Uruguay used to have a quite solid program of extension courses, with no age limit, directed mostly toward people in the countryside who were not able to continue schooling beyond 6th grade(until 20 years ago 7th grade and higher required you to up and go to a city).

However, extremely few people benefited from this, on the principle that, if you wanted learning, you went to the city (and then to Montevideo if you made it beyond 12th grade, likely for good - what use would be your degree back at home?), otherwise you stayed put and tended the chickens. Programa de educacion Post Escolar a Distancia it was called. Mostly oriented toward the needs of pastoral people: cooking, animal husbandry, weaving...

It was not bad at all, actually if you google my name and "canning" you will see an Arequita graduate from that program showing off his training, all the way to Austin, Texas!

Absolutely no idea what its status is right now, I will ask Sur.

Public libraries in the US have no parallel over there. We do have some public libraries, mostly in the larger cities, and some libraries in High Schools, but seldom are you allowed to go browse the books, you have to ask for them in writing at a counter, after perusing the card catalog, with bureaucracy marginally less than that of the Library of Congress. Some books might be borrowed, but the collection tends to be extremely limited and very aged, to the point that private lending libraries cover some of the gap, for those who can afford the fees. Like for example the former USAID one, that was free until 1994, with open access shelves - a mandatory stop for me every time I went to Montevideo.

Quite unlikely computers be available, and if so, even less that they will be networked to anything - if there are any they might have a digital catalog of the books and maybe some encyclopaedia, probably pirated.

Yes, the opportunity is there.

I see more opportunities in SD cards with content in HTML. The Journal quirks are a big limitation, of course, maybe under the Gnome environment?

Yama


On 06/23/2011 03:47 AM, Simon Schampijer wrote:
On 06/22/2011 09:25 PM, Alan Kay wrote:
Hi folks,

I posted the Ceibal video to Mark Guzdial's blog ... and here is a question from
it that seems interesting and important (I'd like to know also).

On a related topic, does Uruguay have anything like free online courses for
adults, perhaps available in public libraries?

Cheers,

Alan

Hi Alan,

there are two portals that I am aware of:

Uruguay Educa [1]: educative material for teachers, school children and parents

Plan Ceibal Portal [2]: material for the use with the XO for teachers, school children and parents

Regards,
   Simon

[1] http://uruguayeduca.edu.uy
[2] http://ceibal.edu.uy
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