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ICT and Literacy: Who Benefits? Experience from Zambia and IndiaAuthorGlen M. Farrell (ed.)
Commonwealth of Learning, Vancouver, Canada Publication DateDecember 1, 2004
SummaryThis 132-page report is intended to assist practitioners with planning of information and communication technology (ICT) applications in the context of community-level adult literacy development. It includes a comprehensive description of Commonwealth of Learning Literacy Project (COLLIT), detailing the experience of implementing it in two different contexts - Zambia and India - and analysing the outcomes and the insights gained. COLLIT - funded by the United Kingdom (UK) Department for International Development (DFID) in collaboration with country partners that, in Zambia, included the University of Zambia and the Ministry of Social Services and Community Development, and, in India, Indira Gandhi National Open University, Commonwealth Educational Media Centre for Asia (CEMCA), the M.S. Swaminathan Foundation and the State Resources Centres in Jaipur and Indore - This report records the experience of literacy workers in India and Zambia who, with support and technical assistance from the Commonwealth of Learning (COL), used modern ICTs to design, create, develop and deliver literacy programmes in the rural parts of these 2 Commonwealth countries over a 3-year period. The various programmes implemented in these countries illustrate different strategies along the lines of the "fault line" described above, and are detailed in this report, which is based on data collected by in-country evaluators during the term of the project as well as from a follow-up study a year later. Some of the key findings are that ICTs can be used very creatively to produce locally relevant learning materials; learning to use the equipment is both easy and highly motivating for learners; and the sustainability of ICT access centres is greatly enhanced when local communities are enabled to take responsibility for managing them and when use is shared with other community agencies. The research also found that the "fault line" has implications regarding the use of ICT in literacy programmes. Those who see literacy as education would be more likely to use the technologies to produce curriculum materials for use in classrooms and, perhaps, to assist in classroom teaching. Those that view literacy education as an ingredient of socio-economic development would be more likely to put the technology in the hands of the learners and to encourage applications that are meaningful in the context of their daily lives. In conclusion, in the COLLIT project, the use of ICTs appeared to contribute to a blurring of this "fault line". For example: Click here to access the full report in PDF format. ContactCommonwealth of Learning (COL)
1055 West Hastings Street, Suite 1200
Vancouver
BC V6E 2E9
Canada
Tel: + 604 775 8200
Fax: +604 775 8210
SourceCOL website on October 21 2005 and February 15 2007. Placed on the Communication Initiative site February 14 2007 Last Updated June 17 2009 How useful did you find the knowledge and contacts on this page to your work? Post your comments (review comments from others below):COMMENTS POSTED |
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