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Thread: How to teach illiterate Ethiopian children English and hacking skills in five months.

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    Icon7 How to teach illiterate Ethiopian children English and hacking skills in five months.

    Ethiopian kids hack OLPCs in 5 months with zero instruction

    What happens if you give a thousand Motorola Zoom tablet PCs to Ethiopian kids who have never even seen a printed word? Within five months, they'll start teaching themselves English while circumventing the security on your OS to customize settings and activate disabled hardware. Whoa.
    The One Laptop Per Child project started as a way of delivering technology and resources to schools in countries with little or no education infrastructure, using inexpensive computers to improve traditional curricula. What the OLPC Project has realized over the last five or six years, though, is that teaching kids stuff is really not that valuable. Yes, knowing all your state capitols how to spell "neighborhood" properly and whatnot isn't a bad thing, but memorizing facts and procedures isn't going to inspire kids to go out and learn by teaching themselves, which is the key to a good education. Instead, OLPC is trying to figure out a way to teach kids to learn, which is what this experiment is all about.
    Rather than give out laptops (they're actually Motorola Zoom tablets plus solar chargers running custom software) to kids in schools with teachers, the OLPC Project decided to try something completely different: it delivered some boxes of tablets to two villages in Ethiopia, taped shut, with no instructions whatsoever. Just like, "hey kids, here's this box, you can open it if you want, see ya!"
    Just to give you a sense of what these villages in Ethiopia are like, the kids (and most of the adults) there have never seen a word. No books, no newspapers, no street signs, no labels on packaged foods or goods. Nothing. And these villages aren't unique in that respect; there are many of them in Africa where the literacy rate is close to zero. So you might think that if you're going to give out fancy tablet computers, it would be helpful to have someone along to show these people how to use them, right?
    But that's not what OLPC did. They just left the boxes there, sealed up, containing one tablet for every kid in each of the villages (nearly a thousand tablets in total), pre-loaded with a custom English-language operating system and SD cards with tracking software on them to record how the tablets were used. Here's how it went down, as related by OLPC founder Nicholas Negroponte at MIT Technology Review's EmTech conference last week:


    "We left the boxes in the village. Closed. Taped shut. No instruction, no human being. I thought, the kids will play with the boxes! Within four minutes, one kid not only opened the box, but found the on/off switch. He'd never seen an on/off switch. He powered it up. Within five days, they were using 47 apps per child per day. Within two weeks, they were singing ABC songs [in English] in the village. And within five months, they had hacked Android. Some idiot in our organization or in the Media Lab had disabled the camera! And they figured out it had a camera, and they hacked Android."

    This experiment began earlier this year, and what OLPC really want to see is whether these kids can learn to read and write in English. Around the world, there are something like 100,000,000 kids who don't even make it to first grade, simply because there are not only no schools, but very few literate adults, and if it turns out that for the cost of a tablet all of these kids can simply teach themselves, it has huge implications for education. And it goes beyond the kids, too, since previous OLPC studies have shown that kids will use their computers to teach their parents to read and write as well, which is incredibly amazing and awesome.
    If this all reminds you of a certain science fiction book by a certain well-known author, it's not a coincidence: Nell's Primer in Neal Stephenson's The Diamond Age was a direct inspiration for much of the OLPC teaching software, which itself is named Nell. Here's an example of how Nell uses an evolving, personalized narrative to help kids learn to learn without beating them over the head with standardized lessons and traditional teaching methods:


    Miles from the nearest school, a young Ethiopian girl named Rahel turns on her new tablet computer. The solar powered machine speaks to her: "Hello! Would you like to hear a story?"

    She nods and listens to a story about a princess. Later, when the girl has learned a little more, she will tell the machine that the princess is named "Rahel" like she is and that she likes to wear blue--but for now the green book draws pictures of the unnamed Princess for her and asks her to trace shapes on the screen. "R is for Run. Can you trace the R?" As she traces the R, it comes to life and gallops across the screen. "Run starts with R. Roger the R runs across the Red Rug. Roger has a dog named Rover." Rover barks: "Ruff! Ruff!" The Princess asks, "Can you find something Red?" and Rahel uses the camera to photograph a berry on a nearby bush. "Good work! I see a little red here. Can you find something big and red?"
    As Rahel grows, the book asks her to trace not just letters, but whole words. The book's responses are written on the screen as it speaks them, and eventually she doesn't need to leave the sound on all the time. Soon Rahel can write complete sentences in her special book, and sometimes the Princess will respond to them. New stories teach her about music (she unlocks a dungeon door by playing certain tunes) and programming with blocks (Princess Rahel helps a not very-bright turtle to draw different shapes).
    Rahel writes her own stories about the Princess, which she shares with her friends. The book tells her that she is very good at music, and her lessons begin to encourage her to invent silly songs about what she's learning. An older Rahel learns that the block language she used to talk with the turtle is also used to write all the software running inside her special book. Rahel uses the blocks to write a new sort of rhythm game. Her younger brother has just received his own green book, and Rahel writes him a story which uses her rhythm game to help him learn to count.
    Read more about Nell in this paper, and if you haven't read The Diamond Age, do so at once.
    Source: http://dvice.com/archives/2012/10/ethiopian-kids.php

    Simply awesome.

  2. #2

    Default Re: How to teach illiterate Ethiopian children English and hacking skills in five months.

    If this is true, that's great.

  3. #3
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    Default Re: How to teach illiterate Ethiopian children English and hacking skills in five months.

