue to understand is that cost keeps coming down for
> digital
> >> products. Right now I can have a basic cell phone which will take
a
> micro
> >> chip with 4GB. Cells are already available with most of the
technology
> >> needed to deliver basic internet type services, even to being
able to
> test.
> >> The cell is a ubiquitous device even in developing countries. So
> computers
> >> to lap tops to cells is a natural migration both in capabilities,
cost
> and
> >> availability both on wireless and wifi delivery.
> >>
> >> Thin clients such as Sarah suggests, or variance thereof is what
happens
> >> with google doc's and other server-based software, even in
developed
> >> countries- safe/secure and not dependent on keeping data stored
on
> portable
> >> media except for off-line purposes.
> >>
> >> OLPC is, as both Sarah and Alan suggest was based on the old
model of a
> >> brick-space synchronous, age-defined cohort model for learning-
bricks
> >> mapped into clicks from K->20.
> >>
> >> We need to rethink educational models first and formost rather
than
> >> thinking about mapping click space technology into brick space
thinking.
> >>
> >> Learning should be anytime/any place- some maybe synchronous in
groups
> but
> >> most, given the exigencies of daily and seasonal life,
particularly in
> >> countries where even students need to contribute to family
income, need
> the
> >> flexibility offered by virtual technology.
> >>
> >> The problem is that the learning model has to change and the tech
can
> help.
> >> But thinking about thin clients, portable media and other
soft/hard tech
> >> will be limited if the models do not also change.
> >>
> >> tom
> >>
> >> tom abeles
> >>
> >>> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >>> To: [email protected]
> >>> Date: Fri, 19 Sep 2008 14:06:52 -0700
> >>> Subject: Re: [DDN] PhD research on OLPC
> >>>
> >>> A more practical approach is "community computers"
(in contrast to
> >> "personal
> >>> computers") available in a school, church, community
center, etc.,
> where
> >>> everyone in the village can have access. It is much more
reasonable to
> >>> provide internet connection for one such community computing
center
> than
> >> for
> >>> personal laptops.
> >>>
> >>> A good model is a thin client/server model, in which one
powerful
> server
> >>> would serve programs and internet access to many thin clients
with
> >> limited
> >>> computing and storage capacity. (Community users would have
their own
> pen
> >>> drives for storing their own files.)
> >>>
> >>> We (Pangaea Network) are testing this idea in Ghana in Asante
Akim
> >> district.
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> Sarah Blackmun-Eskow
> >>> President, The Pangaea Network
> >>> 290 North Fairview Avenue
> >>> Goleta CA 93117
> >>> 805-692-6998
> >>> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >>> www.pangaeanetwork.org
> >>>
> >>> -----Original Message-----
> >>> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >>> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
> Paperless
> >>> Homework
> >>> Sent: Friday, September 19, 2008 5:02 AM
> >>> To: The Digital Divide Network discussion group
> >>> Subject: Re: [DDN] PhD research on OLPC
> >>>
> >>> Dear Caroline,
> >>>
> >>> What you are doing is exactly what our project is about.
> >>>
> >>> We believe that a practical approach should be the way rather
than
> fancy
> >>> ideas about One laptop per child for the developing
countries. It isn't
> >>> practical even in developed countries much less developing
countries.
> >>>
> >>> It is in this direction that we have created a simple tool to
create
> >> small
> >>> sized tutorials and exercises to enable such multimeda
contents to be
> >> saved
> >>> in diskettes or Pen drives. Yes even diskettes can
accommodate
> multimedia
> >>> contents. So in the end the entire extra financial need of
the students
> >>> would be digitally connected would be the cost of a pen
drive.
> >>> It can contain the entire contents for the whole life of the
> students....
> >>> that is our aim.
> >>>
> >>> Computers, students would know how to get access to for those
students
> >>> without computers.
> >>>
> >>> The good thing about OLPC project is the development of low
cost units
> >> and
> >>> its low power needs with longer hours of operation. To use
OLPC for
> each
> >>> child in developing countries... it would never come to pass.
> >>>
> >>> An interesting article about our concept of Practical tech
not high
> tech
> >>> www.paperlesshomework.com/surf
> >>>
> >>> Currently we have tremendous response to our free for schools
> initiative
> >> in
> >>> Malaysia. We would extend it to other developing countries
including
> >> China,
> >>> India and Indonesia which practically form nearly half the
world's
> >>> population. If we succeed here , our job is done.
> >>>
> >>> See videos of our contents here
www.paperlesshomework.ning.com/video
> >>>
> >>> Want to really close the digital divide? Join us. It is the
ONLY such
> >>> project in the world.
> >>>
> >>> Regards
> >>> Alan Foo
> >>> www.paperlesshomework.com
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> www.paperlesshomework.com
> >>> An elearning solution for rural areas where online/CDs cannot
reach.
> >>>
> >>> Get the latest happenings through paperlesshomework tool bar
> >>> www.paperlesshomework.communitytoolbars.com
> >>>
> >>> --- On Thu, 9/18/08, Caroline Meeks  wrote:
> >>>
> >>> From: Caroline Meeks
> >>> Subject: Re: [DDN] PhD research on OLPC
> >>> To: "The Digital Divide Network discussion group"
> >>>
> >>> Date: Thursday, September 18, 2008, 8:20 AM
> >>>
> >>> Thank you all for this interesting discussion.
> >>>
> >>> As someone embarking on a project similar to OLPC I'm
interested in
> what
> >>> advice you have on effective and ethical marketing and
corporate
> >>> relationships.
> >>>
> >>> School Key is "One KeyFob per Child".  Basically,
we question that the
> >> best
> >>> way for children to have ubiquitous access to computers is to
have them
> >>> carry laptops with them.  Even if they did cost $100 in a
city like
> >> Boston
> >>> kids are not safe carrying home computers.  Instead we
propose to give
> >> each
> >>> student a 1GB USB Key (currently $5 at Target, probably
closer to $1 or
> >> $2
> >>> in bulk) and arrange for them to be able to boot every
computer at
> >> school,
> >>> the library, the ICT center and at home with it.
> >>>
> >>> When you buy one computer per student it will always be a
compromise.
> >>> Instead, afterschool programs can have big color screens for
art, High
> >> use
> >>> compuer labs can use low power computers, Science departments
can have
> a
> >>> cart of sturdy laptop with cameras and sensors, and low-cost
> referbished
> >>> computers, that doen't even need a hard drives, could be
supplied for
> >> home.
> >>> Content can be automatically downloaded when connected to the
internet
> at
> >>> school letting students do homework offline if they don't
have internet
> >> at
> >>> home, then automatically save thier work back to the server
when they
> >>> reconnect at School.
> >>>
> >>> Currently this is a Grad school project, developed with open
source
> >> software
> >>> by me and Amy Bisiewicz, a Boston Public Schools IT
professional, who
> >>> attended Harvard Grad School of Education last year thanks to
a
> >> scholarship
> >>> program for Boston Public School employees.  As an Internship
for
> credit
> >> at
> >>> HGSE, I am doing very intial pilot work this fall at two
Boston
> schools.
> >>>
> >>> Right now we have no grants, no marketing, no corporate
partners. Its
> >> seems
> >>> clear to me that we need to change that, so I'm
interested in what you
> >> think
> >>> OLPC and others have done right and wrong in these arenas.
> >>>
> >>> Thanks!
> >>> Caroline
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> _______________________________________________
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> >>>
> >>>
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> >>
> >> _________________________________________________________________
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