Expensive private schools took to
them a while ago, but the tablet is now making digital inroads into smaller
schools, government vidyalayas, and even model anganwadis. But sceptics are not
yet ready to write off paper
Do the students of the Muslim
Educational Society (MES) International School at Pattambi in north Kerala miss
the joys of opening a stiff new notebook? The pleasures of slitting open uncut
textbook pages? In their second year of using tablets as the school-given
replacement to text and notebooks, the thrill of summoning a new pixelated page
is still fresh, and such losses are not yet felt.
The
phenomenon of the `tablet as textbook' is gradually gaining school ground, and
although it has covered only a handful of the 1.5 million schools in India, its
proponents are selling it as the `paperless' future of education.
Redeemed
from the 5-kg backpack, 800 7th to 12th graders at MES go to school armed only
with a 720g tablet and a few notebooks. Another 800 middle scholars are set to
join their ramrod ranks next year. The
Rs 19,000 tabs given to them (with EMI options) are preloaded with dictionaries
and curriculum-specific course material that's animated, hyperlinked and
interactive. Within school premises, students latch on to the institution's
secure intranet and at home, have controlled access to the web from where they
download NCERT textbooks in PDF.
“It's
the democratization of access to study material,“ maintains Atul Kulshrestha,
founder of Extramarks, the edutech company that has turned MES and five other
schools `paperless'. A teacher's notes on the digital whiteboard are
automatically saved on the tabs via wi-fi.
“Each
school's course material (for CBSE, ICSE and four other state boards) is
developed by our content creators in conjunction with its school teachers,“
says Kulshrestha, whose tabs communicate in Hindi and English. The often self explanatory
course notes apparently quickens the work of teachers, who can keep tabs on the
tabs, with direct access to a student's homework and tests.
The
shift to tablets and apps not only marks a shift in pedagogical practice, but
also an evolution in learning behaviour. Says Navaneeth Shashikumar, a tenth
grader at MES: “The audio-visual material is easy to comprehend. For example if
we are learning about the functioning of the heart in biology, we can access
references outside the syllabus on the tab.“
He
adds that 2-D textbook diagrams now come alive with depth and movement. “We can
highlight important sections in the text and refer to them later. Difficult
words are easy to look up in the embedded dictionary. Revision is also easier
as the day's lessons can be recalled with a click.“
A
Technopak report says 12.5% of Indian schools have digital classrooms, and
estimates the current market size as $1b.Apart from mid-tier schools, the tab
is also being deployed free of cost in civic and aided schools, and even
anganwadis. The Shiv Sena-helmed BMC in Mumbai has started dispensing tabs in
the city's civic schools -the Rs 300 crore project has already run into a
controversy with allega tions of nepotism. And Kerala is due to kickstart a
kindred IT@School project.Tablets have also been working to draw students to 66
state `adarsh' anganwadis in Chhindwara, Madhya Pradesh.
Manufactured
by ConveGenius, a Noida-based edutainment startup, the Rs 6,000 CGSlate,
sponsored by the local zilla parishads, has helped children aged 3-5 years
grasp the fundaments of Hindi, English, Maths and personal care through
reward-based interactive games, songs and rhymes. Amita Singh, the anganwaadi
supervisor of the villages of Nagalwadi, Bijorigumai and Khirsadoh, says the
pre-primary section's strength rose from 12 to 28 after the tabs entered class
-word got around the village that `computers' were being used to teach
children.
“If
a child took 10 days to learn a rhyme with a teacher, a couple of viewings of
the animated video now has them picking it up in a couple,“ says Singh, adding
that the kindergartens now rely on the devices, not books. The tabs are
especially useful when teachers themselves have a poor handle on the subject,
she notes.
Companies
like ConveGenius are following Ola's modus operandi and aggregating content
from third-party content creators. Kulshrestha, who developes his own content,
says, “By curating online resources, we take a child exactly where she needs to
go for supplementary information so she doesn't have to hunt the Internet for
it. On the other hand, free online resources like Khan Academy are
West-centric.“
But
critics point to the downside. “Tablets are okay as supplementary tools for
research, but they shouldn't replace text books,“ says Sushant Kalra, director,
Parwarish Institute of Parenting, a Delhi consultancy that focuses on parenting
and education. “Kids are losing touch with the real world as it is. If you also
place their education on tablets, it will further affect their real-world interactions
and health.“
Another
cautionary voice comes from Navneet Publications, whose stationary , reference
guides and prep tests have long been part of education. They too have entered
the digital fray with eSense, a subsidiary that provides ebooks of its print
portfolio as well as pre-filled tablets, but its MD Sunil Gala is not writing
off paper just yet. “Not everyone in education is convinced of its comparative
benefits,“ he says, adding that no school that claims to be `paperless' is
actually 100% paperfree because some amount of writing, geometry and drawing
will always be done by hand. Exams, after all, are handwritten.
The
annual curriculum updates on a tab are made by changing a device's SD card,
which could cost Rs 1,500 to Rs 2,000, depending on the grade. “A fifth grader
may spend Rs 1,700 on new notebooks, guides and textbooks every year,“ says
Gala. An SD card plus the extra outlay of Rs 500 on stationary , does make tabs
seem the more expensive option, not to mention repair costs if the child damages
the tab.
This
year, Navneet supplied tablets to 15 government-aided Marathi-medium schools in
Maharashtra. The tabs come with PDFs of state textbooks and interactive eBooks
of its supplementary resources. “But it's a costly proposition to replace textbooks
with tablets, and since most schools in India aim to be affordable, who will
bear these expenses?“ Gala asks.
Additional
reporting by Sumeet Keswani and P Nijesh in Pattambi
Source | Times of India | 23 August 2015
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