OLPC Rwanda
2007 status: green | ||||
green | ||||
Repubulika y'u Rwanda République Rwandaise Republic of Rwanda | |
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/29/LocationRwanda.png | |
Capital | Kigali |
---|---|
Official languages | Kinyarwanda French English |
Area | 26,338 km² |
Population | |
- 2005 estimate | 9,378,226 |
- 2002 census | 8,128,553 |
- Density | 320/km² |
Education | |
- Literacy (%) | 70.4 |
- Compulsory Years | |
- Compulsory Age | |
- Pop. in School Age | |
- Pop. in School | |
GDP (PPP) 2005 est. | USD 13 billion |
- Per capita | USD 1,500 |
GDP (nominal) 2005 est. | USD 2 billion |
- Per capita | |
HDI (2004) | 0.450 (low) |
Gini Index (1985) | 28.9 |
Time zone | CAT (UTC+2) |
Internet TLD | .rw |
Calling code | +250 |
More statistics... |
About Rwanda
Rwanda, in central Africa, is best known as the site of the 1994 genocide. Rwanda has changed much since that time, and has recently begun embracing technology. The current administration of President Paul Kagame has embraced ICT as the key to his country's future. Many languages are spoken in Rwanda, including Kinyarwanda, Swahili, French, and English.
News Article
Kigali, 3 January 2007
Rwanda commits to “one laptop per child” initiative
In recognition of children being Rwanda’s most precious natural resource, the government of Rwanda has committed to provide one laptop per child to all primary school children within five years.
This commitment was confirmed as H.E. President Paul Kagame met with Prof. Nicholas Negroponte, founder and chairperson of One Laptop per Child (OLPC) at Urugwiro Village on Tuesday.
OLPC will provide test laptops plus support to fully test the concept at no cost in Rwanda, as well as coordinate knowledge exchange with other participating nations.
This initiative will strengthen the quality of already existing free and compulsory primary education, by adopting new tools for learning and engaging children more directly, both inside and outside school.
Furthermore, by moving to electronic format, a much wider body of knowledge will be made available to children than was previously possible or economically feasible with printed text books.
As part of its stated vision of transforming Rwanda into a knowledge-based economy by the year 2020, the government of Rwanda through the Ministry of Infrastructure, Ministry of Education, and the Minister of Science and Technology and Research in the President’s Office will collaborate with the One Laptop Per Child non-profit Association to realize the project.
Statistics
Primary Language | ,|x|Language spoken::x}} |
Number of Laptops | Number of manufactured laptops::16000 |
Keyboard Layout | Keyboard::OLPC English 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::5K laptops have arrived.
5K more coming in November, 2008. Will teach in English, French and Kinyarwanda No School Server planned Much of the deployment will be off net. 96% of primary schools don't have electricity, no server or wireless network in the moment, average of 1k students per school and 70 per classroom. Powerpoint Presentation, Bootstrapping OLPC deployment in Rwanda, from Juliano Bittencourt & Brian Jordan, members of the OLPC Learning Team, who assited with this large-scale deployment.]] |