olpc: holy grail or digital disaster?
DESCRIPTION
Talk given at IATEFL Liverpool April 2012TRANSCRIPT
OLPC Laptops in Schools: Holy Grail or Digital Disaster?
Paul Woods English Adviser
British Council Uruguay
• What do we know about the impact of 1 to 1 laptops in schools - research from 6 states in USA
• The OLPC laptop project in Peru• The Plan Ceibal project in Uruguay
XO laptops in a Uruguayan Primary School
What Do We Know About the Impact of One-to-One?
North Carolina State University studied six statewide 1 to 1 initiatives
Five Student Outcomes Engagement
Teachers and students generally agreed that laptops increased student engagement
MotivationTeachers and students in some states concurred that laptops
increase student motivation, but results were mixed.
Achievement Students and teachers in some of the states thought that the use of
laptops had a positive impact on student achievement, although this was not always supported by the test scores
Self-directed learning Students not only were participating more in group work but also were engaging in self-directed learning.
21st century skills (technology, innovation, communication, collaboration)Improvements across the board in these skills
CHANGES TO INSTRUCTIONAL PRACTICES Technology use for Instruction and the Changes in Pedagogy that
Result:
Teachers in the initiatives used the technology in a number of ways and reported a positive impact on classroom instruction, and teacher readiness to integrate technology
Teacher and student roles
Researchers noticed that the roles of teacher and students shift during the implementation of a 1:1 program.
Summary
In general, the introduction of 1:1 initiatives led to positive responses, ranging from improved student achievement to shifts in the way in which classrooms are run.
Laptop Initiatives: Summary of Research Across Six States http://k12blueprint.com/k12/blueprint/story_impact_1_1.php
Motivating factors 1.
Learning can take place anywhere
Motivating factors 2.
Both the teachers and the students are learning together
Motivating factors 3.
Even at a very early age pupils can access the vast range of resources on the internet
Laptops in Peru
The Peruvian government spent $225m to supply and
support 850,000 One Laptop per Child (OLPC) laptops in
schools throughout the country.
“GIVING a child a computer does not seem to turn him or her into a future Bill Gates—indeed it does not accomplish anything in particular.”
Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) Report on OLPC Laptops in Peru
Findings: • Children who received computers did not show any improvement in maths or reading. • No evidence that access to a laptop increased motivation, or time devoted to homework or reading.• Test scores remained dismal. • Only 13% of seven-year-olds were at the required level in maths • Only 30% reached required level in reading. • Some positive effects were found in general cognitive skills
Conclusion from the official report
“The effective implementation of the “One Laptop per Child” program was not enough to overcome the difficulties of a design that places its trust in the role of technologies themselves. The use of technologies in education is not a magic and rapid solution through which educational problems and challenges can be solved with the simple acquisition of technological devices and systems”.
https://edutechdebate.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/OLPC_Peru_IDB_Report_Synopsis.pdf
Other conclusions from Peru• Program implementation was effective• Despite their availability, the laptops were only
used on some days of the week, especially at school
• There were no effects on learning after three months
• The evaluation found a higher level of teacher satisfaction, and moderately positive results in the development of students' analytical skills.
• The most important lesson was the need to focus the use of technology to improve learning in students, not only at a curricular level, but also to develop their skills and relevant competencies for their life in 21st Century society.
What people told “The Economist”
“Part of the problem is that students learn faster than
many of their teachers”
Lily Miranda, who runs a computer lab at a state school in San Borja, a middle-class area of Lima
“If teachers are telling kids to turn on computers and copy what is being written on the blackboard, then
we have invested in expensive notebooks,”
Sandro Marcone - in charge of educational technologies at the Ministry of Education
What is OLPC?
• Mission - the "$100 Laptop" - could revolutionize how we educate the world's children.
• Goal - to provide children around the world with new opportunities to explore, experiment, and express themselves.
• OLPC XO rolled out to developing countries in November 2007.
• Worldwide over 2.5 million children and teachers have XO laptops
1:1 learning - OLPC classroom devices
“OLPC's mission is to empower the world's poorest children through education” Nicholas Negroponte, MIT
“As the pace of change in the world increases dramatically, the urgency to prepare all children to be full citizens of the emerging world also increases dramatically”.
“What children lack is not capability, it is opportunity and resources. In the first years of OLPC we have seen two million previously marginalized children learn, achieve and begin to transform their communities.”
Where are the OLPC laptops?
• Uruguay• Paraguay• Peru• Madagascar• India
• Nepal
• Gaza & Ramallah
• Kenya
• Afghanistan
• Rwanda
Nepal
Down Every Path
Uruguay
Students in Artigas
Kenya
Gaza and Ramallah
Afghanistan
Madagascar
Peru
Nicaragua
Rwanda
India
Laptops in Use in Schools in the Americas
North America Canada 5,000 OLPC laptops Mexico 50,000 OLPC laptops United States of America 16,500 OLPC laptops
65,000 Apple Mac notebooks25,000 Dell laptops
Caribbean and Latin America Argentina 60,000 OLPC laptops (La Rioja) 1800,000 Intel Classmates 350,000 netbooksVenezuela 500,000 Intel ClassmatesColombia 20,000 OLPC laptops Haiti 13,000 OLPC laptops Peru 870,000 OLPC laptops Uruguay 510,000 mostly OLPC laptopsBrazil 1,500,000 Intel Classmates Paraguay 4,000 OLPC laptops
What are some of the criticisms?
