Students work on technology projects for improving literacy in Uruguay

Students work on technology projects for improving literacy in Uruguay

Summer internships typically involve students learning a specific skill or doing office work to get their foot in the door of an organization. This is not the case for Carnegie Mellon Qatar students Asma Hamid, a junior information systems major, and Afnan Fahim, a sophomore computer science major. Asma and Afnan were determined to put their academic experience to a real world test, and participated in this year’s Innovative Student Technology ExPerience (iSTEP) internship program, joining Carnegie Mellon colleagues from the Pittsburgh campus.

iSTEP is an annual program organized by the TechBridgeWorld research group at Carnegie Mellon University. The program provides students with the opportunity to apply skills learned in the classroom to real world challenges in developing communities. In recent years, iSTEP interns have worked on projects in Tanzania and Bangladesh. This year, the participants worked to improve English literacy skills in Montevideo, Uruguay.

For the first time, iSTEP is working with a government agency – the Administración Nacional de Educación Pública (National Administration of Public Education, ANEP), which is responsible for the development, management and administration of Uruguay’s public education system. ANEP was pleased to work with iSTEP since the focus of the internship program was to customize technology solutions to the community’s needs. To identify these needs, the iSTEP team conducted several focus groups and interviews with administrators, teachers and students at Liceo 39, a local public high school, as well as student-teachers affiliated with ANEP.

Through these partnerships, the iSTEP team worked on three technology projects for improving literacy, which have the potential to influence educational programs in Uruguay. These projects were: One-Laptop-Per-Child/Computer Tool (OCT), a Facebook Tool (FBT), and a Content Authoring Tool (CAT). The OCT and FBT projects focused on creating engaging applications for students to practice their English literacy skills on the XO laptop – low cost laptops designed for educational purposes for kids in developing communities as a part of One Laptop Per Child campaign – and through Facebook, respectively. The CAT project allows teachers to customize literacy content on the OCT and FBT as well as track student progress. The goals of these tools are to encourage students to practice their English literacy skills during their free time and to make it easier for teachers to distribute practice material.

These projects are near and dear to Silvia Pessoa, Ph.D., a professor at Carnegie Mellon University in Qatar who is from Uruguay and graduated from Liceo 39, as well as an advisor for the 2011 iSTEP internship. “I am impressed by the team’s commitment to improving education through technology,” Pessoa said. “The team has gathered great knowledge of what technology solutions would work best to make a positive contribution on English teaching in high schools in Uruguay.”

Afnan, based in Montevideo, was the technical lead of the Facebook Tool project and Asma was the technical floater based in Doha, providing support across all three projects. In describing iSTEP, Asma said, “iSTEP was the best internship I have ever had. I have always been interested in research and the technology research experience iSTEP provided us with is priceless. Carnegie Mellon Qatar gave me a strong foundation to pursue a career in research in the future and the iSTEP helped me get a feel of what it would be like. It’s great.” In addition, Afnan was pleased with language not being a barrier. He said, “My time in Uruguay proved to be an excellent experience, professionally and more importantly, culturally. The internship provided me with a great experience in understanding how material learned in the classroom can be directly applied to improve literacy in any other part of the world, where people didn’t even speak the same language as I did.”

iSTEP is an annual internship where participants go through a long application process, as well as an intense training program. Those who meet the criteria are selected to participate in the 10 week internship. Another non-traditional aspect of the iSTEP internship program is that students start their preparations well before the official internship begins. During the spring semester, the interns trained for four months through mini courses that introduced them to field research in developing communities and simulated the summer internship.

The Qatar Foundation and Student Affairs at Carnegie Mellon sponsored Asma and Afnan’s participation with the iSTEP 2011 internship program. The program was also supported by many individual donors.

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