OLPC Sri Lanka: Difference between revisions

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==News==
==News==
* Jan 07 - 13, 2009 OLPC Technical Team training at [http://ucsc.cmb.ac.lk/ University of Colombo School of Computing] ( UCSC ).
* Jan 07 - 13, 2009 OLPC Technical Team training at [http://ucsc.cmb.ac.lk/ University of Colombo School of Computing] ( UCSC ).
* Dec 15 - 18, 2008 [[OLPC_Sri_Lanka:Teacher_Training|OLPC Teacher Training]] at [http://ucsc.cmb.ac.lk University of Colombo School of Computing] ( UCSC ) .
* Dec 15 - 18, 2008 [[OLPC_Sri_Lanka:Teacher_Training|OLPC Teacher Training]] at [http://ucsc.cmb.ac.lk University of Colombo School of Computing] ( UCSC ) .
* August 10 - 26, 2009 [[OLPC_Sri_Lanka:Teacher_Training|OLPC Teacher Training]] at [http://ucsc.cmb.ac.lk University of Colombo School of Computing] ( UCSC ). Teachers from selected schools from all the provinces were taught some concepts behind OLPC and trained to use of the educational tool - OPLC.



==Mailing Lists ==
==Mailing Lists ==

Revision as of 10:17, 27 August 2009

2007 status: green
green        

News

Mailing Lists


Localization

The Sinhala Linux distribution has support for Sinhalese. The Tamil localization work has been done at the UCSC.

Roadmap

  • Teacher Training
  • Regional Technical Team Training
  • xs server setup
  • xo Distribution

OLPC and LK.XS Configuration

OLPC XS Configuration
OLPC Configuration

About Sri Lanka

The principal language of Sri Lanka is Sinhala. The Tamil language is prevalent among the minority communities living predominantly in the central, eastern and northern province in Sri Lanka although it is fairly common in other parts of the country as well. English, although not spoken in most instances, is generally understood by a substantial percentage of the general population. Due to the many opportunities available, both locally and overseas, to those who can read and write in English, English education is the most widely sought after along with IT skills training. The demand for both English and IT training is consistent throughout every part of the country.

OLPC in Sri Lanka

OLPC Lanka Foundation is currently working with the Ministry of Education and the World Bank in deploying 1000 XO laptops to 9 schools in the nine provinces of Sri Lanka. In keeping with the OLPC concept of saturating the regions, private sector funding to import an increased number of XO laptops has been secured for an additional 350 units for piloting in schools around the primary pilots. This roll out is targeted to be completed by end September 2009. The pilots would be closely monitored by both MoE and World Bank officials.