Archive for the ‘Education’ Category.

Two blind teenagers admitted into one of Peru’s toughest universities

23 September, 2008 [ 11:57 ]

Living in Peru
Israel J. Ruiz

Cinthia Laura Chaupin and Nathaly Huapaya proved that being blind was not going to hold them back from fulfilling their dreams and reaching their highest aspirations.

The two girls were lauded by the heads of San Marcos University, the oldest university in the Americas, after being admitted into their university, one of the hardest to get into in Peru.

With smiles on their faces that reflected the satisfaction of having reached their goal, the girls assured they would take full advantage of everything the university had to offer.

“The hardest part of the exam was the math and physics because you have to imagine the problems, the rest was just a matter of studying,” said 17-year-old Cinthia on Monday as her loved ones proudly gathered around her at an awards ceremony.

“My dream is to get a doctorate in Political Sciences and be a militant member of a political party,” said Nathaly, thanking her parents and teachers for their dedication, trust and patience.

“This prize is for them,” said the 17-year-old girl.

Both girls received computers and certificates from the university, who gave the hard-working students a warm welcome.

Over 20,000 students took the admission exam on September 21 to attempt to get into the university. 1,762 students were accepted.

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Peru to be first with new OLPC laptop with Windows

Peru will become the first country ever to run a trial of OLPC laptops running on Windows XP.

Dan Nystedt (IDG News Service) 17 September, 2008 09:29:00

ARN

The government of Peru will run the first ever trial of the One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) association’s low-cost XO laptop running on Microsoft’s Windows XP operating system, putting the nation at the heart of a software controversy.

The little green laptop, which OLPC is trying to reduce to just US$100 per device, will be given out to school children throughout Peru for use over the next nine months as part of the trial. Currently, the XO costs around US$200 each to build.

Kids and their teachers in the country will use the laptops as part of efforts to introduce more technology into classrooms in Peru, including Microsoft’s Student Innovation Suite of software, which includes Microsoft Office 2003 as well as Learning Essentials 1.0 for Microsoft Office.

The groups did not say how many laptops would be handed out as part of the trial nor when it would start.

The program puts Peru at the heart of a software controversy that has been raging for years between those who advocate making software and its source code free, such as Linux OS developers, and those who charge for software and keep the development recipes secret, such as Microsoft.

OLPC started out offering the XO with Linux because the OS cost nothing and organizers believed it made the device run more efficiently. Some open-source software advocates hoped the XO would spread the use of Linux and the open source philosophy to the 5 billion people living without computers in the developing world.

Microsoft also wants to capture the next 5 billion people for its future market potential.

The decision to put Windows on the laptops came about because officials in some countries, such as Egypt, feared a non-Windows laptop would ill prepare students for the real world, in which Microsoft software dominates.

OLPC ultimately decided to ignore the controversy and follow its mission of delivering laptops to kids in developing nations to help ensure they don’t get left out of the global computing revolution.

The group now offers XO laptops with either Linux or Windows XP. Within the next few months, laptops armed with both operating systems will be available.

OLPC was started by professors from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and is led by Nicholas Negroponte.

Microsoft launched a company program a few years ago called Unlimited Potential, with a similar goal of spreading computing throughout the developing world. Microsoft hopes to introduce technology to one billion more people by 2015.

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Peru: University of Lima not to sell Surco campus

Lima | 20 August, 2008 [ 12:30 ]

Living in Peru
Israel J. Ruiz

The University of Lima, one of the country’s leading private universities, affirmed on Wednesday that it would not be selling its campus in the Limean district of Surco.

Aside from rumors that the university was going to sell its campus in the Monterrico area, there were speculations that the private university was going to open a site in southern Lima.

In a press release, university representatives affirmed it was false that the campus in Surco would be sold stating a sale was not in line with the institution’s mission.

The press release clarified the campus would not be sold now or in the future and would not have a site south of metropolitan Lima.

It was also announced that there were plans to continue expanding facilities for the benefit and comfort of students.

Expansion plans include the construction of a new building with more classrooms and laboratories as well as three underground parking lots for over 1,100 vehicles and a new 20,000 square-meter (215,278 square-foot) park.

The university has also announced it is to build a new, more modern library.

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Laptop computers a hit in remote Peru

26/12/2007 8:00:00 PM. | AP

Live News

Doubts about whether poor, rural children really can benefit from quirky little computers evaporate as quickly as the morning dew in this hilltop Andean village, where 50 primary school children got machines from the One Laptop Per Child project six months ago.

These offspring of peasant families whose monthly earnings rarely exceed the cost of one of the US$188 ($A215) laptops - people who can ill afford pencil and paper much less books - can’t get enough of their “XO” laptops.

At breakfast, they’re already powering up the combination library/videocam/audio recorder/music maker/drawing kits.

At night, they’re dozing off in front of them - if they’ve managed to keep older siblings from waylaying the coveted machines.

“It’s really the kind of conditions that we designed for,” Walter Bender, president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology spinoff program One Laptop Per Child, said of this agrarian backwater up a precarious dirt road.

Founded in 2005 by former MIT Media Lab director Nicholas Negroponte, One Laptop has retreated from early boasts that developing-world governments would snap up millions of the pint-sized laptops at US$100 ($A114) each.

In a backhanded tribute, One Laptop now faces homegrown competitors everywhere from Brazil to India - and a full-court press from Intel’s more power-hungry Classmate.

But no competitor approaches the XO in innovation. It is hard drive-free, runs on the Linux operating system and stretches wireless networks with “mesh” technology that lets each computer in a village relay data to the others.

Mass production began last month and Negroponte says he expects at least 1.5 million machines to be sold by next November. Even that would be far less than Negroponte originally envisioned. The higher-than-initially-advertised price and a lack of the Windows operating system, still being tested for the XO, have dissuaded many potential government buyers.

Peru made the single biggest order to date - more than 272,000 machines - in its quest to turn around a primary education system that the World Economic Forum recently ranked last among 131 countries surveyed. Uruguay was the No. 2 buyer of the laptops, inking a contract for 100,000.

Negroponte said 150,000 more laptops will get shipped to countries including Rwanda, Mongolia, Haiti, and Afghanistan in early 2008 through “Give One, Get One,” a US-based promotion ending December 31 in which you buy a pair of laptops for US$399 and donate one or both.

The children of Arahuay prove One Laptop’s transformative conceit: that you can revolutionise education and democratise the internet by giving a simple, durable, power-stingy but feature-packed laptop to the worlds’ poorest kids.

“Some tell me that they don’t want to be like their parents, working in the fields,” first-grade teacher Erica Velasco says of her pupils. She had just sent them to the Internet to seek out photos of invertebrates - animals without backbones.

Antony, 12, wants to become an accountant.

Alex, 7, hopes to be a lawyer.

Kevin, 11, wants to play trumpet.

Saida, 10, is already a promising videographer, judging from her artful recording of the town’s recent Fiesta de la Virgen.

“What they work with most is the (built-in) camera. They love to record,” says Maria Antonieta Mendoza, an Education Ministry psychologist studying the Arahuay pilot project to devise strategies for the big rollout when the new school year begins in March.

Before the laptops, the only cameras the kids at Santiago Apostol school saw in this hamlet of 800 people were carried by tourists coming for festivals or the local Inca ruins.

Arahuay’s lone industry is agriculture. Surrounding fields yield avocados, mangoes, potatoes, corn, alfalfa and an Andean fruit called cherimoya.

Many adults share only weekends with their children, spending the work week in fields many hours’ walk from town and relying on charities to help keep their families nourished.

When they finish school, young people tend to abandon the village.

Peru’s head of educational technology, Oscar Becerra, is betting the One Laptop program can reverse this rural exodus to the squalor of Lima’s shantytowns four hours away.

It’s the best answer yet to “a global crisis of education” in which curricula have no relevance, he said.

“If we make education pertinent, something the student enjoys, then it won’t matter if the classroom’s walls are straw or the students are sitting on fruit boxes.”

Indeed, Arahuay’s elementary school population rose by 10 when families learned the laptop pilot was coming, said Guillermo Lazo, the school’s director.

The XOs that Peru is buying will be distributed to pupils in 9,000 elementary schools from the Pacific to the Amazon basin where a single teacher serves all grades, Becerra said.

Although Peru boasts thousands of rural satellite downlinks that provide Internet access, only about 4,000 of the schools getting XOs will be connected, said Becerra.

Negroponte says One Laptop is committed to helping Peru overcome that hurdle. Without internet access, he believes, the program is incomplete.

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Peru’s illiteracy rate drops to 7.1 percent

Living in Peru

Based on information taken from the national census carried out in October 2007, the number of illiterate people in Peru has decreased 5.7 percentage points, said Renan Quispe, the head of country’s national statistics institute (INEI).

When compared to the national census in 1993, when it was reported that 12.8 percent of the Andean country was illiterate, a 5.7 percentage point drop was registered in 2007.

According to statistics, the country’s illiteracy rate is now at 7.1 percent.

When comparing 1993 and 2007 census results, reports showed there was a greater decline in the number of illiterate women than illiterate men.

While the amount of illiterate women in Peru was registered at 18.3 percent in 1993, it dropped to 10.6 percent in 2007. In the case of men, it declined from 7.1 percent in 1993 to 3.6 percent in 2007.

Furthermore, it was reported that the greatest drop in the country’s illiteracy was seen in Peru’s rural areas, where illiteracy decreased over 10 percentage points to 19.7 percent.

It was also reported that the number of people that were studying in Peru had increased.

Statistics show that over 8 million people in the Andean country have attended school while more than 5 million Peruvians over the age of 15 are attending higher learning institutions.

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