About me

I am Prateeksha Tiwari, currently a State Bank of India Youth For India Fellow of SBI Foundation. I work in Wankaner block, Gujarat in association with an NGO called Aga Khan Rural Support Programme-India.

There is more about my work on Facebook, Instagram, and SBI Youth For India.

The digital ‘drought’

Everyone – be it Ministry of Human Resources Development, Gujarat Government, school teachers or parents – believes learning and using computers for education is the need of the hour. But with student:working computer ratio as high as 30:1, not every student gets to use the computer, let alone be able to learn using one.

To tech or to not tech

Technology is not a panacea for problems afflicting education. Merely replacing human instruction with technology will not produce any difference in learning outcomes. Because it usually involves a substantial investment, it is expected to bring miraculous results – which it cannot unless it is combined with motivated teachers, and an environment conducive for education at school and at home. Technology should be oriented towards supplementing the teachers, and be another tool in their armour with which they can educate better – and not replacing them.

Why One Mouse Per Child (OMPC)?

The idea is to bring the benefit of technology-assisted learning to as many students as possible while making the most of limited financial and hardware resources available. My project endeavours to make a modest attempt at bridging the existing rural-urban and public school-private school digital divide using pre-existing resources (computers, multimedia content), free content (Microsoft Mouse Mischief, informative videos) and low-cost technology (computer mice).

Teaching with multimedia

Teachers in three project schools use multimedia content to supplement standard ‘chalk-and-talk’ instruction. By using audio-video medium; teachers find that student attention and interest are retained longer, complex and abstract concepts are explained easily, and subject understanding is improved.

No more raising hands, it’s click click now

After the lesson concludes, each student participates in a quiz based on the same lesson – with a mouse! Students answer multiple choice, image-based, and yes/no questions testing their understanding of the subject matter. It is a form of immediate revision – the kind which students perceive as a ‘game’ they play with their classmates. There is always a race to be the first one to answer correctly!

Informal assessment = Fun + Immediate correction

Consolidated result is displayed after every question answered by the students. While the students enjoy playing the ‘quiz game’ with their classmates, teachers get vital insight into level of students’ understanding of a particular topic addressed in the question. If many students do not answer the question correctly, the teacher can revise the concept immediately.

Raising student leaders

We encourage students to lead quiz sessions for their classmates, especially when the teacher is occupied with other duties. Apart from curriculum material, quizzes have been prepared to test general knowledge, social and health awareness, and moral science. Leader students learn to operate the computer in a much more nuanced fashion, enjoy playing the teacher for a while, and earn social capital in their peer group.