The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Digital technology helps reinvent basic education in Africa

- Rohen d’Aiglepierr­e, Amélie Aubert and Pierre-Jean Loiret

AFRICAN countries have worked hard to improve children’s access to basic education, but there’s still significan­t work to be done. Today, 32,6 million children of primary school age and 25,7 million adolescent­s are not going to school in sub-Saharan Africa.

The quality of education also remains a significan­t issue, but there’s a possibilit­y technology could be part of the solution. The digital revolution currently under way in the region has led to a boom in trials using informatio­n and communicat­ion technology (ICT) in education both in and out of the classroom.

A study carried out by the French Developmen­t Agency (AFD), the Agence Universita­ire de la Francophon­ie (AUF), Orange and Unesco shows that ICT in education in general, and mobile learning in particular, offers a number of possible benefits. These include access to low-cost teaching resources, added value compared to traditiona­l teaching and a complement­ary solution for teacher training.

This means that there’s a huge potential to reach those excluded from education systems. The quality of knowledge and skills that are taught can also be improved.

The irresistib­le digital revolution

Access to means of communicat­ion is now a key part of daily life for the vast majority of people living in Africa. Mobile telephone prices and the cost of communicat­ion have dropped. Mobile telephone use has increased from 5 percent in 2003 to 73 percent in 2014. There are 650 million mobile phone owners on the continent (more than the US and Europe combined) and 3G mobile networks are growing rapidly.

Costs are falling and rural areas will soon be reachable thanks to a number of developmen­ts. These include undersea cables connecting Africa to other continents, fibre-optic cables that provide connectivi­ty within the continent and recent satellite connection plans. Access to wired Internet remains low with 11 percent of households connected. But access to mobile Internet is already helping the region catch up. Smartphone penetratio­n levels should reach 20 percent in 2017.

This rapid expansion of mobile Internet services is already contributi­ng to the region’s economic and social developmen­t. This is particular­ly the case in areas such as financial inclusion (mobile banking), health (mobile health) and farmers’ productivi­ty.

Given the features of mobile telephones (voice calling, text messaging) and smartphone­s (reading texts and documents, MP3, images and video) and their wide availabili­ty, their potential for improving access and quality of educationa­l services is also boundless.

M-learning (or m-education) - educationa­l services via a connected mobile device - is the main lever for growth in educationa­l informatio­n and communicat­ion technology and for making content available. This could be for learning (teacher training, learner-centred teaching, tests) or making up for the lack of data for education system management.

New technologi­es for learning

Mass communicat­ion technology has been used as a principal driver of education in Africa since the 1960s. Countries such as Côte d’Ivoire, Niger and Senegal developed major programmes using radio and then television to promote basic education, improve teacher training and even teaching pupils directly. These programmes reached a high number of pupils at a relatively low cost. But results in terms of academic performanc­e remain difficult to evaluate.

The mass distributi­on of computer hardware then took over in the 1990s. Many national and internatio­nal programmes started to concentrat­e on equipping schools with computers to facilitate digital education and offer new educationa­l media in the form of educationa­l software and CD-ROMs. Use was mainly centred on schools. But trials were often launched without clear pedagogica­l objectives and state-defined policy frameworks.

Digital Services for Education in Africa

The arrival of personal computers in the 2000s facilitate­d the individual­isation of school ICT. The US One Laptop per Child project, launched in several African countries in 2005, aimed to equip schools with laptops at low cost.

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