Technology for Education in Low-Income Countries: Supporting the UN Sustainable Development Goals

Information and communications technologies (ICTs) are increasingly available, even in developing countries, leading to a number of pressing questions. Will ICTs for education (ICT4E) improve learning and educational quality? Might they increase the ‘digital divide’ with negative consequences for equity? What can ICT4E offer to help assist in the achievement of the new UN Sustainable Development Goals? The present review addresses these questions and uses of ICT4E in developing countries. First, a short overview is provided of how ICT4E intersects with the learning outcomes and the quality of education, including contemporary perceptions of what does and does not work in ICT4E. Second, an ICT4E framework is suggested as a way to reconceptualize the parameters currently in use that will lead to more effective ICT4E design solutions. Third, ICT projects in four key education subsectors – early childhood, basic as well as secondary education, and teacher education – help to disaggregate where and how interventions have been made in recent years. Finally, a set of investment domains in ICT4E is described, along with a set of specific suggestions to advance the field. The paper concludes with the suggestion that measurable, sustainable, and scalable design solutions in ICT4E are the best way to assist in achieving the UN Sustainable Development Goals.

[1]  Travis J. Lybbert,et al.  Can Mobile Phones Improve Learning? Evidence from a Field Experiment in Niger , 2012 .

[2]  Amber K. Gove,et al.  Early Reading: Igniting Education for All. A Report by the Early Grade Learning Community of Practice. Revised Edition. , 2011 .

[3]  Siobhán Clarke,et al.  ICT 4 the MDGs? A Perspective on ICTs’ Role in Addressing Urban Poverty in the Context of the Millennium Development Goals , 2013 .

[4]  John Traxler,et al.  Learning in a Mobile Age , 2009, Int. J. Mob. Blended Learn..

[5]  Kentaro Toyama,et al.  Text-Free User Interfaces for Illiterate and Semi-Literate Users , 2006, 2006 International Conference on Information and Communication Technologies and Development.

[6]  S. Revi Sterling,et al.  Minding the gaps: cultural, technical and gender-based barriers to mobile use in oral-language Berber communities in Morocco , 2013, ICTD.

[7]  B. Sparrow,et al.  Google Effects on Memory: Cognitive Consequences of Having Information at Our Fingertips , 2011, Science.

[8]  Marguerite Koole,et al.  Mobile Learning in Distance Education: Utility or Futility?. , 2010 .

[9]  Esharenana E. Adomi,et al.  Application of ICTs in Nigerian Secondary Schools , 2010 .

[10]  Daniel A. Wagner,et al.  Mobiles for literacy in developing countries: An effectiveness framework , 2014 .

[11]  Leigh L. Linden,et al.  The Use and Misuse of Computers in Education : Evidence from a Randomized Experiment in Colombia , 2009 .

[12]  S. Revi Sterling,et al.  Considering failure: eight years of ITID research , 2012, ICTD.

[13]  Miguel Nussbaum,et al.  Computer supported collaborative learning using wirelessly interconnected handheld computers , 2004, Comput. Educ..

[14]  Mark Pegrum,et al.  Learning to take the tablet: How pre-service teachers use iPads to facilitate their learning , 2013 .

[15]  Shirley Williams,et al.  The impact and reach of MOOCs: a developing countries’ perspective , 2013 .

[16]  Mary Burns,et al.  Using technology to train teachers : appropriate uses of ICT for teacher professional development in developing countires , 2005 .

[17]  Ç. Kâğıtçıbaşı,et al.  Effects of an Educational Television Program on Preschoolers: Variability in Benefits. , 2008 .

[18]  Christopher Walsh,et al.  English in Action (EIA): mobile phones as an agent of change for large-scale teacher professional development and English language learning in Bangladesh , 2013 .

[19]  D. Wagner,et al.  Technology and Mother-Tongue Literacy in Southern India: Impact Studies Among Young Children and Out-of-School Youth , 2010 .

[20]  J. Pellegrino,et al.  Professional Development in Integrating Technology Into Teaching and Learning: Knowns, Unknowns, and Ways to Pursue Better Questions and Answers , 2007 .

[21]  Mitchel Resnick,et al.  Designing ScratchJr: support for early childhood learning through computer programming , 2013, IDC.

[22]  Simon Andrews,et al.  Gene Co-Expression in Mouse Embryo Tissues , 2011, CUBIST Workshop.

[23]  C. Clement,et al.  Barriers to the Introduction of ICT into Education in Developing Countries: The Example of Bangladesh , 2012 .

