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The
founder of HiWEL, Chief Scientist Emeritus
of the NIIT group and currently Professor
of Educational Technology at Newcastle University,
Dr Sugata Mitra, started the project in
1999 as a research initiative to determine
alternative pedagogy across rural India.
India is developing a reputation as
a serious global outsourcing base and we
needed to investigate how the country would
cope with multiple industries moving here,
Dr Mitra said.
We
needed to know if the existing education
system would work over a long period to
provide people with an education level to
sustain the intellectual impact of companies
moving their bases to India, he said.
In
June, 2000, Dr Mitra installed computers
in Madantusi to study the impact of the
HiWEL on the communitys children.
Dr Mitra was astonished by the results
Hindi-speaking children, who had previously
spoken no English at all, had learned how
to use the Internet and were teaching themselves
around 400 English words per month.
Dr
Mitra continued to experiment with the technology
and installed computers in Kalkaji, Shivpuri
and dozens of other locations, with 200-300
children sharing a village computer and
becoming PC-literate within three months.
To
investigate how far this kind of self-organised
learning can go, Prof. Mitra recently loaded
a computer with an English biotechnology
program on it in Kuppan, a remote village
in South India. When he returned three months
later, he discovered a young girl who had
seen the program, contacted a relative about
it and had taught herself about biotechnology
and DNA sequencing from the computer programs.
She had then proceeded to teach other children.
India
is now the largest global outsourcing provider
and Dr Mitra hopes that NIIT Technologies
Ltd can use HiWEL to educate the next generation
of IT and outsourcing professionals.
Since
the early 1990s, NIIT Technologies has been
in the forefront of introducing new technology
to young people. The challenge now is a
much greater one - the development of talent
in rural India through education. Indeed,
a talent pool from rural India would be
one of the only ways of tackling the worldwide
shortage of skilled people. Through initiatives
such as HiWEL, NIIT Technologies hopes to
promote quick and far reaching IT literacy
in the country.
India
is now the largest global outsourcing provider
and Dr Mitra hopes that NIIT Technologies
Ltd can use the HiWEL to educate the next
generation of IT and outsourcing professionals.
HiWEL is currently being used in Cambodia,
the border between Pakistan and China as
well as several African countries with more
than 300,000 children having used the computers.
NIIT
Technologies is a leading IT solutions organisation,
servicing customers in North America, Europe,
Japan, Asia and Australia. For further information
please visit www.niit-tech.com
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