OLPCorps Cornell Mauritania: Difference between revisions

From OLPC
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
Line 64: Line 64:


'''Mauritania’s Unique Literacy Problem'''<br />
'''Mauritania’s Unique Literacy Problem'''<br />
In Mauritania, school subjects are taught in Arabic or French, rather than the local language. If a student does not have a firm grasp in either language, their performance suffers. To compound the problem, Arabic presents a diglossic situation as described in Mohamed Maamouri's [http://papers.ldc.upenn.edu/EALL/ArabicLiteracy.pdf paper]. Fusha, Modern Standard Arabic, is the formal written and spoken language, which shares roots with the local dialect, <i>Hassaniya</i>, and can be confusing for students. This impedes language instruction because children cannot connect the words on the page to the words that they are speaking. The overall literacy rate in Mauritania is only 51.2%, compared to 99% in developed countries.
In Mauritania, school subjects are taught in Arabic or French, rather than the local language. If a student does not have a firm grasp in either language, their performance suffers. To compound the problem, Arabic presents a diglossic situation as described in Mohamed Maamouri's [http://papers.ldc.upenn.edu/EALL/ArabicLiteracy.pdf paper]. <i>Fusha</i>, Modern Standard Arabic, is the formal written and spoken language, which shares roots with the local dialect, <i>Hassaniya</i>, and can be confusing for students. This impedes language instruction because children cannot connect the words on the page to the words that they are speaking. The overall literacy rate in Mauritania is only 51.2%, compared to 99% in developed countries.


'''How the XO Laptops Can Help'''<br />
'''How the XO Laptops Can Help'''<br />

Revision as of 06:34, 25 March 2009

Mission Statement

  • We are a group of socially conscious, technically inclined students at Cornell University who wish to improve education in Africa. We believe that OLPC and its constructionist, hands-on learning method is the best way to do this.
  • We are going to use technology for the rest of our lives in whatever profession we choose. Acknowledging this, it is necessary to share a part of what we have been given. All children can succeed if given the right tools. We need to go out and share the technology that has enabled us to learn.
  • Improving literacy is the best application of this technology.

Who we are

Name Major Responsibility
Eli Luxenberg Information Science '10 Project Lead
James Elkins Information Science '11 Logistics Lead
Seth Luxenberg Policy Analysis and Management '08 Community Lead
Alan Garcia Information Science '09 Technology Lead
Nora Callinan Biological Sciences '09 Fundraising Lead
Jawwad Asghar Mechanical Engineering '11 Pedagogical Lead
Billy Podlaski Biological Sciences '11 Pedagogical Lead
Charles Curwen Information Science '12 University Liason

When

  • Summer 2009 - June 20th-August 20th

Where

  • Tdjikja, Mauritania

<googlemap version="0.9" lat="18.559205" lon="-11.431832" zoom="15"> 18.558205, -11.426863 Tidjikdja, Tagant Location of the Girls Mentoring Center </googlemap>

750 Word Formal Proposal

Please comment on the discussion page if you have any suggestions!

Supporting Documentation

Our Budget

ROUGH Deployment Plan & Notes

Letter of Support

Pictures