OLPC India: Difference between revisions
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OLPC Project has made a start in India with a pilot deployment in a rural village at [[Khairat_Chronicle|Khairat]] near Navi Mumbai where laptops have been deployed and every child carries one laptop home. |
OLPC Project has made a start in India with a pilot deployment in a rural village at [[Khairat_Chronicle|Khairat]] near Navi Mumbai where laptops have been deployed and every child carries one laptop home. |
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April 2008 : The journey was tremondous in terms of learning and working on Khairat. And the project has expanded to several other schools as well. |
April 2008 : The journey was tremondous in terms of learning and working on Khairat. And the project has expanded to several other schools as well. Parikrma in Bangalore, Katha in New Delhi and some smaller ones in UP and other parts of Maharashtra have shown very promising results. |
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Now we have an organization in India that is reaching out to the governments, NGOs, corporations, international bodies and anyone who has significant interest to contribute to this movement. |
Now we have an organization in India that is reaching out to the governments, NGOs, corporations, international bodies and anyone who has significant interest to contribute to this movement. |
Revision as of 06:47, 23 October 2009
2007 status: green | ||||
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India is a very large multicultural country with many interest groups. Participation of OLPC project in India will not only revolutionize the way we teach children, the vision behind this "educational" project, but will also scale up the eco-system of sharing between the diverse set of communities existing in the Indian Subcontinent.
OLPC India
OLPC Project has made a start in India with a pilot deployment in a rural village at Khairat near Navi Mumbai where laptops have been deployed and every child carries one laptop home.
April 2008 : The journey was tremondous in terms of learning and working on Khairat. And the project has expanded to several other schools as well. Parikrma in Bangalore, Katha in New Delhi and some smaller ones in UP and other parts of Maharashtra have shown very promising results.
Now we have an organization in India that is reaching out to the governments, NGOs, corporations, international bodies and anyone who has significant interest to contribute to this movement.
Katha has been mandated to take its model to several million children in Delhi and they are excited about XO changing the world of children of Delhi's slums around Govindpuri. The work done at one of the school named Katha Khazana setup by Katha in New Delhi can be found here OLPC India/Katha_Chronicle.
Deployments
Current
- Katha Khazana School, Govindpuri, Kalkaji, New Delhi
- Chiragh Grammar School, Uttar Pradesh
- Khairat school, Khairat-Dhangarwada Village, Maharashtra
- Parikrma Center for Learning, Bangalore
- Aradhna Convent School, Bangalore
- Holy Mother School, Nashik
- Saint-Anthony School, Dugawar (U.P.)
- Auroville, Tamil Nadu
Potential
- Poorva Maadhyamik Vidyalaya (Pre Middle School) पूर्व माध्यमिक विद्यालय , Bhagmalpur, District Jaunpur, Uttar Pradesh
- Chiragh Grammar School, Meerut (U.P.) and Project Writeup
- Belgaum District, Karnataka
- Belgaum District, Karnataka
- Ahmedabad, Gujarat funded by MangoTree Group
OLPC India Student Chapter
OLPC India Student Chapter is an organization whose primary aim is to spread awareness about OLPC in India and unite the student manpower of various universities, colleges and schools. The organization was formed on 5th February 2008 at a seminar in Punjab University, Chandigarh. Also, the organization is running various projects of content development for XO users.
To know more about OLPC India Student Chapter click HERE.
To Join OLPC India Student Chapter, click HERE.
OLPC Pune
A meeting of volunteers who are interested in OLPC project took place on 14th Feb in Pune city of Maharashtra.It has been decided to start an OLPC volunteers group in Pune.Initial discussions are going on.
More about Pune activities here: OLPC Pune
OLPC Mumbai
The efforts undertaken for this movement in Mumbai, information of volunteers, tasks undertaken and completed projects right from Mumbai,Maharashtra.The first meeting held on March 14, 2009.
For further information and updates refer the link : OLPC Mumbai
Languages needed for localization
Which language or languages are needed for localization for use by children in India please?
INDIA has 28 states and 24 official languages. The language with the largest number of speakers is Hindi however it is not a majority language. Because of the large number of languages, English has become the lingua franca in business and government. However, this is neither British nor American English but a distinct Indian dialect with its own unique vocabulary and style.
According to Ethnologue, 180,000,000 people in India speak Hindi. It is the official language of Arunachal Pradesh, Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Bihar, Chandigarh, Chhattisgarh, Delhi, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh and Uttaranchal.
