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A solar-powered computer lab bridges digital divide

Posted on : Thursday , 25th August 2016

 An ordinary bus-turned computer lab is boosting digital literacy among thousands of youths in Nairobi’s slums.

 
Inside the bus used by Craft Silicon Foundation as a classroom for computer classes in Kawangware, Nairobi. The vehicle had its interior customised, its seats removed and replaced with 64 chairs and 32 reading tables. Each table has a computer desktop, modifications that have turned the ordinary bus into a typical computer lab.
 
It is 11 o’clock. Ruth Wanjiru and her friend jump out of a 72-seater bus parked at a chief’s camp in Kawangware, Nairobi.
 
Minutes later, a group of teenage boys and girls alight from the bus, some clutching bags, others carrying books in their arms.
 
Watching the boys and girls from a distance, it is easy to mistake them for regular passengers. But no! The teenagers are not passengers, and the blue bus is not exactly a bus; it is a moving computer classroom.
 
“We study inside here,” says Wanjiru, pointing at the bus. “This bus is a mobile ICT classroom,” she adds.
 
The vehicle had its interior customised, its seats removed and replaced with 64 chairs and 32 reading tables. Each table has a computer desktop, modifications that have turned the ordinary bus into a typical computer lab.
 
Besides the 32 monitors, the computer lab is fitted with specialised servers, education courseware, Internet, printers and scanners. All the gadgets are powered by four photovoltaic cells installed atop the vehicles’ roof. The solar panels trap energy, which is then stored in four car batteries.
 
“We study computer packages, which are offered for three months. A lesson lasts only two hours,” says Wanjiru, 18, adding they are 32 in her class.
 
She says she started the computer classes early this year after completing high school last year. Her parents, whom she lives with in Kangemi, run a small grocery kiosk to take care of her and her six siblings.
 
 “My parents’ business does not generate enough money to take me to college. Before, I would spend most of my time at home or doing menial jobs that paid little,” explains Wanjiru, who now runs a small cyber café and photocopy business.
 
CONNECTING WOMEN
 
So how did she learn about the computer classes?
 
“Sometime in February this year, a friend informed me about the mobile ICT bus, which offers free computer classes. I got interested and registered for the programme.”
 
Elizabeth Akinyi, Wanjiru’s classmate, describes the experience as an answered prayer.
 
“It is very convenient for youths like us who cannot afford bus fare on a daily basis to town for  classes,” says Akinyi, a Kibera resident.
 
Wanjiru adds that before she enrolled for the lessons, she could hardly operate a computer, hence accessing vital information on the Web, such as scholarships or job opportunities, was akin to a jigsaw puzzle.
 
A recent study revealed that digital literacy is still very low among Kenyan women.
 
The October 2015 study, conducted by Web Foundation, covered 10 developing countries including Kenya. It found out that only 37 per cent of women used the Internet, compared to 59 per cent of men. Lack of know-how and high cost of accessing Internet emerged as the major barriers keeping women offline, the report’s authors pointed out.
 
While Internet use does not necessarily translate into new job opportunities or enhanced income, policy experts believe that access opens up more choices.
 
Mr Sam Wambugu, an Informatics specialist, says digital technology can be a powerful tool to disadvantaged groups and can improve socio-economic and health outcomes for women, men and children in developing countries.
 
While access to the Internet has increased over the past two decades, not so many girls and women around the world are enjoying the cyberspace. A recent study titled, Offline and falling behind: Barriers to Internet adoption, estimates that approximately 4.4 billion people are offline across the world, of which 52 per cent are women.
 
“The differing amount of information between those who have access to the Internet, especially broadband access, and those who do not have access is technically referred to as digital divide or digital split.”
 
“It is generally agreed that the gender digital divide stems primarily from the structural inequalities that exist between men and women in many societies. This means that women are less likely to reap the benefits of new economic and social opportunities of ICT, including employment and access to money,” he says.
 
Contrary to a common belief that women may be more “technophobic” than men, a study conducted in 2011 by the University of Southern California, in collaboration with the United Nations, found that women are actually more active digital users than men; if  socioeconomic factors like employment, education and income are controlled.
 
Illiteracy emerges as the biggest barrier in keeping away girls and women from ‘going digital’. Across all developing countries, about 25 per cent of women are illiterate, compared to 14 per cent of men, according to the Women and the Web study. 
 
DIGITAL LITERACY
 
Women represent nearly two-thirds of the illiterate population worldwide, with almost 40 per cent of offline women citing unfamiliarity with technology as a reason for not accessing the Internet.
 
This is part of the reason why Ms Priya Budhabhatti, chief executive officer Craft Silicon Foundation, a Nairobi based non-profit organisation, introduced a customised computer bus to provide free ICT training to youths from poor backgrounds; mostly girls in major slums.
 
Ms Priya founded the digital literacy programme five years ago as an intervention to close the wide digital literacy gap.
 
 “The project’s aim is to promote universal computer literacy among the youths and young girls in the slums and enable them use computer knowledge and skills to seize opportunities that will make them self-reliant. The programme also aims at promoting development in these areas,” she says, adding that the intervention also helps keep the youth off drugs and crime. 
 
She notes that youths who benefit from the programme are expected to go out into the market and create jobs.
 
Mr Alex Chege, Silicon Foundation Project Manager, explains that they have three sessions daily, and all the computers are powered by the four solar panels.
 
“To recruit students, we normally have a street vetting programme. Our main focus is youths, especially those coming from poor backgrounds,” says Mr Chege.
 
“The programme does not end at the end of studies, we also connect the students with our partners for job opportunities and also offer room for our best students to advance their studies in ICT,” he adds.
 
Tech experts believe that as ICT increasingly becomes an essential tool in both our personal and professional lives, enabling access to these technologies, delivering relevant applications and services and ensuring inclusion in the lucrative tech sector will become a critical factor in women’s ability to contribute fully to their individual, family and societal outcomes.
 
According to Mr Wambugu, lack of gender-disaggregated data is among the biggest bottlenecks in addressing women’s needs in technology. As a result, it becomes difficult to determine and draw conclusions on specific usage trends. Poor attention by policymakers in the ICT sector also contributes to the technology dearth among women.
 
Lack of access to the internet, according to the Women and the Web Survey, is giving rise to a second digital divide, where women and girls risk being left further behind.
 
That gap soars to 43 per cent in sub-Saharan Africa, where men are almost twice as likely to have access to the Internet as women. The report issued a call to action to double the number of women online in the next three years, both by bridging the gender gap and broadening overall access in developing countries.
 
Ms Priya’s mobile computer lab programme serves as an example of initiatives that seek to close the existing ICT gap, especially among girls, who are financially disadvantaged. 

Source : www.nation.co.ke

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