
Hi, I recommend you all read Mr. Sang's post below on your large computers screens preferably in full screen mode especially since many of you were not present at the KICTANET forum held at Strathmore to discuss the laptops project and develop a position for the sector. There was also a brilliant presentation from UNESCO that complemented the MOE presentation, information was flowing freely and in abundance unfortunately only a few of us had the privilege of being present. For those proposing a lab please give up the device you are using to post and instead use the equipment at the nearest cyber, while at it also call Orange to install a land-line in your house in place of your mobile phones. Regards ________________________________ From: Barnabas K. Sang <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <[email protected]> Sent: Monday, 12 August 2013, 15:06 Subject: Re: [kictanet] Govt: Children will not take laptops home Dear colleagues, I want to assure all KICTAnet members that ICT Integration in Education for Primary Schools in Kenya is on course. Retired President Kibaki launched our first pilot in 2006 at Kikambala Primary School Kilifi. There has been a National ICT Strategy for Education and Training developed in 2006 (where Walubengo and others facilitated its development), guiding ICT Integration in Education. Having participated in the design of the concept meant to guide laptop programme in Primary schools, I remember encouraging members in the forum at Strathmore University to move quickly and approach all leaders on mode of distribution and use (whether to be used in lab model or use by kids as take-away device). There are a lot of intrigues surrounding the two approaches, some driven at highest levels in Government. As such, I am confident that Dr. Mathiangi and Prof. Kaimenyi are equal and listening to all positive criticism and suggestions. Today, I know the Ministry of Education was holding internal stakeholders forum (MOE's agencies, teachers heads association, unions etc.) and hope that is subsequent sessions, they will include industry experts. Otherwise, professionals can book appointments with Temba John (Project Manager at MOE) and have a presentation whenever possible. B. K. Sang Executive ICT & EGov, Uasin Gishu County Former CIO / Head of ICT Department MOE ________________________________ From: kictanet [[email protected]] on behalf of Mark Mwangi [[email protected]] Sent: Monday, August 12, 2013 2:39 PM To: Barnabas K. Sang Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions Subject: Re: [kictanet] Govt: Children will not take laptops home @wash The government exists with your taxes and support(again with taxes, patriotism blah blah blah.) It should thus be guided to the right path. Treating the government as an amorphous body that we have no real control over will leave Prof. Kaimenyi implementing horrendous things due to political pressure or rather tender pressure. As Kivuva says, it is rather strange that we are happy to sideline 7 generations in favour of incoming class one students. On Mon, Aug 12, 2013 at 2:32 PM, Kivuva <[email protected]> wrote: As a community, lets advocate for the labs. There is no reason why a class 2 student should spend 7years in school without access to a terminal while a class 1 has 8 years of laptop access. Is common sense that scarce?
______________________ Mwendwa Kivuva twitter.com/lordmwesh
google ID | Skype ID: lordmwesh
On 12 August 2013 14:01, Odhiambo Washington <[email protected]> wrote:
The more they should just build LAB with terminal and let all children
use the computers. It doesn't make sense to limit them to class 1.
"Each device would cost Sh15,000 meaning the government could spend at least Sh15 billion in the first phase". From other news I've seen before, the govt (or their mouthpieces) did say these devices would cost KES 8,500 or thereabouts.
From https://twitter.com/OleItumbi/status/346704000147664896, I can see there is a plan to build Labs, and it was in the budget.
However, my question is still on the laptop. What is the _actual_ cost for a single unit?
On 12 August 2013 13:21, Grace Githaiga <[email protected]> wrote:
The government now says schoolchildren would not be allowed to walk home with laptops once they start using them from next year.
Ministry of Education officials Monday told a stakeholders’ forum in Nairobi that lessons from other countries indicate there would be many cases of lost gadgets if school children are allowed to go home with them.
http://www.nation.co.ke/News/-/1056/1944834/-/vlrgegz/-/index.html
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