School in the cloud: What happened after TED Prize 2013 | Sugata Mitra | TEDxUFM
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0:10 - 0:13The last time I stood
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0:13 - 0:16on a TED main stage
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0:18 - 0:22was in February, 2013.
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0:24 - 0:27It was in Long Beach, California.
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0:30 - 0:33TED gave me their prize
at that point in time, -
0:33 - 0:35a million dollars.
-
0:36 - 0:38I thought they would put it
in my bank account, -
0:38 - 0:40but they didn't, actually.
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0:40 - 0:41(Laughter)
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0:41 - 0:43They gave it to the university.
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0:44 - 0:48But anyhow, here I am again
on a TED main stage. -
0:51 - 0:53I spent the million dollars.
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0:53 - 0:54(Laughter)
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0:55 - 0:58I'll tell you what happened next.
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0:58 - 1:00I thought I'll give you a report
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1:00 - 1:04on what I did with the money,
and where we are at this point in time. -
1:04 - 1:07It's not all gone;
there's just a little bit left. -
1:07 - 1:08(Laughter)
-
1:11 - 1:16When TED gave me the prize, they also gave
another prize, a smaller one, -
1:17 - 1:23to Sundance Institute to make
a documentary on the whole project. -
1:24 - 1:27The documentary will be called
"The School in the Cloud." -
1:27 - 1:31At the moment,
the documentary is not finished, -
1:31 - 1:34but I got hold of a trailer
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1:34 - 1:37and I thought
you might enjoy watching that. -
1:40 - 1:43(Video) Sugata Mitra:
What is the future of learning? -
1:45 - 1:50Could it be that we are heading
towards or maybe in a future -
1:50 - 1:52when knowing is obsolete?
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1:53 - 1:56Could it be that we don't need
to go to school at all? -
1:57 - 2:00Could it be that at the point in time
when you need to know something, -
2:00 - 2:03you can find it out in two minutes?
-
2:03 - 2:05[In 2013, Sugata Mitra asked TED
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2:05 - 2:08to help him discover
the future of learning.] -
2:09 - 2:11My wish is to build a facility
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2:12 - 2:15where children go on
these intellectual adventures -
2:16 - 2:19driven by the big questions
which their mediators put in. -
2:20 - 2:22It's a facility
which is practically unmanned; -
2:22 - 2:25it will be called the School in the Cloud.
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2:29 - 2:32Woman: (Hindi) We really want him
to become an educated person, -
2:32 - 2:35but it's difficult
because of the state of the school. -
2:35 - 2:37[Former primary school, Korakati]
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2:37 - 2:39Good teachers don’t go to remote places.
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2:39 - 2:43The remoter you get,
the worse primary education becomes. -
2:43 - 2:46[Sugata has chosen sites
for the project in rural India... -
2:46 - 2:47...and in northeast England.]
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2:47 - 2:50I don't know how to build
a "School in the Cloud" -
2:50 - 2:52because I have never built one.
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2:54 - 2:56So, I'm trying to figure out a design
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2:56 - 2:59which, really speaking, belongs
to children and is run by children. -
2:59 - 3:03So, that's what's going on;
it's a great big experiment. -
3:06 - 3:09Schools as we know them now are outdated.
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3:10 - 3:11Teacher: As soon as I started doing it
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3:11 - 3:14and seeing the buzz
and the enjoyment of the kids, -
3:14 - 3:18it made me look at my lessons differently,
and the role of a teacher differently. -
3:18 - 3:22Less talking at the front
and more handing it over to the children. -
3:24 - 3:26Girl: I really like it
because it's independent, -
3:26 - 3:28and you get to work with your friends.
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3:28 - 3:31SM: Korakati may or may not be different
from the schools of England, -
3:31 - 3:34but that's what we are going to look for.
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3:34 - 3:37The idea is to have
a complete glass front -
3:37 - 3:38to a building here
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3:38 - 3:41and a large screen for a full size
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3:41 - 3:43Skyped-in mediator.