The other important languages and their respective states and population numbers are as below:
In addition to Hindi and English:
- Assamese — official language of Assam (15,334,000 speakers)
- Bengali — official language of Tripura and West Bengal (70,561,000 speakers)
- Bodo — official language of Assam (70,561,000 speakers)
- Dogri — official language of Jammu and Kashmir (2,105,000 speakers)
- Gondi — language of the Gond tribals of the Gondwana (part of the northern Deccan plateau) comprising Chattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Orissa, Andhra Pradesh. (2,632,000 speakers)
- Gujarati — language of Dadra and Nagar Haveli, Daman and Diu and Gujarat (45,479,000 speakers)
- Kannada — official language of Karnataka (35,346,000 speakers)
- Kashmiri — official language of Jammu and Kashmir (4,391,000 speakers)
- Konkani — official language of Goa (4,000,000 speakers)
- Malayalam — official language of Kerala and Lakshadweep (35,351,000 speakers)
- Maithili - official language of Bihar (22,000,000 speakers)
- Marathi — official language of Maharashtra (68,030,000 speakers)
- Meitei or Meithei — official language of Manipur (1,240,000 speakers)
- Nepali — official language of Sikkim (6,000,000 speakers)
- Oriya — official language of Orissa (31,666,000 speakers)
- Punjabi — official language of Punjab and Chandigarh, second official language of Delhi and Haryana (27,109,000 speakers)
- Sanskrit — language of Hinduism, Jainism and Buddhism, required teaching in many schools (6,106 speakers)
- Santali - language of the Santhal tribals of the Chota Nagpur Plateau (comprising the states of Jharkhand, Bihar, Orissa and Chattisgarh) (5,959,000 speakers)
- Sindhi - language of the Sindhi community (2,812,000 speakers)
- Tamil — official language of Tamil Nadu and Pondicherry (61,527,000 speakers)
- Telugu — official language of Andhra Pradesh (69,634,000 speakers)
- Urdu — official language of Jammu and Kashmir, Andhra Pradesh, Delhi and Uttar Pradesh (48,062,000 speakers)
These are only estimates of numbers of speakers, of course, and refer to first languages, roughly the language spoken in the home. Sanskrit is spoken as the first language only in a few Brahmin families(and few villages where everyone speaks the language irrespective of caste). Some of the numbers are from 1997.
Projects
BoomingBang
'Introduction- BoomingBang is a third person RPG arcade game* whose idea was taken from Wormux. Similarly like Wormux, BoomingBang emphasizes on Performance over style, using SDL library and XML as well as a great deal of C programming :)
This project is monitored by Abhishek Indoria , 14, a leader who is currently active in working with Phoenix-Team which is a 10 members team. Please visit [ http://phoenix-team.tk Phoenix-Team official Website ] for more information.
The basic mission of players is to eliminate all other players from the game in a funny way.
You control a team of creatures, be it a penguin or Pigeon or a bull. You try various methods, like dropping them into water by pushing them towards water from a hill, or hitting them with bat and send them flying, to give them a vomiting injection and you'll see them vomiting(Be careful, stand around the vomited surface too long and you will find yourself in grave),booming them with a funny bazooka or removing surface under them so if the move, BINGO!
More information at: [|BoomingBang Sub-Official Site]
JUPITER1.0
Introduction-This project is founded by SCOMST (School of Computer Science and Technology) which is part of a not-for-profit organization in a small town called Yavatmal in Maharashtra State, India. The project is currently in the Architecture/Design phase. Manusheel Gupta and Lauren Klein from OLPC are supporting this project.
Project description- Jupiter is called "Brhaspati" (बृहस्पति) in the Sanskrit language and refers to the "Guru" (preceptor) of the Gods. The ultimate aim of Jupiter is to make self-study software for OLPC so intelligent and powerful that, just by knowing age and/or grade level and language of a student, it should be able to teach the student appropriate subjects and create learning database(s) for her. Based on the learning record, it should be able to find the next level of course(s) for the student. With just the OLPC laptop, any remote student should be able to develop her literacy up to any level. Creating the courses for each level will be a part of this project. Information on this project will be updated on this page periodically.
More information at: Details
WEB-TEACHER
WEB-TEACHER - SCOMST is making lot of effort to remotely connect to village/small town schools via internet and teach/guide the students in their career development. The idea is to use remote desktop sharing along with voice/video conferencing softwares to present the ideas and guide the students remotely. OLPC's schoool server along with the laptop's mesh networking will be very usefull for remote teaching. SCOMST will experiment various softwares with OLPC Laptop and find out the best possible solution for WEB-TEACHER program.
COMPLETE ONLINE EDUCATION SYSTEM
COES - This section describes about how the whole education system can be made complete online. More TDB.
OLPC India Day
OLPC India Day was held on August 4, 2008. More information is available at http://www.olpc.co.in/olpcindiaday/ Photos are posted at http://picasaweb.google.com/prashantbthakkar/OLPCIndiaDay
External Links
IndLinux Language Teams: Hindi, Oriya, Assamese, Bengali, Gujarati, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Punjabi, Tamil, and Telugu
Other Localization Teams: Dzongkha (Bhutan), Nepali (Nepal), Sinhala (Sri Lanka), Pan Localization
Janabhaaratii Linux localization project: Hindi, Marathi, Gujarati, Bengali, Malayalam
Primary Language | ,|x|Language spoken::x}} |
Number of Laptops | Number of manufactured laptops::750 |
Keyboard Layout | Keyboard::OLPC Devanagari Keyboard |
Build | ,|x|Software release::x}} |
Date(s) Arrived in Country | ,|x|Has received laptops on date::x}} |
School Server | ,|x|School server status::x}} |
Deployment Status | [[Deployment status::Khairat - 31 XOs (1 teacher). Currently running 656. No Internet, had it but offline now. School server with very old build. Katha has 30. Vasant Valley School is a new champion with its Director Arun Kapur taking the lead in taking it forward.]] |