Archive for November 1st, 2007

Assessment challenges in higher education

November 1, 2007

The education scene in today has challenges & opportunities.

Let me focus on three challenges and an opportunity.

• The first is a challenge of scale; we need to scale at least 10 times more; out student batch sizes are large; we do not have enough teachers. While technology to help in reaching the teachers is in place (EDUSAT, cable TV, e-Learning, broadband, PC..) we need a reliable and scaleable technology to assess; online assessment would be the real need

• There are technology challenges by way of broadband, PC affordability, power availability to power the PC, content creation tools..; luckily they are being addressed and the falling costs are making technology affordable

• The people challenges are enormous. The regulators view “online education” with suspicion; the teachers are afraid of losing jobs; sometimes the students feel they are provided “second rate” education. Most of these are myths and represent just “mental blocks:’ they must be solved before technology can genuinely help to “deliver” education

The opportunity is immense; Indians are accepted as teachers around the world – America, Africa, Europe, Asia and Australia. Today’s Indian IT is accepted around the world. Can we combine the both to give the next global opportunity for India (beyond IT and BT)?

(Invited Talk in Asessment Tomorrow Conference in Bangalore in October 2007)

gPC for $ 199 PC with gOS

November 1, 2007

Starting October last week Wal-Mart the world’s largest retail stores has started selling a low-cost PC (mde by Everex Computers) at $ 199 price point. Interestingly, thi computer is inspired by Google and is loaded with gOS (uBuntu Linux distribution that is “tailored” for Google applications – Mail, Wordprocessing, Spreadsheet, Pictures, Music and Video).

Targeted at the two ends of the social spectrum (poor children and poor senior citizens) this low-cost PC has a potential to build the “digital divide”.

Made by Taiwanese manufacturer this PC has just a handful of icons for the key applications (like the “dock” in toay’s Apple computers) and very easy to use. It is intuitive, clutter-free and the opening screen is even gorgeous to appeal to the high-school students and comes bundled with OpenOffice.

The hardware is impressive too – 1.5 gHz Via processor, 512 MB RAM, 80 GB Hard disk, DVD – CD-RW device and Ethernet port; monitor has to be purchased separately

gPC will be interesting to watch.