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3:43 - 3:46Boy: Teachers will teach us from London
using the Internet. -
3:51 - 3:54Woman: All I ever really wanted
to know about computers -
3:54 - 3:55was how to turn them off.
-
3:57 - 3:58Hi!
-
3:58 - 4:00Hello Raveen. Hello [unclear].
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4:00 - 4:01How nice to see you.
-
4:02 - 4:03Look what I made.
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4:04 - 4:06Can you see what this is?
Whoo! -
4:06 - 4:08(Laughter)
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4:08 - 4:10Boy: English is spoken everywhere.
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4:10 - 4:13If I learn it from childhood,
then when I grow up -
4:16 - 4:17Woman: You help a child to the point
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4:17 - 4:19where if he wants to know something
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4:19 - 4:22he knows where to look for it,
and how to look for it. -
4:22 - 4:26SM: More affluent children have people
who will help them to learn anyway. -
4:26 - 4:28But it's children in desolate areas
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4:28 - 4:31who really desperately need
to know how to learn, -
4:32 - 4:34and I know that the Internet does that.
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4:34 - 4:37Learning itself is actually
an emergent phenomenon -
4:37 - 4:40like a hive or a thunderstorm.
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4:40 - 4:44It's not about making learning happen;
it's about letting it happen. -
4:44 - 4:47[School in the cloud]
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4:47 - 4:49(Applause)
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5:00 - 5:01I made a project.
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5:02 - 5:04I made a project for TED.
-
5:04 - 5:08The way it works is that they tell you
what to do with the money if you get it. -
5:09 - 5:11So I made out a project.
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5:11 - 5:15The project was that I would build
seven laboratories. -
5:16 - 5:18Seven learning laboratories.
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5:19 - 5:23Five of them would be in India,
and two would be in England. -
5:25 - 5:27What sort of labs?
-
5:27 - 5:31Well, for that, you need to know
what happened before -
5:31 - 5:33which I won't go over,
-
5:33 - 5:37but what happened in the 15 years
before the TED prize -
5:38 - 5:42was that I was able to figure out
something which all of you know -
5:42 - 5:44and all of you figure out
for yourselves in 2 minutes. -
5:45 - 5:48Which is that if you have a question
-
5:49 - 5:53you no longer need to ask
a human being for an answer. -
5:54 - 5:58There is something out there
which can tell you what the answer is. -
5:59 - 6:00What is it out there?
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6:01 - 6:03The Internet of course,
we call it the Cloud. -
6:05 - 6:08To me it's the first non human,
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6:10 - 6:12conscious and intelligent entity
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6:13 - 6:15that we have encountered.
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6:15 - 6:19We always thought that aliens
will land from other planets -
6:20 - 6:24and they will be green with long legs
and round eyes. -
6:25 - 6:27It turned out
it was not going to be like that. -
6:28 - 6:32The alien entity is made up
of four billion people, -
6:33 - 6:37but it is not a person, it's a thing.
-
6:38 - 6:43You can ask that thing anything,
and it tells you what you want to know. -
6:44 - 6:48Given that situation,
what happens to children and education? -
6:51 - 6:53There are reports
from all around the world -
6:53 - 6:56that children are not asking
questions to people. -
6:57 - 7:00Or at least if they have to ask
a question to a person, -
7:00 - 7:03they do that after they've asked
their phones. -
7:05 - 7:10Children don't want to learn
how to multiply, divide, add and subtract. -
7:11 - 7:14Because they say they already know
how to do that. -
7:14 - 7:16It's done with phones.
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7:17 - 7:21Children don't want
particularly to learn to read -
7:22 - 7:27because they say there are things
that can read out things to them, -
7:28 - 7:30even if they don't know how to read.
-
7:31 - 7:35At the moment,
they don't like to write by hand -
7:35 - 7:36because they want to know
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7:36 - 7:39why they should learn
how to write by hand. -
7:39 - 7:42Will they ever do it
in the rest of their lives? -
7:42 - 7:46So, what happens in a world
where reading, writing and arithmetic -
7:46 - 7:50are treated in such a cavalier manner?
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7:51 - 7:54I wanted to experiment with that world.
