OLPC India/Nashik: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
== Holy Mother School == |
== Holy Mother School == |
||
Holy Mother School is an English medium school in Nashik, Maharashtra. We are a private school established in 2004 by Joshua and Heera Pritikin. My wife runs the school, and I funded it out of my own savings |
Holy Mother School is an English medium school in Nashik, Maharashtra. We are a private school established in 2004 by Joshua and Heera Pritikin. My wife runs the school, and I funded it out of my own savings. |
||
Heera's introduction: Teaching was something I was passionate about. Both of us thought of doing something for the society. We constructed a big building in India. There I started tutoring poor students who were not able to pass the matriculation exam. When I started teaching these students, I found that they were very weak in their basic concepts. I felt like I need to do something more significant in this area. I got the idea of starting an English medium school in Nasik, India. My husband helped me with money to build a school and procure the necessary materials. To run the school efficiently and to know more about schooling, I decided to apply for education studies at University of Oregon. |
|||
A small OLPC trial has begun as of July 2008. We are working on an Internet connection. We already have a machine to serve as a school server. |
A small OLPC trial has begun as of July 2008. We are working on an Internet connection. We already have a machine to serve as a school server. |
||
Line 9: | Line 11: | ||
* Students pay about 105 USD per year in tuition. |
* Students pay about 105 USD per year in tuition. |
||
We purchased 15 laptops for 2008-2009. For 2009-2010, we are ordering another 10 laptops. |
|||
I am paying for 10 laptops to develop interest. |
|||
Our implementation is simplistic because we are not yet trying to |
Our implementation is simplistic because we are not yet trying to |
||
achieve child ownership. The laptops are owned by the school. The |
achieve child ownership. The laptops are owned by the school. The |
||
children spend |
children spend a few hours a week working with them. As the kids |
||
and parents become more comfortable with the laptops, we expect to move |
and parents become more comfortable with the laptops, we expect to move |
||
towards child ownership and closer integration into the curriculum. |
towards child ownership and closer integration into the curriculum. |
||
We hope to save ourselves from disappointment by starting with |
We hope to save ourselves from disappointment by starting with low expectations. |
||
Wish list: |
|||
The teachers like the laptops so much that we decided to order another 5 for a total of 15. |
|||
What we really need for child ownership is to replace the cost of books with the cost of the laptop. Children spend about 25 USD per year on books. That's about 125 USD over 5 years. There are a bunch of things we need before this is possible: |
|||
* NCERT books are a good start, but they are just scans of the pages. We need books or activities better tailored to the laptop medium. |
* NCERT books are a good start, but they are just scans of the pages. We need books or activities better tailored to the laptop medium. |
||
* An English slice of Wikipedia would be neat. [DONE] |
|||
* Everybody is impressed by the speak activity. English, Hindi, or Marathi childrens' books which are integrated with text-to-speech would be fantastic, even if pronunciation is poor. I know people are working on this, but we need it ASAP. |
* Everybody is impressed by the speak activity. English, Hindi, or Marathi childrens' books which are integrated with text-to-speech would be fantastic, even if pronunciation is poor. I know people are working on this, but we need it ASAP. |
||
Line 32: | Line 31: | ||
we are planning to buy 1 USB key per student. |
we are planning to buy 1 USB key per student. |
||
The students will own the USB keys. |
The students will own the USB keys. |
||
=== Please Donate === |
|||
Child ownership is crucial, and we need your help to get there. A single gift of 100 laptops would permit us to move to child ownership with a laptop-saturated learning environment. |
|||
<gallery> |
<gallery> |
Revision as of 00:34, 25 April 2009
Holy Mother School
Holy Mother School is an English medium school in Nashik, Maharashtra. We are a private school established in 2004 by Joshua and Heera Pritikin. My wife runs the school, and I funded it out of my own savings.
Heera's introduction: Teaching was something I was passionate about. Both of us thought of doing something for the society. We constructed a big building in India. There I started tutoring poor students who were not able to pass the matriculation exam. When I started teaching these students, I found that they were very weak in their basic concepts. I felt like I need to do something more significant in this area. I got the idea of starting an English medium school in Nasik, India. My husband helped me with money to build a school and procure the necessary materials. To run the school efficiently and to know more about schooling, I decided to apply for education studies at University of Oregon.
A small OLPC trial has begun as of July 2008. We are working on an Internet connection. We already have a machine to serve as a school server.
We would love to make the laptops child owned but
- There are 50 students in 1st grade and older.
- Students pay about 105 USD per year in tuition.
We purchased 15 laptops for 2008-2009. For 2009-2010, we are ordering another 10 laptops.
Our implementation is simplistic because we are not yet trying to achieve child ownership. The laptops are owned by the school. The children spend a few hours a week working with them. As the kids and parents become more comfortable with the laptops, we expect to move towards child ownership and closer integration into the curriculum.
We hope to save ourselves from disappointment by starting with low expectations.
Wish list:
- NCERT books are a good start, but they are just scans of the pages. We need books or activities better tailored to the laptop medium.
- Everybody is impressed by the speak activity. English, Hindi, or Marathi childrens' books which are integrated with text-to-speech would be fantastic, even if pronunciation is poor. I know people are working on this, but we need it ASAP.
Update 08 Mar 2009
Since we can't afford one laptop per child, we are planning to buy 1 USB key per student. The students will own the USB keys.