Teaching kids how to use a computer is hard enough
already, since they’re kids, but just try doing it without any computers. That
was the task undertaken by Richard Appiah Akoto in Ghana, and his innovative
(and labor-intensive) solution was to draw the computer or application on the
blackboard in great detail. His hard work went viral and now Microsoft has
stepped in to help out.
Akoto teaches at Betenase Municipal Assembly
Junior High in the small town of Sekyedomase. He had posted pictures of his
magnum opus, a stunning rendition of a complete Microsoft Word window, to
Facebook. “I love ma students so have to do what will make them understand wat
am teaching,” he wrote. He looks harried in the last image of the sequence.
The post blew up (9.3K reactions at this point),
and Microsoft, which has for years been rather quietly promoting early access
to computing and engineering education, took notice. It happened to be just
before the company’s Education Exchange in Singapore, and they flew him out.
It was Akoto’s first time outside of Ghana, and at
the conference, a gathering of education leaders from around the world, he
described his all-too-common dilemma: The only computers available — one
belonging to the school and Akoto’s personal laptop — were broken.
“I wanted to teach them how to launch Microsoft
Word. But I had no computer to show them,” he said in an interview with
Microsoft at the event. “I had to do my best. So, I decided to draw what the
screen looks like on the blackboard with chalk.”
“I have been doing this every time the lesson I’m
teaching demands it,” he continued. “I’ve drawn monitors, system units,
keyboards, a mouse, a formatting toolbar, a drawing toolbar, and so on. The
students were okay with that. They are used to me doing everything on the board
for them.”
Pursuing such a difficult method instead of giving
up under such circumstances is more than a little admirable, and the kids are
certainly better off for having a teacher dedicated to his class and subject. A
little computer literacy can make a big difference.
“They have some knowledge about computers, but they
don’t know how to actually operate one,” Akoto said. So Microsoft has offered
to provide “device and software support” for the school (I’ve asked for
specifics, though they may depend on the school’s needs), and Akoto will get a
chance to go through Microsoft’s educator certification program (which has
other benefits).
Obviously if this school is having this issue,
countless more are as well, and could use similar support. And as Akoto himself
eloquently pointed out to NPR when his post first went viral, “They are lacking
more than just equipment.”
But at least in this case there are a couple
hundred students who will be getting an opportunity they didn’t have before.
That’s a start.
Source:
Techcrunch
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