Freedman report on the flow of technology talent into government and civil society #techdeficit

http://tfreedmanconsulting.com/documents/AFutureofFailure-Public.pdf This report by Feedman Consulting (commissioned by the Ford Foundation and the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation) assesses the current state of the pipeline, key challenges and barriers to the development of technology-oriented human capital in government and civil society, models of successful interventions, and recommendations for a more robust pipeline.

Hope-in-the-Wall? A digital promise for free learning. Payal Arora. 2010; British Journal of Educational Technology – Wiley InterScience

 

Hope-in-the-Wall? A digital promise for free learning. Payal Arora. 2010; British Journal of Educational Technology – Wiley InterScience: “

ABSTRACT Hole-in-the-Wall as a concept has attracted worldwide attention. It involves providing unconditional access to computer-equipped kiosks in playgrounds and out-of-school settings, children taking ownership of their learning and learning driven by the children’s natural curiosity. It is posited that this approach, which is being used in India, Cambodia and several countries in Africa, can pave the way for a new education paradigm and be the key to providing literacy and basic education and bridging the digital divide in remote and disadvantaged regions. This paper seeks to establish why two such open access, self-directed and collaborative learning systems failed to take root in the Central Himalaya communities of Almora and Hawalbagh. The purpose of this study is not to deny the achievements and potential of such an approach in other settings, but to examine the tenets and sustainability of such initiatives. It is argued that there is a need to distinguish between Hole-in-the-Wall as an idea and as an institution and to reflect on the key suppositions on how unsupervised access, informal, public, self-guided and collaborative work can help in children’s learning.

 

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BBC News – Technology linked to happiness, study claims

 

BBC News – Technology linked to happiness, study claims: “BCS, the Chartered Institute for IT, analysed the results of a survey of 35,000 people around the world.

Access to communication devices was found to be the most valued.

It found that women in developing countries, and people of both sexes with low incomes or poor education, were most influenced emotionally by their access to technology.”