[kictanet] adopt a school

Alex Gakuru alex.gakuru at yahoo.com
Thu Feb 8 11:49:11 EAT 2007


I thank and really encourage everyone helping to make the Internet for Everyone a reality in Kenya.

Collectively, it appears we may actually make National ICT policy target of all secondary  to have access to the internet in 2 years and 10 months (by 2010).

Nice job Walu, at least no keyboards or monitors got smashed:-)

Alex 

"Mr. Barnabas Sang" <bksang at education.go.ke> wrote:       Muthoni,
  
 Thanks for the highlights on FOSS/FLOSS, which the  education sector have been following for the last three years.
  
 During the last one year, we have been evaluating  and inquiring for proponents of FOSS/FLOSS to come forth with a concrete  proposal that will ensure government get a solution that will provide the  features and advantages you have highlighted (perhaps another call made  here).
  
 By the way, for the 142 Schools to be equipped by  March, all bidders are expected (mandatory feature) to have dual boot to both  Open Source OS (Ubuntu or equivalent) and Windows OS. The challenge is  that we are yet to see bidders with enough capacity to handle this kind of  deployment in our schools. 
  
 There is lots of potential on FOSS/FLOSS. Statistic  in Europe and Asia indicate to us the direction education institutions are  taking in order to ensure TCO and ROI on ICT in education investments are  justified.
  
 I got a CD from your stand in the ongoing ICT for  Development Expo which is quite informative (productwise). Missing though is the  e-learning platforms like moodle, which could interest enterprises and  institutions of higher learning.
  
 Otherwise, Thanks, will take note of your advice on  issues you've touched.
  
 Kind regards
  
 Sang
    ----- Original Message ----- 
   From:    Dorcas    Muthoni 
   To: bksang at education.go.ke 
   Sent: Wednesday, February 07, 2007 8:35    PM
   Subject: Re: [kictanet] adopt a    school
   

I believe that Free and Open Source Software (FOSS/FLOSS) can a    play significant role on the software acquisition frontier, capacity building,    security (no viruses) and CUTTING COSTS.

We surely do not need    discounts on software to make e-centers/ digital schools a    reality.

Muthoni

   On 2/7/07, Mr. Barnabas    Sang <bksang at education.go.ke>    wrote:             Numbers are no longer an issue taking into      consideration the current momentum of e-leaders in our amidst:
      
     Early Childhood Development (ECD) Centers -      29,500
     Primary Schools - 19,890
     Secondary Schools - 4,125
      
     Tertiary - 3,200
      
     ICT as an      means....
      
     The challenge is to increased access to      Secondary Education which currently stand at 60% transition (i.e. percentage      of class eight graduates to Secondary education). Big question then is, Does      ICT provide answers to such an issue? Yes.... Thus need for prioritization      of ICTs targeting Secondary Schools and Community Learning Centers to allow      youth out of formal schooling to access Secondary Education.
      
     Research also indicates that PC presence in      schools, especially in Primary, have some influence on grade performance      (sciences and mathematics). Primary schools with ICT infrastructure can      benefit from huge knowledge-base and variety of digital content (largely      Universal) available.
      
     For digital villages and e-schools to succeed,      the following have to be prioritized:
            