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7:55 - 7:59The idea was to create facilities
for children, which have the Internet, -
8:01 - 8:04and the children can go in
and do what they like -
8:04 - 8:07without any supervision,
or without any teachers. -
8:09 - 8:12We could have presence there
-
8:12 - 8:15but it would come out of the Internet
over Skype, from somewhere, -
8:16 - 8:18if the children wanted to.
-
8:19 - 8:23I work with children in the age group
of about 8 to 13 years old. -
8:25 - 8:29They love speaking to adults over Skype,
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8:32 - 8:36particularly adults who are retired
school teachers and people like that. -
8:37 - 8:38I asked them,
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8:40 - 8:42"Why do you like this so much?
Do you like it?" -
8:42 - 8:44"Yes, we love it."
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8:44 - 8:46"Why do you like this so much?"
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8:46 - 8:48They said, "You know what?
We can switch them off." -
8:48 - 8:50(Laughter)
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8:56 - 8:58What I did after February, 2013
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9:00 - 9:04was to first look for places,
and then start building. -
9:06 - 9:11The seven labs are built to cover
from the really remote areas, -
9:14 - 9:15such as areas
-
9:16 - 9:21without electricity, without healthcare,
without schooling, -
9:22 - 9:24nothing really, just the wild,
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9:25 - 9:28through to middle class England
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9:28 - 9:30and all the ones in between.
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9:32 - 9:34So, the seven have all been built now;
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9:35 - 9:38I finished opening the last one
just this month. -
9:39 - 9:40The very first one
-
9:40 - 9:44was opened in November, 2013
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9:48 - 9:50the same year that I got the prize.
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9:50 - 9:53You see over there, a picture of that lab.
-
9:53 - 9:56It's in a town called
Killingworth, England. -
9:57 - 9:59It's actually situated inside a school.
-
10:00 - 10:03The school is called
George Stephenson High School. -
10:04 - 10:06It's very close
to George Stephenson's home, -
10:06 - 10:09you know the guy who built
the first working steam engine. -
10:11 - 10:12In Killingworth
-
10:15 - 10:16- this is a room -
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10:17 - 10:22it just looks like a nice lounge
with computers and an Xbox. -
10:28 - 10:30The teachers when I built it said,
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10:30 - 10:32"Sugata, this is a bit too much.
-
10:32 - 10:36Do you have any idea of what
they're going to do with that Xbox? -
10:36 - 10:39They are going to do nothing else,
except play with the Xbox." -
10:40 - 10:42So I said,
"That's our challenge, isn't it?" -
10:42 - 10:45If you have gone in there
to teach geography -
10:46 - 10:48and students are playing with the Xbox,
-
10:49 - 10:52it means geography
is more boring than the Xbox. -
10:53 - 10:58Then, we should really look at geography
and chuck it from the curriculum -
10:58 - 11:01or put it into the Xbox somehow.
-
11:02 - 11:05You can't tell the children:
"We will take away your Xbox -
11:06 - 11:10and put you into school
to do other things." -
11:12 - 11:16That's not the right way to engage
children's attention. -
11:17 - 11:20So here is a picture
of what happens in there. -
11:20 - 11:23As you can see
there are five children in the corner -
11:23 - 11:25researching something or the other,
-
11:25 - 11:27and there is one on the Xbox.
-
11:27 - 11:30If you give them something
interesting enough to do, -
11:30 - 11:33they don't, actually
play Xbox all the time; -
11:34 - 11:36
it was our misconception. -
11:38 - 11:40Here is more of Killingworth.
-
11:40 - 11:44What they do in there is called
the self-organized learning environment. -
11:45 - 11:49It's very simple, take five computers
and take twenty children. -
11:50 - 11:54Put them in there; ask them a question.
-
11:55 - 11:58The question has to be an interesting one,
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11:59 - 12:01what we call a "Big Question."
-
12:02 - 12:04What's a big question?
-
12:05 - 12:09It can be all kinds,
but let me give you an example: -
12:13 - 12:17A big question could be,
"Can trees think?" -
12:21 - 12:26If you give that question to children,
they first will mutter with each other, -
12:26 - 12:29"Trees, they can't."
