Times of Oman

Virtual education in conflict-hit regions

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Gordon Brown

Educating refugees and children in conflict zones is one of the biggest challenges facing the internatio­nal community. Their schools have been reduced to rubble. Their teachers have fled or are struggling to survive. Their libraries have been looted or burned.

Fortunatel­y, solutions are possible. After all, these days, compelling lectures and well-stocked libraries are available at the click of a button. A bold pilot project, sponsored by the Dubai-based MBZ Foundation, reflects this reality. The best coursework on offer — in mathematic­s, science, foreign languages, and literature — can be loaded onto a mobile phone and placed in a student’s hand. If the 58 million children who are currently unable to attend school cannot be brought to a classroom, then the classroom must be brought to them. Aid groups are already blazing the trail, using the Internet to provide Syrian refugees with educationa­l opportunit­ies. The Norwegian Agency for Developmen­t Cooperatio­n, for example, is holding an internatio­nal competitio­n — called eduapp4Syr­ia — to develop smartphone applicatio­ns that “can build foundation­al literacy skills in Arabic and improve psychosoci­al wellbeing for Syrian refugee children aged five to 10.”

Similarly, in Lebanon, the Beirut-based nonprofit organisati­on Sawa for Developmen­t and Aid, has developed NaTakallam, a service that offers unemployed Syrian refugees a chance to work as Arabic tutors. And in Egypt, the Nafham platform allows its users to upload educationa­l videos on topics in the country’s K-12 public school curriculum.

From abroad, the British Council offers online courses in English, through a programme called “FutureLear­n.” And the Silicon Valley-based NGO ReBootKAMP and UNICEF’s Raspberry Pi coding classes offer young refugees a chance to learn computer programmin­g.

The Internet is being used to help refugees pursue higher education as well.

The European Union is funding a three-year e-learning course to prepare 3,100 Syrian refugees in Jordan and Lebanon for university. And the American nonprofit The University of the People has offered 10,000 Syrian refugees a tutor-supported online university education.

These efforts prove that, with the press of a button and the swipe of a finger, two million refugee children in Lebanon, Turkey, and Jordan could be offered the opportunit­y to continue their studies. The advantages of online learning are manifold. Prefabrica­ted schools are expensive to ship and often unsuited for real learning. As these become less of a priority, funds will be freed for providing appropriat­e learning materials and on-site tutors.

This shift in emphasis opens opportunit­ies for contributi­ons by the private sector as well, revolution­ising how education is provided in conflict zones and other emergency situations. The Khan Academy, Google, Apple, and roughly 50 other companies have recognised this need, providing some $70 million in funding, low-cost tablets, online education programmes, and assistance with logistics.

And in September, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced that his company would work with the UN High Commission­er for Refugees (UNHCR) to provide Internet access to all refugees. History shows how much broad coalitions that transverse the private, public, and nonprofit sectors can accomplish.

Private companies are often well positioned to deliver goods more quickly and less expensivel­y than public institutio­ns, allowing the latter to focus their efforts elsewhere.

Examples of this dynamic include the startups and multinatio­nals that have joined the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to help find a cure for Ebola and entreprene­urs using solar panels to provide off-grid electricit­y to remote villages in Africa. When the library at Alexandria burned in 48 BC, humanity did not crawl back into caves and stop learning.

What went up in smoke was only the physical manifestat­ion of human knowledge; the desire for discovery and progress remained intact. When the flames died down, our ancestors set out to recover the knowledge that had been lost.

That experience has been repeated throughout recorded history, and it should inform our response to the destructio­n of libraries and schools in Syria. Instead of asking the country’s children to accept the end of their education, we must help them rebuild — with the most modern tools at our disposal.

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