Planning and designing educational technology for low-income communities: A participatory and proactive approach

Resource type
Book Section
Authors/contributors
Title
Planning and designing educational technology for low-income communities: A participatory and proactive approach
Abstract
This chapter is an excerpt of a study that addressed the above concern using the One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) projects in Nigeria and Ghana as a case. It also situates the OLPC XO-laptop as a disruptive technology, because it aims at altering the existing pedagogy of the communities in which it was introduced through its constructivist approach. Moreover, as with most disruptive technologies, the XO laptop project is considered revolutionary, dramatically cheaper than regular laptops, convenient, and provides a different kind of learning content. As with the theme of this chapter, the XO laptop, although possessing disruptive technological qualities, was unable to achieve its goal due to lack of thorough planning and implementation of the adoption process. Results from the study informed the author to posit a model for technology adoption in low-income communities that is considered inclusive, participatory, and proactive, involving all stakeholders in setting up a policy. Such policy is expected to serve as benchmark for measuring the congruency of any proposed product whether disruptive or sustainable to the local need before its adoption.
Book Title
Disruptive Technologies, Innovation and Global Redesign: Emerging Implications
Publisher
IGI Global
Date
2012
Language
en
ISBN
978-1-4666-0134-5 978-1-4666-0135-2
Accessed
17/03/2020, 16:41
Library Catalogue
DOI.org (Crossref)
Citation
Ezumah, B. (2012). Planning and designing educational technology for low-income communities: A participatory and proactive approach. In N. Ekekwe & N. Islam (Eds.), Disruptive Technologies, Innovation and Global Redesign: Emerging Implications. IGI Global. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-0134-5