    It's amazing and hilarious. Looks like my friends will have new Ethiopian competition. :

    Just Kidding of course The implications for education and even computer technology if these kids are learning to program, are amazing. :

  4. #4

    Default Re: How to teach illiterate Ethiopian children English and hacking skills in five months.

    I was honestly laughing when I read the article. No due to any negative thing, but to know that a person may not have seen any printed works to learn how to operate a tablet or any electrical device. The chuckling came after reading the bit about the hacking, that was simply awesome!
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    Default Re: How to teach illiterate Ethiopian children English and hacking skills in five months.

    Well... that's awesome.
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    Default Re: How to teach illiterate Ethiopian children English and hacking skills in five months.

    This is the answer to all those wondering what would happen if you travelled back in time to the Dark Ages with the gear we have today.

    Quote Originally Posted by Adar View Post
    Russia have managed to weaponize the loneliest and saddest people on the internet by providing them with (sometimes barechested) father figures whom they can adhere to in order to justify their hatred for the current establishment and the society that rejects them.

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    Default Re: How to teach illiterate Ethiopian children English and hacking skills in five months.

    Quote Originally Posted by Aanker View Post
    This is the answer to all those wondering what would happen if you travelled back in time to the Dark Ages with the gear we have today.
    That was actually asked?
    I figured you'd be accused of witchcraft and burned to a crispy state.
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    Default Re: How to teach illiterate Ethiopian children English and hacking skills in five months.

    Quote Originally Posted by Morbius Sire View Post
    That was actually asked?
    I figured you'd be accused of witchcraft and burned to a crispy state.
    No, it wasn't explicitly asked, but it's one of those questions that people with a general interest in history might ask.

    As for your later reply: well, it depends on the age. This experiment clearly shows that human children have an amazing ability to learn and experiment to achieve progress. However, even an adult would possess the ability to learn, albeit at a slower rate.

    Quote Originally Posted by Adar View Post
    Russia have managed to weaponize the loneliest and saddest people on the internet by providing them with (sometimes barechested) father figures whom they can adhere to in order to justify their hatred for the current establishment and the society that rejects them.

    UNDER THE PROUD PATRONAGE OF ABBEWS
    According to this poll, 80%* of TGW fans agree that "The mod team is devilishly handsome" *as of 12/10

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    Default Re: How to teach illiterate Ethiopian children English and hacking skills in five months.

    If you took a person from the Roman Empire to the modern-day, they'd adapt and learn to function perfectly well in society.

    If you took a person to the Roman Empire from today, they'd be completely unable to cope due to the differences in technology, culture, and at the time.

    Unless of course it was me, I was born 1600 years too late.

  10. #10

    Default Re: How to teach illiterate Ethiopian children English and hacking skills in five months.

    Quote Originally Posted by Magister Militum Flavius Aetius View Post
    If you took a person from the Roman Empire to the modern-day, they'd adapt and learn to function perfectly well in society.

    If you took a person to the Roman Empire from today, they'd be completely unable to cope due to the differences in technology, culture, and at the time.

    Unless of course it was me, I was born 1600 years too late.
    lol how?
    If anything, It should be the opposite. We know much of their societies and habits. They'd know nothing and wouldn't even know what to expect.
    Last edited by Morbius Sire; November 05, 2012 at 01:20 PM.
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    Default Re: How to teach illiterate Ethiopian children English and hacking skills in five months.

    Quote Originally Posted by Morbius Sire View Post
    lol how?
    If anything, It should be the opposite. We know much of their societies and habits. They'd know nothing and wouldn't even know what to expect.
    Technology - a person from the modern day would not be able to live without it, and a person back then would be able to adapt to use it. A caveman could do the same thing - Homo Sapiens is smart enough to learn the modern technology, and this proves it with these ethiopian children.

    Also considering there were no modern languages back then, but we have Latin today, it would help

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    Default Re: How to teach illiterate Ethiopian children English and hacking skills in five months.

    One thing is reading a bunch of facts on books and such and other is to really live them. So no, it wouldn't work one way or the other, at least no for everyone. I'm more than willing to bet that the children would be the easies ones to adapt in our little time travel experiment. Meanwhile adults would have far more difficulties.
    PROUD TO BE A PESANT. And for the dimwitted, I know how to spell peasant. <== This blue things are links, you click them and magical things (like not ending up like a fool) happens.
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  13. #13

    Default Re: How to teach illiterate Ethiopian children English and hacking skills in five months.

    That sounds an awful lot like the premise to Childhood's End by Arthur C. Clarke.

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    Default Re: How to teach illiterate Ethiopian children English and hacking skills in five months.

    I would scoff and laugh and how ridiculous this sounds and say it cannot possibly be true, but then I remembered that I don't think I have ever actually been formally taught how to use a computer. I have just always had one, since as early as I can remember, and I worked it out by using it. We did have a couple of exercises in school on how to type, and we did have IT lessons teaching us how to use Microsoft Word and Excel, but I do not find it at all hard to believe that someone with no knowledge of writing could learn quickly to use a computer. Afterall, after about a week in France someone with no knowledge of French can learn to speak it on a basic level, and computer software is really no different from any other language.
    A new mobile phone tower went up in a town in the USA, and the local newspaper asked a number of people what they thought of it. Some said they noticed their cellphone reception was better. Some said they noticed the tower was affecting their health.

    A local administrator was asked to comment. He nodded sagely, and said simply: "Wow. And think about how much more pronounced these effects will be once the tower is actually operational."

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