E-reading in India: ‘Hole-In-the-Wall’ helps popularize computers–and literacy
Luddites knock the One Child Per Laptop project by saying computers are too complex for children in the developing world. Perhaps the Luds should check out a Christian Science Monitor article:
“Free computers placed where children play could help bring basic education to India’s 200 million boys and girls under age 15. That’s the hope of the man behind an Internet learning experiment called Hole-in-the-Wall [link added].
“Sugata Mitra [link added], physicist and chief scientist with India’s international software giant NIIT Ltd., launched the experiment in 1999 by embedding a kiosk housing a high-speed touch-screen computer into the wall that separates the company’s headquarters from New Delhi’s biggest slum. Dr. Mitra was surprised to see how quickly the children had mastered navigating the Internet–within hours.”
The article continues:
Since then, Mitra has installed more than 150 computers - with keyboards, touch pads, and Web cameras - in some 50 locations from New Delhi slums to points in rural India. In each location, with no supervision or instruction, the children “download and play audio and video, send and receive e-mail, chat, and so on,” he says. They quickly move on to learn some English from English-language websites, read Indian newspapers, and even “look for jobs for their fathers,” Mitra says…
Hole-in-the-Wall has already helped thousands of previously nonliterate boys and girls teach themselves not only about computers but also “several pieces of primary education,” Mitra says. Within nine months, the boys and girls achieve, “the proficiency level equivalent to the skills of most modern office workers.
Mind you, Indian student may be more motivated than their counterparts in affluent countries such as the United States, so I’m not certain how much of this is applicable over here. But elsewhere in the Third World?
If nothing else, the experiment is laudable for its ‘tude toward online porn, the bane of U.S. tech advocates who must contend with moralists who make Elmer Gantry seem like Hugh Hefner.
During a recent visit to the slum’s cyber wall, a group of boys took turns, two and three at a time, at each of the wall’s four computer kiosks. A group of girls nearby quickly volunteered their reasons for coming here. Rubina, a tall teenager with a heavy braid and no head scarf, explains that, from the day the first computer was installed, she wanted to know what it did. Once she reached the age when Muslim girls are supposed to stay cloistered and well covered, she says, her mother bought her a computer to use at home. “But I still come here with the other girls,” she admits.
Mitra is unfazed by western skeptics who suggest that his computers will expose young children to pornography. In five years, across all locations, he says, Hole-in-the-Wall computers have experienced “less than 0.5 percent pornographic access,” adding that the computers “are clearly visible to passing adults.” The fact that both boys and girls have access “completely eliminates pornographic or other undesirable access,” he says.
To western parents he advises: “Don’t lock up your child with a computer in a study. Keep the computer in a public place, like where the TV is, and most of the evils associated with isolation, addiction, and pornography will disappear.”










June 7th, 2006 at 9:15 am
Is it possible to launch one in Bangladesh. It is really impressive and Innovative. I wish we had some one like sugata mitra. what bothered me is the idea of watching pornography. who said internet is the biggest source of pornography. there are cheaper and better ways to watch porno movies even without the net. if you go to any cd shop in a suburb area you can get cds on rent. who needs to go through all the fuss to watch porno in the net. I do not support this idea. Rather I believe that such project would increase computer literacy.