A whole new way of learning: Sugata Mitra's first School in the Cloud lab opens in India
- Date:
- February 4, 2014
- Source:
- Newcastle University
- Summary:
- Professor Sugata Mitra, whose work into minimally invasive education in India inspired the film Slumdog Millionaire, has just opened his first School in the Cloud lab just across from the road from the original Hole in the Wall that began this global educational phenomenon.
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Newcastle University's Professor Sugata Mitra, whose work into minimally invasive education in India inspired the film Slumdog Millionaire, has just opened his first School in the Cloud lab just across from the road from the original Hole in the Wall that began this global educational phenomenon.
India's first 'School in the Cloud' facility is off to an auspicious start: it's located just across the road from the original Hole in the Wall that sparked a global phenomenon.
The Government Girls School in Kalkaji, New Delhi is a stone's throw from where Newcastle University's Professor Sugata Mitra first tested the idea of unsupervised learning using computers by carving a "hole in the wall" that separated his office from the adjoining slum.
Now it is to become India's first link into the School in the Cloud, a learning lab where children can explore and learn from each other by tapping into online mentors and resources.
TED Prize 2013 winner Prof Mitra was Chief Scientist at NIIT when he set up the first 'hole in the wall' 15 years ago. The freely accessible computer was an instant hit with groups of Indian street children, who learnt to use the computer and Internet by themselves.
Further experiments in more remote locations helped to define a new way of learning -- minimally invasive education -- as well as inspiring the film Slumdog Millionaire.
In recent years this idea has rapidly gathered pace, evolving into over 100 Self-Organised Learning Environments (SOLEs) where children search for answers to 'big' questions. It has also inspired Self Organised Mediation Environments (SOMEs) -- better known as the Granny Cloud -- where children interact with online 'grannies' to engage in a wide range of informal activities.
Explaining his idea for the School in the Cloud, Professor Mitra said it would bring together all of the research to date, linking the SOLEs and the Granny Cloud to create something that was a bit different from both of these components. "We already know that reading comprehension is likely to improve in the children taking part in these activities but we do not know what else might happen in the process," he explains. "What we do know is that order emerges out of this creative chaos.
"In India, we will be looking at two things -- whether the children can learn to read and also search the Internet accurately by themselves. If they can do this, then it's the end of schooling as we know it."
The Kalkaji facility, which is being officially opened on 4 February 2014, is the first of five new SOLES to open in India and has been described as 'undoubtedly a doorway to 21st century learning skills which should be introduced in all schools in the near future', by staff at the school.
There has been a small-scale experimental SOLE operating on this site for the past few years, set up thanks to a donation from London-based entrepreneur Richard Alberg, who heard Prof Mitra speak at the Stone Club in 2011 and was inspired to help fund his research.
Spanning from the hub near Calcutta to the remotest site five hours away in West Bengal, what all the new SOLE locations share is a lack of educational opportunities for the children living there, coupled with a drive and determination from those communities to turn that around.
The primary aim is to improve children's reading comprehension and search skills and develop their confidence.
"Working in small groups, children can competently search for answers to 'big questions', drawing rational, logical conclusions," explains Dr Suneeta Kulkarni, research director for the School in the Cloud project. "This is far ahead of what is expected of them in their school curriculum and a kind of learning activated by questions, not answers.
"It's wonderful to be at this point where so many people believe in this project and we finally have the capacity and resources to take it forward on a larger scale."
Background to the 'School in the Cloud'
This project builds upon the successful Granny Cloud, which was set up in 2009 after a plea for retired teachers in the UK to come forward who were willing to interact with children in India via Skype. They are not all 'grannies' and in this context the term is actually becoming less tied to gender or age as it is seen by many as a 'badge of honour'!
What makes this work is the universal 'grandmother' approach, where children get to interact with a person who is encouraging and appreciates their efforts, and in doing so enables them to learn what they need and also find out more about interests them.
The need for the Granny Cloud became apparent during the preliminary experiences in the SOLEs (self organised learning environments). The SOLEs were originally initiated to provide educational support for children in remote, disadvantaged settings in rural and urban areas in India.
The SOLE approach appealed to many educators world-wide and is now used by many teachers and schools in their own classrooms. The School in the Cloud joins these two components together and will bring in the Grannies who will use the SOLE approach in these settings.
The new SOLE locations in India are: Area 0 -- Gocharan, West Bengal; Area 1 -- Korakati, West Bengal; Area 2 -- Chandrakona, West Bengal; Area 3 -- Kalkaji, New Delhi (opening 4 Feb 2014); Area 4 -- Phaltan, Maharashtra. Area 5 has also just opened in the UK at George Stephenson High School, Killingworth, North Tyneside, Tyne and Wear, UK (opened 22 Nov 2013). The second UK learning lab of the School in the Cloud -- Area 6 -- will be at Greenfield Arts, Greenfield Community College, Newton Aycliffe, County Durham, UK (opening 13 February 2014)
About the TED Prize and Sugata Mitra
The first TED Prize was awarded in 2005, born out of the TED Conference and a vision by the world's leading entrepreneurs, innovators, and entertainers to change the world -- one wish at a time. What began as an unparalleled experiment to leverage the resources of the TED community has evolved into an ambitious, million-dollar award to spur global-scale change.
In 2013, TED awarded the prize to educator Sugata Mitra who wished to "help design the future of learning by supporting children all over the world to tap into their innate sense of wonder and work together."
He looked to TED's extended community to do two things: build the School in the Cloud, a series of learning labs across India and the UK where children can embark on intellectual adventures by engaging and connecting with information and mentoring online; and bring SOLEs (Self Organized Learning Environments) to their own communities.
The response to Mitra's wish has been remarkable. Microsoft is leading on innovating the School in the Cloud web platform with product development partner Made by Many. IDEO and Newcastle University are conducting research, Dropbox is providing storage, and a network of reachers and community leaders are giving time and resources to help build SOLE labs across India and the UK. All of this will be captured in a documentary made possible by the Sundance Institute/TED Prize Filmmaker Award.
Thousands of people from Colombia to South Africa have also downloaded his SOLE toolkit for use in their homes and classrooms, experimenting with his learning method on the ground. They are also sharing their discoveries to help advance his research.
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Materials provided by Newcastle University. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.
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