Saturday, August 27, 2011

DepEd: Laguna students to get tablet computers

06/07/2011 | 08:51 PM

For this school year, students at some schools in Laguna province will have something even their counterparts in Metro Manila may envy: tablet computers.

Department of Education Undersecretary Tonisito Umali hinted Monday this may be the basis of a long-term DepEd program to replace heavy books with high-tech gadgets.

"Sa Laguna binibigyan nila ng tablet ang mga estudyante sa Laguna. Kausap natin si Gov. E.R. Ejercito, yan malaking bagay rin dahil makakatulong yan sa usaping kakulangan ng aklat," he said in an interview on dwIZ radio.

(In Laguna, some schools are getting tablets. Governor Emilio Ramon Ejercito III believes this will be a big deal for students because it will help address the lack of textbooks.)

However, Ejercito did not immediately say how many schools or students in Laguna will be using the tablet computers.

A feature article on the Laguna government website indicated the eRizal Tablet is to be distributed to schools on the 150th birth anniversary of national hero Dr. Jose Rizal, June 19.

"The eRizal Tablet provides an easier and a more interactive access of students to electronic textbook copies, and avoids them from bringing numerous and heavy ones," it said.

Provincial Administrator Leonardo Ragaza Jr. said this tool would sharpen Laguna’s competitiveness when it comes to education.

Meanwhile, Umali said the DepEd is considering developing online learning modules that can use such tablet computers.

"Plano ng DepEd ang pag-develop ng modules, i-upload sa Internet o i-download ng batang may tablet ... dapat pagisipang mabuti," he said.

(We have been considering developing online modules that will be uploaded to the Internet, to be downloaded by pupils with tablets. We have to thresh out the details.)

He added that this is part of the government's efforts to be "more innovative" in the field of education by using computers and the Internet.

"Nagiging innovative lang tayo, sa computer at Internet, using it as a tool for learning and teaching (We have to be innovative. We can use the computer and Internet as a tool for learning and teaching)," he said. — TJD, GMA News

DepEd: Public-private partnerships key to ICT education

JM TUAZON, GMA News
07/13/2011 | 03:30 PM

Engaging the private sector in bringing technology tools to public schools in the country is a key ingredient in the Department of Education's (DepEd) push for information and communications technology (ICT) in education in the country, a ranking official said on Wednesday.

Speaking to the press at the sidelines of the 2nd Asia Pacific Ministerial Forum on ICT Education, DepEd Sec. Armin Luistro said that the government alone cannot address current education challenges, such as the need to impart 21st-century skills to students.

Luistro said that, with the help of the private sector, they were able to make great strides in bringing ICT to schools.

"One of our major achievements this year is that we were able to connect all 7,000 public high schools in the country, except for those without power and mobile connectivity," Luistro said.

"[In these endeavors], you need innovation and Public-Private Partnership (PPP) to get the projects moving," he added.

Luistro shared that GILAS (Gearing up Internet Literacy and Access for Students) —a collaboration among several Philippine corporations aiming to connect public schools in the country to the Internet— provided funding for connecting about half of all the public high schools to the Internet.

"Many of the initiatives applying ICT in education in the Philippines were made possible through this productive partnership between the private companies and the public school system," Luistro said during his keynote speech at the forum.

Bridging gaps

The DepEd chief was aware, however, that there are more pressing problems in the education system that needs to be addressed by the government, such as the lack of classrooms and textbooks in schools.

"Indeed, there are no quick and easy answers to the concerns that we face. These concerns, however, should not be addressed by piecemeal solutions, but through a comprehensive package of interventions," he stressed.

Despite the progress they have achieved with their ICT initiatives, Luistro said their efforts still fall short of equipping students with 21st-century skills.

"[But] our most viable option [right now] is to seize the moment and institute the necessary reforms to equip our learners with the necessary competencies for the future," he said.

For the time being, and until such time that ICT implementation in the education system has gone full swing, Luistro said the most useful application of technology in education is the linkage of students and teachers to their peers in other localities, as well as to hard-to-find resources.

He cited the Learning Resources Management and Development System co-developed by the agency and the Australian Government Overseas Aid Program (AusAID), which sought to make learning resources available to teachers.

"We are in the process of expanding access to this portal as well as populating it with more resources developed both internally and outside the Department," he said.

Assessing progress

But how effective are these projects, really?

Dr. Gwang-Jo Kim, director of the UNESCO office in Bangkok and co-chairman of the two-day Manila forum, stressed the need for a standard assessment system in evaluating ICT in education.

"We found that, except for a few cases, evaluation endeavors [in some countries] are not fully supported by budgets, and do not focus on outcome," Kim told the audience at the forum, composed mainly of education ministers in the region.

Kim said that even if countries do focus on outcome in their evaluation of projects, "student learning is not the primary evaluation objective."

He cited a certain study in which students where given computing devices to aid in education, where the desired objective was not met.

"What's troublesome, [the study said], is that when it comes to the use of technology in schools, it does not make any difference in students' math scores," he said.

"But when students use technology at home, there's an improvement in the score."

Kim stressed that there is a need to measure or evaluate if ICT-supported learning is really happening through these projects.

"Are students using ICT for their learning or something else? We automatically assume that when we give devices, they will use it for learning. Is that the case?" he pointed out. — TJD, GMA News