[Air-l] India Rejects One Laptop Per Child
J. J.
japeks at hotmail.com
Thu Jul 27 07:48:23 PDT 2006
Wojciech,
>I must say that the first argument is a perfect example of how people in
>developed countries often lack the foresight and local knowledge required
>to
>adequately decide whether a technology truly is "appropriate". Forget the
>merits to education or the potential for employability skills -- those are
>secondary to the potentially negative health effects of the laptops.
Responses of the Western civiliation to the needs of the "developing"
countries abound. The Westerners have developed this keen "foresight" as to
what the "other" countries really need. In the meantime, merits of access to
computers in education are questionable. There does not seem to be any
direct link between computers and raised student academic achievement. What
constitues "academic achievement" is yet a different matter. Commercial use
of the Internet is most prevalent and one may argue that it is the Western
culture that is carried through the newest of technologies. Western thought
imposed on other lands does not always bring the desired fruits of stability
and prosperity, does it? I believe that the Indian government's actions
deserve more of a dialogue, then outright condemnation. That only builds
resentment.
Best,
Jarek
>From: "Wojciech Gryc" <wojciech at gmail.com>
>Reply-To: air-l at listserv.aoir.org
>To: air-l at listserv.aoir.org
>Subject: [Air-l] India Rejects One Laptop Per Child
>Date: Thu, 27 Jul 2006 00:49:50 -0400
>
>Hi,
>
>Keeping in mind the long discussion that was posted a few weeks ago with
>regards to the merits (or lack thereof) of the One Laptop Per Child
>project,
>I thought this may interest subscribers of this list:
>
>HRD rubbishes MIT's laptop scheme for kids
>http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/msid-1698603,curpg-1.cms
>
>So India has decided against the One Laptop Per Child Project (for now).
>Two
>arguments that stood out for me:
>
> 1. Poor rural children often have health problems that may be
> exacerbated by laptop use, especially those affecting eyesight and
> children's backs.
> 2. No developed country has universalized laptops for children, so why
> should India?
>
>I must say that the first argument is a perfect example of how people in
>developed countries often lack the foresight and local knowledge required
>to
>adequately decide whether a technology truly is "appropriate". Forget the
>merits to education or the potential for employability skills -- those are
>secondary to the potentially negative health effects of the laptops.
>
>Thanks,
>Wojciech Gryc
>
>--
>
>Five Minutes to Midnight:
>Youth on human rights and current affairs
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