[Telecentres] requesting immediate feedback: telecentres/educationstatement

Gáspár Mátyás gaspar.matyas at axelero.hu
Tue Feb 22 13:03:14 GMT 2005


Dear Andy

The statement is very good, I support it much. What I'd like to add is
that we suggest governmental administrations to open their institutions
having ICT infrastructures and serving special target groups for the the
larger public, for all local community. This isn't evident solution for
manyi countries, when organising public, community access for all.

Matyas Gaspar

-----Original Message-----
From: telecentres-bounces at wsis-cs.org
[mailto:telecentres-bounces at wsis-cs.org] On Behalf Of Andy Carvin
Sent: Tuesday, February 22, 2005 1:36 PM
To: telecentres at wsis-cs.org
Subject: [Telecentres] requesting immediate feedback:
telecentres/educationstatement

Hi everyone,

I've been working with Divina Frau-Meigs and Jane Johnson from the
education caucus to craft language to be presented in tomorrow morning's
plenary. As we wrote down our ideas, we realized that much of what we
had
to say was similar to some of the ideas we have discussed on the
telecentres list.

So I would like to propose that we consider issuing a joint statement
with
the education caucus on areas of agreement regarding the role of
schools,
universities and telecentres in meeting the MDGs. Please give me
feedback
on the following ideas as soon as possible, because our telecentres
meeting
tomorrow afternoon will be too late in the process to impact the
discussion
on financing mechanisms. thanks! -ac

ICTs are a key tool in achieving universal education, while wired
schools
and non-formal learning institutions such telecenters can play a major
role
in promoting development.

1. When considering financing mechanisms, do not neglect the role that
schools, universities and informal educational institutions such as
telecentres an play as a community hub for building knowledge and
integrating marginalized communities into the information society.

Schools, libraries and other institutions are existing infrastructures
that
focus on the future -- the potential of our children and young people.
Young people should be a priority for accessing these educational ICTs
as
they cannot afford to wait for policymakers; their longterm prosperity
is
at stake.

2. It's not enough to finance infrastructure - professional development
for
educators and curriculum development must also be addressed - curriculum
that is linguistically and culturally appropriate, including open
courseware.

3. Multi-purpose access points: schools should be able to serve as
telecentres, while telecentres can serve as educational institutions in
themselves

4. Encouraging local/community vested interest in the success of these
institutions. Community members must have a true stake in their
technological and educational development.

5. Promote the development of regional open courseware initiatives as a
primary means for cultural and linguistic diversity, for pluralism of
educational formats. These initiatives should be networked for worldwide
capacity building.



-------------------------------------------------
Andy Carvin
Program Director
EDC Center for Media & Community
acarvin @ edc . org
http://www.digitaldividenetwork.org
http://www.edwebproject.org/andy/blog/
-------------------------------------------------

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