"Maybe they can." "I don't know." -
12:29 - 12:32Then you just leave them alone
and you say, -
12:32 - 12:36“I don’t know the answer either,
but why don't we look for it? " -
12:36 - 12:40And this will happen,
what you see on the screen. -
12:40 - 12:44About 30 or 40 minutes later
they will come back to you, -
12:45 - 12:48not with childish observations;
-
12:49 - 12:52they will come back
with the nature of thought, -
12:52 - 12:55with the latest advances in biology, etc.
-
12:56 - 12:59That's called the self-organized
learning environment. -
13:00 - 13:03Here is one that we did
in Kalkaji, New Delhi. -
13:05 - 13:10It has on the wall a Skyped-in mediator
as you can see, and it's a girls school. -
13:13 - 13:15The girls couldn't speak
any English, to start with. -
13:15 - 13:18We opened it in February, 2014.
-
13:21 - 13:24I put in a team of observers
-
13:24 - 13:28to measure their
beginning levels of English, -
13:28 - 13:30which was close to zero, and then I said,
-
13:30 - 13:34"We will measure every two months or so."
-
13:35 - 13:37After about three days,
-
13:37 - 13:40I was talking to this mediator
that you see on the screen, over Skype, -
13:42 - 13:44I was asking,
"How is it going there?" -
13:44 - 13:47She said, "Very nice.
Those girls are really nice. -
13:47 - 13:50One of them said to me,
'When are you coming next?' " -
13:51 - 13:54I said, "In what language
did she say that?" -
13:55 - 13:57The mediator said, "In English."
-
13:59 - 14:04When I sent my research team in
after a month to measure the level, -
14:05 - 14:08she reported that was too late;
it's done already. -
14:09 - 14:11I've never seen anything
happen so quickly, -
14:11 - 14:13so I went to Delhi to ask the girls.
-
14:13 - 14:16I said, "How did you do that so fast?"
-
14:17 - 14:19They gave me an answer
which was quite astonishing. -
14:20 - 14:23They said, "You know that woman
who comes on the TV screen? -
14:23 - 14:25She doesn't understand
anything other than English." -
14:26 - 14:27(Laughter)
-
14:28 - 14:30It's as simple as that.
-
14:32 - 14:35This is a little town called
Newton Aycliffe in England. -
14:37 - 14:41If you remember the map,
it's in Northeast. -
14:42 - 14:44This school is called Greenfields,
-
14:45 - 14:48and we have a School in the Cloud there.
-
14:48 - 14:52What they have done is
they made one of their walls glass. -
14:54 - 14:58On the other side, is a typical
English green country side. -
15:00 - 15:04Inside they put in astro turf,
so when you enter the room -
15:04 - 15:07suddenly you feel as though
you are outside -
15:07 - 15:09because of the turf merging in.
-
15:09 - 15:13They put park benches, gas lamps,
and things like that -
15:14 - 15:16and a few computers scattered in there.
-
15:18 - 15:23So, the children come into the room,
and when you leave them alone - -
15:24 - 15:27when you do self-organized
learning environment, -
15:27 - 15:30you, the teachers,
don't stay there; you go out - -
15:31 - 15:33so, you start the session, and you go out,
-
15:34 - 15:38and from the other side
which is also glass you can observe them. -
15:41 - 15:44Once, very recently in Greenfields,
-
15:44 - 15:49a group of 8 year olds were sent
into the room by their teacher, -
15:50 - 15:53the teacher said -
we often do this in SOLEs - -
15:53 - 15:55we say to the children,
-
15:55 - 15:57"For the next 45 minutes,
-
15:57 - 15:59I can't talk to you,
you can't talk to me." -
16:00 - 16:02There is no communication.
-
16:02 - 16:05You are on your own,
and there is the big question. -
16:06 - 16:07So, she did that.
-
16:08 - 16:12These 8 year olds were doing things.
-
16:14 - 16:16After a while - remember what she said?