   Content: appropriate content which supplements        or complement current curriculum. Thanks to Mr. Sammy Kirui (Telkom) for        identifying this need in ICT for Development Expo speech. This is the        number one case: Without appropriate content, ICT becomes a luxury and        hence no school management committees can justify ICT in education        investment. Will there be some significant change in school performance        after investment? Can school retention of students (against dropouts or        transfers) be sustained? Will the syllabi be better delivered than is the        case now?        
   Capacity building: yes digital content can be        in place and infrastructure and all software we need to have envisaged        e-institutions. Without training to manage the resources and utilized        them, the investment will be run down within no time. Challenges of        security (antivirus: experience we are observing in the NEPAD e-Schools),        malfunctioning of hardware (physiological differences of our landscape -        dust, heat, wind/ power access and physical security) and social threats        of Internet introduced in our schools. Definitely, training is key.        follow-up training is critical as well.        
   ICT Integration: This is an activity that        involves integration of ICT in each subject area, making ICT a media for        instruction, tool for delivery and channel for information access. e.g. if        you're a biology teacher, we expect you to take students to a computer lab        twice a week to teach some topics which require animation for better        comprehension. If one teaches Kiswahili, we expect some lesson in "Ngeli        na sentensi..." to be done in the lab... using Swahili version of        software... This is what will demystify ICT from being a preserve for tech        teachers to being a tool for every teacher every student rather than for        computer students.        
   ICT Infrastructure access: the Numbers, yes,        30,000 Schools as indicated would require some resources. For an e-school        to be effective, assuming two students will share a PC in our schools, a        45 Student stream class would use 25 PCs per lab. If the school is three        streams, then you require a minimum of two labs. To have sharing of        materials and resources done effectively and efficiently, a LAN is        definitely required.        
   National and Regional ICT Support Centers: to        act as institutions where issues are resolved as they arise in our        e-institutions. Could it be content? Repair? Training follow-up?        Replacement etc. Support centre should provide some helpdesk        services.
     Connectivity comes to add value to all      interventions, especially when an e-institutions realize they have content      that require others to access or they would require access to shared      resources in some portal. In some cases, Internet might be supplementary to      the above key points. Yes, we know Internet is a resource where the learner      and info-seekers would benefit. It still lies with having content      (appropriate content and security), capacity building (on sites, portals)      and Sustainable connectivity options. Thanks to Kai and others who're      sounding an alarm for provision of this treasured resource to our esteem      education institutions (for Free!). With launch of various      products by service providers in the recent past, it is expected that      connectivity will be available in most parts of our country / continent!      (CEO Safaricom and CEO Celtel -> ICT for Dev Expo quotes). I will be more      observant to see demos
 of these products in a few      e-institutions.
      
     Thanks to PS InfoCom and all of you working to      make eMado (Madaraka) PC a reality. I hope we have other players      thinking on content (especially for e-education/e-learning) for various      target groups; that will indeed make the eMado attractive.
      
     Kind regards,
      
     B. K. Sang
     ICT Department
     Ministry of Education
     P O Box 30040-00100
     Nairobi
            -----        Original Message ----- 
       From:        Alex Gakuru        
       To:        bksang at education.go.ke 
       Cc:        David Owino 
       Sent:        Wednesday, February 07, 2007 5:51 PM
       Subject:        Re: [kictanet] adopt a school
       

       Whoaa... 30,000 Kenya schools?        

Gakuru

Kai Wulff <kai.wulff at kdn.co.ke> wrote:                 Hello,
          
         we are willing to ADOPT the connectivity          to all the schools for free!
          
         Kai
                    -----            Original Message ----- 
           From:            Rebecca            Wanjiku 
           To:            kai.wulff at kdn.co.ke 
           Sent:            Wednesday, February 07, 2007 15:09
           Subject:            [kictanet] adopt a school
           

           Adopting Schools
           
           It all started with "Adopt a light", an ambitious city lighting            project. Now, Manu Chandaria, industrialist cum philanthropist wants            to apply the same concept in ICTs.
           
           Speaking at the ICT for Development Expo opening ceremony            on February 7, Chandaria challenged Kenyans to adopt schools and make            sure they can access computers.
           
           "You can change the face of your village school. Just go there            and donate a computer. You can change the face of Kenya," Chandaria            said.
           
           He also disclosed that he will finance a digital training            centre in Mariakani. The centre will be expected to act as a base to            establish digital villages in coastal area. One digital village will            cost approximately shs 140,000 (USD 2000).
           ends 


Rebecca            Wanjiku,
journalist,
p.o box 33515,            
Nairobi.00600
Kenya.

Tel. 254 720 318 925

blog:http://beckyit.blogspot.com/            
           
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