South Africa Begins Ambitious Tablets In Schools Pilot Project
An anonymous reader writes "Guateng province — which is home to Johannesburg and Pretoria and is the richest state in sub-Saharan Africa — has just kicked off a pilot project to replace textbooks with tablets in seven government schools. If successful, the project will be extended to all 44 000 schools in the area. It's all been put together in a hurry — the local minister for education announced it in a media interview less than a year ago and details have never been made fully public, but he's hoping it will be an end to 'Irish Coffee' education in which rich white students float to the top." From the article: The classroom of the future being piloted is modelled on the system that’s been in use at Sunward Park High School in Boksburg for the two years. That former “model C” was the first state school in South Africa to go textbook free, and has pioneered the use of tablets in public education here. ... As with Sunward Park, the schools in this new pilot will be using a centralised portal developed by Bramley’s MIB Software for managing tablets and aggregating educational content into a single portal. MIB’s backend pulls in CAPS aligned digital textbooks from the likes of Via Afrika as well as extra resources from around the web. Content from Wikipedia, the BBC, the complete works of Shakespeare and Khan Academy is all cached locally for teachers to reference during lessons and pupils to use for self-directed study and research.
it fails. Why do we keep throwing tech at a non tech problem just for the sake of throwing tech at it? Cali is in the process of taking back all the tablets they passed out after major issues. Sometimes real paper books are the answer.
have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
Don't you all know the famous story?
Archimedes was killed by a Roman soldier whilst he finger-painted on a Syracusian tablet running Android 0.0000001 Olive Tree.
Tech in school is generally a bad idea, I feel (children don't need tablets to learn) but this is an example of it done right. South African schools can use those tablets to build a massive library of free reference resources and public domain literature and share that with the students. It's more a pop-up computer lab, if anything.
And how would this in any way address the “Irish Coffee” problem?
If anything I could see this exacerbating the problem. Rich white kids are probably more computer literate than poorer black peers – going full on digital will amplify the difference.
Do it if it improves education in general (a big if). I know that tablets and online education are the future, but one that never quite arrives in the correct form. Content is key whether it is online or in a book. Handing out hardware doesn’t solve the content problem.
Letter To Iran
Whites don't run the country anymore. And from the looks of things, nobody is really running the place all that well. I don't see the blacks treating each other any better than the whites did. Equal indeed...
This 'tablet' stuff is a scam, to cover up continued government atrocities against the people, and to sell electronic trinkets.
... all that's needed is for Eskom (the South African electrical utility) to actually supply reliable power to recharge all those tablets!
these tablets are traveling Time Clocks for Teachers.
he's hoping it will be an end to 'Irish Coffee' education in which rich white students float to the top
Rich students have so many advantages over poor students that nothing you can do in the schools is ever going to fully compensate for it - not that they shouldn't try. From infancy wealthier kids are (on average of course) spoken to more, with a more varied and stimulating vocabulary, and with more encouraging words. They are generally exposed to more stimulating activities, and read to more regularly. By the time they hit Pre-K they already have significant cognitive advantages. The achievement gap needs to be tackled at its root causes if you really want to try to close it.
Firstly it's spelt "Gauteng" and it's not a state...it's a province, albeit the most populous and largest contributor to South Africa's GDP.
I keep feeling that the tablet fetish is a way to "fix" the chronic issues with distributing textbooks. Unfortunately, it doesn't address the largest issue in the education system: poorly performing, trained and at times simply lazy teachers. Added to that a belligerent teachers union that obstructs any attempts to introduce strong performance monitoring.
As other posters have pointed out, the battery life of your typical tablet is such that they'll be useable during classes and won't last much past that. You'd after all want learners to be able to carry all the teaching resources with them home. And, besides turning them into mugging targets, many of the poorer communities, which you'd think would benefit most from this initiative, don't have electricity.
Gauteng, for it's previous sins, had tried a very ambitious computer labs and internet connectivity project a few years ago and that imploded so weary whether this is likely to have any greater success :(
Andries
Do they expect to fix education problems by throwing more tablets at it?
If it were me though, I'd go the way the military does for some of its members: A "sealed" (no radio or USB, with tamper-evident seals on the case) e-reader pre-loaded with the textbooks the student will need. This will keep theft way down.
Make it rugged enough to handle 5-10 years of careless use by students, but cheap enough so if it gets lost or really banged up it can be written off.
Use "e-paper" so there is no battery use until the student turns the page and so they can read it right before bedtime without causing sleep issues. Throw in a speaker for audio-books/text-to-speech/audio-translations/etc.