Lack of teacher training and ongoing support OLPC gives underprivileged children laptops and "walks
away“: this "drive-by" implementation model was the official strategy of the project.
Nicolas Negroponte - "You actually can" give children a connected laptop and walk away
Experiences with self-guided learning in India (Sugata Mitra).
“Laptops are getting opened and turned on, but then kids and teachers are getting frustrated by hardware and software bugs, don't understand what to do, and promptly box them up to put back in the corner.“ (Intern in Peru)
Intel Classmate
• Intel teamed up with the British Council to introduce computer-based language learning in Egypt
• Egypt’s National Strategic Plan for Education Reform is designed to deliver high-quality education to all citizens.
• The Ministry of Education ran a computer-learning pilot program, in collaboration with the British Council and Intel, in a school in Cairo.
• The pilot was based on Intel-powered classmate PCs pre-loaded with English language learning software from the British Council.
Assessment• The pilot had four
assessment areas: training implications for
teachers impact of technology on
student motivation impact of technology on
attitudes towards technology
relevance of computer-based English language material from the British Council to the school’s English syllabus
Impact
• Highly engaged learning: the children and teachers readily engaged with the classmate - pilot evaluations highlighted increased levels of enjoyment and engagement
• Greater learner satisfaction: teachers and students reported higher levels of motivation and commitment
Result British Council has teamed up with Intel to pre-load
LearnEnglish materials onto Classmates – 150 million by 2015
Argentina – LearnEnglish Materials
3 million children are now using laptops in schools and potentially have access to British Council LearnEnglish materialsThe LE materials have been mapped to the City of Buenos Aires curriculumIn-service training is taking place for teachers in how to use appropriate materials on the laptopsBritish Council recruited a trainer of trainers to work with local trainersWorking with 41 teacher training colleges in Province of Bs As and 26 trainers, to reach 2600 trainees initially
http://learnenglish.educ.ar/
Criticisms
• Many pupils take the laptops home and don’t use them at school
• Some schools lack connectivity• Teachers have not been trained
to use the laptops, or have received insufficient training
• Inadequate arrangements for maintenance when things go wrong
INGLES EN INGLES.wmv
Uruguay – Plan Ceibal
• Every child has a laptop• Tele-presence
technology • Remote teachers
Mexico, Colombia and Argentina. Soon to include The Philippines
• RT 45 minutes per week• CT 2 x 45 minutes per
week• Proof of concept phase • Progressive expansion
2-way video & audio
“This is Uruguay's problem: 40% of children who attend public schools come from the poorest fifth rung of society. And out of this fifth, just 3% makes it to college. Through Plan CEIBAL we decided to take a chance on making a change and to find a way out of this crisis we live in.”
Miguel Brechner, Plan Ceibal
Joint lesson planning
Students with Classroom
laptops
Local classroom:• TV screen showing
remote teacher• Lesson materials
shown via Webex, Promethean software
Joint lesson planning
Local class teacher
managing activity
Remote teacher using video-conferencing
Uruguay – Remote Teaching using OLPC
How do children use the Laptops outside school?
Hours of use outside schoolHours per week % of children
Up to 3 hrs
3-7 hrs approx
7 – 14 hrs approx
14 – 20 hrs
Over 20 hrs
Not used at home
Total
Hours of use outside School per week
Average: 10 hrs 20 min
Median: 7 hrs
Percentiles:25 - 3 hrs 30 min50 - 7 hrs75 – 13 hrs
A L Martinez: :Plan Ceiba -: evaluación y lecciones aprendidas en la primera experiencia 1 a 1 a nivel nacional
In what way do children use the laptop and with whom?
How do they acquire the knowledge?
With help from a teacher Individual self
discovery
In Pairs
Has the child taught someone else to use the XO?
Whom?
Parents: 73%Siblings: 46%Other children: 42%Teachers: 9%
A L Martinez:Plan Ceibal: evaluación y lecciones aprendidas en la primera experiencia 1 a 1 a nivel nacional
Key Findings in Uruguay:
• Internet via Cyber cafes (65% 2006, 25% 2008 in the country side) Internet via school (32% 2006 67% 2008)
• Children take two weeks to
learn to handle the XO. Most learned by individual exploration.
• 50% of teachers use XO at least once a week, 21% almost daily.
• 92% of children use XO for homework.
• Browse activity is most preferred • Activities such as Write, Paint, and
Memorize less preferred by children in higher grades.
• Access to the XO not only closes the gap in access to computers and the Internet but also its use levels the students who don’t have a computer at home with the ones who do.
So - is the jury still out?• Teachers need to be trained adequately,
both in how to maximise use of the software on the laptops and how to manage a class where the pupils have laptops, for example, encouraging students to create their own simple blogs
• Where laptops are to be used as part of a structured programme, materials need to be mapped to or created for the local syllabus
• With young learners not everything can be done on the laptops – they need to touch, feel, handle, move round the room, do things actively with other children
• Testing should test what the students have been taught!
In Uruguay we are demonstrating that, with sufficient support, appropriate training for classroom teachers and appropriate materials for the pupils, learners are highly motivated, develop autonomy and achieve measurable results through lessons delivered via tele-presence technology and 1 to 1 laptops, supported by classroom teachers with only a very limited knowledge of English.
Using the language
Thank you for listening!
www.facebook.com/rphwoods
Twitter - @rphwoods
Linked In – Paul Woods
A L Martinez:Plan Ceibal: evaluación y lecciones aprendidas en la primera experiencia 1 a 1 a nivel nacional