The government of India has abandoned plans to order the laptop computers
being developed by the
One
Laptop Per Child (OLPC) project.
India's Ministry of Human Resource Development labelled the $100 laptop
project as "pedagogically suspect", according to the
Kaumudi
newspaper, claiming that there are no proven benefits of providing all
children with their own notebook computers.
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"The case for giving a computer to every single child is pedagogically
suspect. It may actually be detrimental to the growth of the creative and
analytical abilities of the child," Education Secretary Sudeep Banerjee told a
planning commission.
He added that the project is suffering from an unpredictable timeline. "We
cannot visualise a situation for decades when we can go beyond the pilot stage.
We need classrooms and teachers more urgently than fancy tools," said Banerjee.
"We do not think that [OLPC project leader] Nicholas Negroponte's idea is
mature enough to be taken seriously at this stage and no major country is
presently following this. Even inside America, there is not much enthusiasm
about this."
He concluded that India would be better off investing the funds in expanding
secondary education programmes.
The OLPC project aims to build a notebook computer for children in developing
nations. The idea is that computers will teach children to think in a more
structured manner while allowing them to educate themselves instead of depending
on teachers.
The project is led by MIT professor
Nicholas
Negroponte. In presentations about the project, Negroponte has repeatedly
made a case for providing children with notebook computers, pointing to succe
ssful projects in the west and developing nations such as Cambodia.
Production of the computers will start once five to 10 million have been
ordered and paid for, according to the
OLPC
website.
Nigeria placed an order
for one
million OLPC laptops earlier this month and other nations are set to follow
including Brazil and Egypt.
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