Showing posts with label education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label education. Show all posts

Friday, October 16, 2009

Blog 23: Laptops for Kids in Uruguay

According to BBC News, Uruguay is the first country in the world where every child in elementary school will have a laptop computer, courtesy of the public education budget.

You don't hear about Uruguay very often in the news, and I am glad that now that we hear about it, it is to share very good news.

The total cost of the program wasn't even 5 percent of the education budget, and that included not only the laptops for the kids, but also for the teachers, as well as IT support.

70 percent of the kids who got a laptop did not have a computer at home, as quoted in the story: "This is not simply the handing out of laptops or an education programme. It is a programme which seeks to reduce the gap between the digital world and the world of knowledge," explained Miguel Brechner, director of the Technological Laboratory of Uruguay and in charge of Plan Ceibal."

The plan is not finalized, since some of the most rural schools do not have access to internet, but this is a very good first step in the right direction.

Monday, October 12, 2009

Blog 20_World's youngest headmaster teaches at family backyard

You do not need many years of teaching experience or the perfect classroom to be a good teacher and change life. All you need is the hunger to learn and the determination to share. Babar Ali, a 16-year-old schoolboy from Murshidabad, West Bengal, is a remarkable example.

Babar Ali is the protagonist of the first report in the BBC's Hunger to Learn series. At the age of 16, he is the world's youngest headmaster. He has no formal teaching qualification and is just a normal teenager. What makes him extraordinary is that everyday he runs classes for hundreds of poor students from his village, in his family's backyard.

Being the first in his family to receive proper education, Babar Ali understands how precious education is.

"It's not easy for me to come to school because I live so far away," he says, "but the teachers are good and I love learning."

Everyday before classes, Babar Ali has to help out with household chores before going to school. He takes an auto-rickshaw for a ride of about 10km (six miles) to Raj Govinda and has to walk the last couple of kilometres.

Raj Govinda is a government-run school which is free. However, it is still very difficult for parents to send their kids to school -- many cannot afford the US$40 fees each year for school uniform, books and transportation.

Barba Ali understands the obstacles for his fellow villagers. When he was nine, he already started teaching a few friends and eventually decided to open an unofficial school and give lessons at his backyard everyday at 4pm. He teaches and shares what he learns from school in front of a massive crowd.

Now his afternoon school has 10 teachers, including Barba Ali himself, and 800 students, mostly girls.


"My father is handicapped and cannot work," says Chumki Hajra, a 14-year-old girl attending Barba Ali's unofficial school. She has been a full-time cleaner since she was five and never attended school.

"We need the money. If I don't work, we can't survive as a family. So I have no choice but to do this job." she told the
Damian Grammaticas of the BBC.

Nelson Mandela once said "Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world." In this case, Barba Ali is an excellent soldier.

For the full report or interviews on BBC, click here