At the end of the year, unscrew the cases, replace or refresh the data chip with next year's books, and apply new tamper-evident seals.
In large quantities, a typical-tablet-sized device could be made for well under $50 before you add in the licensing fees for the books and the licensing fees for any applicable patents (sigh). Amortize that over 5 years and you are talking $10/year/student before paying off patent-holders, licensing the books, and paying the wages of the employees who refresh the machine each year.
To placate copyright owners (an unfortunate necessity), the "data chip" should be unreadable (i.e. encrypted) unless it is plugged into the same device as it was plugged into when it was first inserted or when it was last refreshed.
An optional enhancement to this would be a USB or similar port that ONLY talked to devices who presented a token cryptographically signed by the school that issued them. This would allow for things like e-library books, teacher-prepared books or presentations to be taken home (without color though, e-paper is B/W only as far as I know), and a less-labor-intensive end-of-year-refresh process.
If the school wants to issue tablets for the purposes of computation or Internet access, they should either be:
* In-school-use only
* leased to students who don't have a home computer or home Internet, and/or
* "leased" at no cost to students who don't have a home computer or home internet and can't afford one
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
Wouldn't be a problem if they went with e-readers instead. Tablets are a bad solution in search of a problem.
Or are the kids only going to be using these indoors?
Is anyone doing a true daylight viewable display, like the transflective LCDs which were used on Fujitsu tablets?
I need to replace my Fujitsu Stylistic ST-4121, and there simply don't seem to be any real options (need a Wacom stylus as well).
Sphinx of black quartz, judge my vow.
Tablets are really nice, but they also happen to be, well, toys for the most part. Tablets play a very fundamental key role in assisting students in very young levels and students with special needs to learn things, but once you get above a certain age (I'm talking, like, 2nd grade) an actual laptop makes far, *far* more sense, both ergonomically and speaking from a capability standpoint.
It's easy for educators to get excited about tablets in schools, but rarely does it pan out with flying colors.
"The XC Collaboration AddOn Software is a 3rd party product and not a default part of your installation of SMART Notebook Platform. In order to use this AddOn, you first have to download, install and activate it."
He invoked math first!
>A typical textbook costs about $100 and will last 10-20 years
I would like to take this as a given, but my experience is a new "edition" comes out every 3 years, making the old edition obsolete. Now this is in theory controllable, but as far as I can tell many school boards are on the payroll of the text book companies.
So lets use 3 year, 100 bucks. 30 bucks per book per year for 4 core subjects.
Books
That would give me the total cost for a student going to high school as
4 core subjects * 4 years * 30 USD per year => 480 USD for 4 years of high school.
Tablet
(4 core subject * 4 years * 5 USD per subject (using common core)) + 200 USD for ebook reader => 280 USD
Now this doesn't take into account supporting the tablet. But at scale I think that could be 10's of dollars per year per student.
ALSO
4 core books + 10 pounds of notes => Many students with very sore back from lugging all those books around
PLUS
No need to go back to locker to swap out books => Billions of additional hours for students to check their social media accounts!
This would be a no brainer if so many people didn't profit from the current price inflated school book system.
Ask how it went in LA. Also, does it bother anybody that "Khan Academy" popped up again?
Harrison's Postulate - "For every action there is an equal and opposite criticism"
I work in educational IT, and that generally means some executive wants something shiny with no clue as to the resources needed to make it work. Hilarity ensues.
Never let a lack of data get in the way of a good rant.
That's far too well-thought-out to ever see the light of day in any school system, in South Africa, or elsewhere. If you propose a sound solution that actually addresses, if not solves, nearly all of the potential issues, you'll get shot down immediately. Stop thinking and just throw money at it, that's what everyone else is doing so it must be better. (and admittedly, the solution you propose requires semi-custom hardware and software and integration, as well as negotiation with content providers, all of which can prove much more time consuming and expensive than anticipated).
South Africa is kind of an interesting place though. The current plan might actually be a reasonable choice, given the circumstances, as long as the tablets are low-cost and durable, and have good battery life. Just having all that information readily available could be a great help to many of the poorer students, at least the ones who are actually motivated but whose families lack resources. Pilot programs are also the right strategy, and give time to evaluate and modify the solution (and work through the issues that arise) rather than doing a truly massive simultaneous rollout that would be almost certain to fail miserably.
The majority of teachers are not qualified to teach anything, Grade 8 students average a better score than their teachers!
The government failed to deliver textbooks to quite a few schools in recent years.
The government do not spend nearly enough on upgrading/maintaining rural schools.
what has racism to do with this ?