CSIR’s rural education pilot highlights potential techno-based interventions
Results from Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) inform-ation and communication technology (ICT) arm the Meraka Institute’s rural education pilot programme indicate its poten-tial sustainability and scalability.
The institute aims to develop and apply technology-based interventions for improved education in rural areas. Many of South Africa’s estimated 26 500 schools – 17 000 of which are in rural and remote areas – are without connectively and access to the Internet, hampering access to education.
The pilot kicked off with the distribution of multimedia tablets to teachers and students of Arthur Mfebe Senior Secondary School, in Comfivaba, in the Eastern Cape, in August last year, where the study saw 77% students matriculate in 2012, compared with 41% in 2011, Meraka ICT for education and mobile learning manager Merryl Ford has reported.
The ICT for rural education development (ICT4Red) pilot project was rolled out to support traditional teaching and learning with digital content on tablets and aimed to study the use of tablet computers and their impact on improving rural education.
To date, Meraka, in conjunction with the Department of Basic Education and the Department of Science and Technology (DST), besides others, has delivered tablets to 26 Nciba Circuit schools in the Comfivaba school district, benefiting 6 500 students, 350 teachers and 16 district officials.
The ICT4Red pilot project is one of the subcomponents of the overarching Technology for Rural Education Development project.
Ford, in a progress presentation to Science and Technology Minister Derek Hanekom, said the pilot had expanded to include a further 11 schools, with the first round of training teachers to use multimedia tablets and ensuring connectively under way.
The initiative will supply tablets to a further 14 schools in 2014.
The schools are connected to the Internet through satellite and wireless mesh technologies, as Meraka moves to build ‘schools of the future’, incorporating both formal and informal schools and comprising an educational content platform, human language technology, real-time educational video broadcasting and accessible tutoring programmes through Dr Math, besides others.
Over 200 schools are connected through Meraka’s wireless mesh and village operator initiatives, which form part of the institute’s ‘broadband for all’ ambitions and include white spaces and the South African National Research Network (Sanren) high-speed network, which is used by over 700 000 people a day.
Hundreds of research and educational sites have been connected to high-speed networks through Sanren, which aims to narrow the digital divide between urban and remotely located institutions.
The DST earlier this year committed about R600-million over the next five years to more than double the international bandwidth of Sanren.
A further ten schools in Cape Town have been connected to the Internet following the start of the first trial studying the effects of connecting underserviced regions to the Internet using television white spaces – unused bands of frequencies reserved for television broadcasting.
Over the next two years, the group will establish an ICT education advisory board and expand initiatives such as the ICT4Red pilot project, its Mxit-based Dr Math tutor programme, a peer-based learning programme called Mathlete and the ‘digital doorway’ – a freestanding multi- media computer terminal with a keyboard and a touchpad embedded in a robust kiosk, accessible to the public 24 hours a day.
Hanekom praised Meraka’s advancements, saying that the institute had reported remark-able achievements, citing the education programmes, broadband developments, the progress of satellite-based earth observation science and information tech- nologies, ICT for health projects, and the unit’s super computing scheme, ‘out-compute-to-out- compete’, besides others.
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