Monitoring Policy Making at the United Nations
Global Policy Forum Monitors Policy Making at the United Nations.
 
Security Council UN Finance What's New
Social & Economic Policy International Justice Opinion Forum
Globalization Tables & