2009
DOI: 10.1007/s10796-009-9172-1
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“My child will be respected”: Parental perspectives on computers and education in Rural India

Abstract: Public spending on computer centers in rural Indian public schools raise questions about the value of expensive modern technology in extremely resourcestrapped environments. Arguments for or against providing computers in low-income schools have appeared in policy circles, academia, teacher conferences, and philanthropic discussions, with passionate rhetoric from all sides. We present the results of a qualitative study of computer-aided learning centers in schools catering primarily to Below Poverty Line (BPL)… Show more

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Cited by 57 publications
(33 citation statements)
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“…Well aware of the value of education as a pre-requisite for reasonable employment conditions, there were great expectations across many groups that the skills the youth learned at iREACH would serve them well in their pursuits of better lives. Similar findings emerged from research by Pal et al (2009) in rural India, where parents, without caring much about what their children actually did on the computers, considered computer use beneficial for their children's futures. The highest learning priorities at iREACH were ICT, English language, and Khmer typing skills and these were interrelated in that participants in more than half of the groups adhered to the view that the use of computers had helped children with their English and other skills.…”
Section: Capabilities: Education Health and Innovationsupporting
confidence: 68%
“…Well aware of the value of education as a pre-requisite for reasonable employment conditions, there were great expectations across many groups that the skills the youth learned at iREACH would serve them well in their pursuits of better lives. Similar findings emerged from research by Pal et al (2009) in rural India, where parents, without caring much about what their children actually did on the computers, considered computer use beneficial for their children's futures. The highest learning priorities at iREACH were ICT, English language, and Khmer typing skills and these were interrelated in that participants in more than half of the groups adhered to the view that the use of computers had helped children with their English and other skills.…”
Section: Capabilities: Education Health and Innovationsupporting
confidence: 68%
“…Besides, they get personal satisfaction from the fact that one of their passions -the job of their dreams, or even a job they would had never expected they could have aspired to -become reality, and that, on top, their efforts are relevant for the development of their own communities. The sense of self-confidence and accomplishment, the acquired social recognition, and the strong sense of expectation that ICTs can be the key to social and economic ascent are in line with the ICT4D literature discussing the "aspirational value" of technology (Pal et al, 2009;Pal, 2012;Ray & Kuriyan, 2010). "Aspiration" and "capacity to aspire," in line with Appadurai's work (2004) are intended as not only the formation of ambitions, but also as the capacity to determine the routes through which ambitions can be accomplished.…”
Section: This Is Ansupporting
confidence: 59%
“…In postcolonial Morocco, where French is the official language of business, switching the medium of instruction from French to [the local language] Arabic is associated with a 50% reduction in the economic returns to schooling [2]. In India, from surveys with poor parents [27], English is one of the two most sought-after skills. In the city of Mumbai in India, for instance, "schooling in [the local language] Marathi channels the child into working class jobs, while more expensive English education significantly increases the likelihood of obtaining a coveted white-collar job" [24], such that English speakers experience returns on investment in schooling between 24% and 27%, while the returns for non-speakers are 10%.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%