-
16:16 - 16:19"You can't talk to me,
and I can't talk to you." -
16:19 - 16:22After a little while one of them
came up to the glass window, -
16:22 - 16:28he had a piece of paper in his hand,
and he held it up, on it were the words -
16:28 - 16:30"Help! We are stuck."
-
16:30 - 16:32(Laughter)
-
16:34 - 16:37She didn't say,
"You can't communicate with me," -
16:37 - 16:39she said, "You can't talk to me."
-
16:40 - 16:42I thought that was clever thinking.
-
16:44 - 16:46Here is another view of Greenfields.
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16:48 - 16:49Another one.
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16:50 - 16:52Chandrakona in Bengal,
-
16:54 - 16:56it's a pretty remote area.
-
16:57 - 17:00If you can think of the map of India
-
17:01 - 17:06think of the eastern side,
the side close to Burma and Thailand. -
17:08 - 17:10This is somewhere there.
-
17:12 - 17:15In Chandrakona we have this structure
-
17:16 - 17:18and we built a School in the Cloud.
-
17:19 - 17:24The parents came there;
they are all farmers and they said, -
17:24 - 17:26"What are we supposed to do here?"
-
17:26 - 17:29I said, "You are supposed
to send your children here." -
17:29 - 17:30They said, "What for?"
-
17:31 - 17:34I said, "They learn things here."
-
17:35 - 17:38They pointed to the computers and said,
"From those TV screens?" -
17:38 - 17:41I said, "They are not TVs,
they are computers". -
17:42 - 17:44And they said,
"Well, isn't that the same thing?" -
17:44 - 17:46I said, "No, not quite"
-
17:47 - 17:50They said, "Who will teach them?"
-
17:51 - 17:53I said, "They will teach themselves".
-
17:54 - 17:58"How can they?"
I said, "They will use the Internet." -
17:58 - 18:00"What's the Internet?"
-
18:02 - 18:04Where do you go from there?
-
18:06 - 18:09This is what it looks like inside.
-
18:09 - 18:13If you can see it,
you will see it at the far end -
18:15 - 18:18an Australian gentleman
who talks to the children. -
18:20 - 18:23I hate to think
what will happen to their accents, -
18:23 - 18:25but otherwise they love him.
-
18:25 - 18:27(Laughter)
-
18:27 - 18:30In Chandrakona, three months later
-
18:32 - 18:35there's a tall, slim, young girl there.
-
18:40 - 18:43I have visited the place and she said,
"We really love this place." -
18:43 - 18:45I said, "For what?"
-
18:46 - 18:49She said, "You can find out
all sorts of things here." -
18:49 - 18:52I said, "Like what?
What are you finding out today?" -
18:52 - 18:57She said, "We were taught in school
that plants are green -
18:59 - 19:01because they have chlorophyll.
-
19:01 - 19:05And they have chlorophyll
to process light in order to make energy. -
19:07 - 19:10I've come here to find out
-
19:10 - 19:15why chlorophyll has to be green
and not blue, yellow or red. -
19:17 - 19:18Do you know?"
-
19:19 - 19:23I said, "No, I have no idea
why it has to be green." -
19:24 - 19:27She said, "Ok, we will figure it out."
-
19:29 - 19:30Three months.
-
19:32 - 19:34That's a view of the inside again.
-
19:35 - 19:40Here is our most remote area;
it's called Korakati, also Eastern India; -
19:40 - 19:42it's where the Ganges meets the sea.
-
19:44 - 19:45It has nothing there;
-
19:45 - 19:48there's no electricity,
no healthcare, no schools. -
19:49 - 19:51I won’t say nothing -
they have Bengal tigers, -
19:52 - 19:53(Laughter)
-
19:54 - 19:58and hooded cobras and lots of children.
-
20:00 - 20:03It took some building,
but I built that one. -
20:04 - 20:08It's solar powered, it has a tower
which is 45 ft high. -
20:09 - 20:11I couldn't get the Internet,
-
20:11 - 20:14I had a receiver and kept raising it
on bamboo poles, -
20:14 - 20:19at 45 ft above ground,
we now got 8 megabits per second 3G. -
20:22 - 20:263G met the stone age in there.
-
20:30 - 20:33In Chandrakona,
the sessions are intermittent -
20:33 - 20:35because of all sort of problems.
-
20:37 - 20:40The cables run on the ground,
-
20:41 - 20:44the Internet cables that connect
all the computers together. -
20:44 - 20:48If you have seen those cables,
they are kind of cream colored. -
20:50 - 20:54I had to remove them
and lift them up, somewhere, -
20:55 - 21:00because there is a very pale, thin snake
-
21:00 - 21:06which can change its color to the color
of the Internet cable and sleeps there. -
21:08 - 21:10A bit of a strange problem,
-
21:10 - 21:13you don't get these problems
in schools usually. -
21:13 - 21:14(Laughter)
-
21:16 - 21:19The Internet comes and goes.
-
21:20 - 21:23The children walk for three miles
to come to school -
21:23 - 21:26and find there is no Internet
and walk back three miles. -
21:26 - 21:29Naturally they are not
very happy about it. -
21:29 - 21:31But in the middle of all this,
-
21:32 - 21:38what they do is to find games,
download them and play them. -
21:40 - 21:42Somehow they are able
to get to that point. -
21:43 - 21:47I asked them what a web page was recently,
-
21:48 - 21:50and they thought for a while.
-
21:50 - 21:54They said, "It's made
by someone who is not here, -
21:55 - 22:00someone very far away who sends it
somehow over those things -
22:01 - 22:04which look like the cream colored snakes."
-
22:04 - 22:06(Laughter)
-
22:07 - 22:10This is the latest of the areas.
I don't have a picture of it. -
22:10 - 22:12It's a hexagonal, our best structure.
-
22:13 - 22:18In there, the studies are just beginning.
-
22:19 - 22:23It took a lot of time to build,
and it cost close to a million dollars, -
22:24 - 22:26but there are a thousand children,
-
22:28 - 22:32thousand very interesting children
added to the Cloud. -
22:34 - 22:35Thank you.
-
22:35 - 22:37(Applause)
- Title:
- School in the cloud: What happened after TED Prize 2013 | Sugata Mitra | TEDxUFM
- Description:
-
This talk was given at a local TEDx event, produced independently of the TED Conferences.
In 2013, Dr. Sugata Mitra earned the first ever one million dollar TED Prize award for his project "School in the Cloud." Two years later, he shares what he did with the prize and the evolution of this innovative project which is changing the life of thousands of children around the world.
Educational researcher Sugata Mitra is the winner of the 2013 TED Prize. In 1999, Mitra and his colleagues dug a hole in a wall bordering an urban slum in New Delhi, installed an Internet-connected PC, and left it there (with a hidden camera filming the area). What they saw was kids from the slum playing around with the computer and, in the process, learning how to use it and how to go online, and then teaching each other.
- Video Language:
- English
- Team:
- closed TED
- Project:
- TEDxTalks
- Duration:
- 23:12
Ivana Korom approved English subtitles for School in the cloud: What happened after TED Prize 2013 | Sugata Mitra | TEDxUFM | ||
Ivana Korom edited English subtitles for School in the cloud: What happened after TED Prize 2013 | Sugata Mitra | TEDxUFM | ||
Ivana Korom edited English subtitles for School in the cloud: What happened after TED Prize 2013 | Sugata Mitra | TEDxUFM | ||
Ivana Korom edited English subtitles for School in the cloud: What happened after TED Prize 2013 | Sugata Mitra | TEDxUFM | ||
Reiko Bovee accepted English subtitles for School in the cloud: What happened after TED Prize 2013 | Sugata Mitra | TEDxUFM | ||
Reiko Bovee edited English subtitles for School in the cloud: What happened after TED Prize 2013 | Sugata Mitra | TEDxUFM | ||
Reiko Bovee edited English subtitles for School in the cloud: What happened after TED Prize 2013 | Sugata Mitra | TEDxUFM | ||
Reiko Bovee edited English subtitles for School in the cloud: What happened after TED Prize 2013 | Sugata Mitra | TEDxUFM |