[24]  Andrew Moore,et al.  Harnessing OER to Drive Systemic Educational Change in Secondary Schooling , 2014, Journal of Learning for Development.

[25]  Gary K. W. Wong,et al.  Engaging students using their own mobile devices for learning mathematics in classroom discourse: a case study in Hong Kong , 2014, Int. J. Mob. Learn. Organisation.

[26]  Qualitative Research in Distance Education: An Analysis of Journal Literature 2005–2012 , 2013 .

[27]  IT and Education for the Poorest of the Poor: Constraints, Possibilities, and Principles , 2001 .

[28]  Dorothy Valcarcel Craig,et al.  Content Creators and Language Learners: Exploring Web 2.0 and Wikis. , 2013 .

[29]  P. McEwan Improving Learning in Primary Schools of Developing Countries , 2015 .

[30]  Marco Moretti Globalization of Mobile and Wireless Communications: Bridging the Digital Divide , 2011 .

[31]  Philip C. Abrami,et al.  What Forty Years of Research Says About the Impact of Technology on Learning , 2011 .

[32]  Edward Cutrell,et al.  Anthropology, development and ICTs: slums, youth and the mobile internet in urban India , 2012, ICTD.

[33]  Mark West and Han Ei Chew,et al.  Reading in the mobile era: A study of mobile reading in developing countries , 2014 .

[34]  D. Wagner,et al.  MOOCs for Development: Trends, Challenges, and Opportunities , 2015 .

[35]  T. Unwin Towards a framework for the use of ICT in teacher training in Africa , 2005 .

[36]  Joyojeet Pal,et al.  Multiple Mice for Computers in Education in Developing Countries , 2006, 2006 International Conference on Information and Communication Technologies and Development.

[37]  Perspectives on Human Development, Family, and Culture: Pro-poor approaches to using technology for human development: Monitoring and evaluation perspectives , 2009 .

[38]  Matthew Kam,et al.  Human computer interaction for international development: past present and future , 2011 .

[39]  Richard J. Murnane,et al.  Education and the Changing Job Market. , 2004 .

[40]  Leading the Way to Math and Science Success: Challenges and Triumphs in Paraguay: New research from the Inter-American Development Bank on the promotion of critical thinking in preprimary and primary education , 2012 .

[41]  Jean Jacques Servan-Schreiber,et al.  Le défi américain , 1967 .

[42]  John Traxler,et al.  Will Student Devices Deliver Innovation, Inclusion, and Transformation? , 2010 .

[43]  Juan Ponce,et al.  Information Technology and Student Achievement: Evidence from a Randomized Experiment in Ecuador , 2011 .

[44]  Kentaro Toyama,et al.  Technology as amplifier in international development , 2011, iConference.

[45]  Norbert Pachler,et al.  Learning to Teach Using ICT in the Secondary School: A Companion to School Experience (2nd Edition) , 2005 .

[46]  Miguel Nussbaum,et al.  Co-located single display collaborative learning for early childhood education , 2013, International Journal of Computer-Supported Collaborative Learning.

[47]  Rosalie J. Russo-Gleicher Qualitative Insights into Faculty Use of Student Support Services with Online Students at Risk: Implications for Student Retention , 2013 .

[48]  Pamela Y. Abbott Connecting ICTs to Development: The IDRC Experience , 2014 .

[49]  Jonathan Miller,et al.  Monitoring and Evaluation of ICT in Education Projects A Handbook for Developing Countries , 2005 .

[50]  Judith Ramsay,et al.  The five central psychological challenges facing effective mobile learning , 2012, Br. J. Educ. Technol..

[51]  V. Greaney,et al.  Bangladesh : assessing basic learning skills , 1998 .

[52]  Michelle Lonsdale Using Television to improve learning opportunities for indigenous children , 2010 .

[53]  Edward Cutrell,et al.  VideoKheti: making video content accessible to low-literate and novice users , 2013, CHI.

[54]  Vijayan Sugumaran,et al.  Towards a Semiotic Metrics Suite for Product Ontology Evaluation , 2009, Int. J. Intell. Inf. Technol..

[55]  Jennifer Ho,et al.  Tuned In To Student Success Assessing the Impact of Interactive Radio Instruction for the Hardest-to-Reach , 2009 .

[56]  William R. Penuel,et al.  Effectiveness of Reading and Mathematics Software Products: Findings from the First Student Cohort , 2007 .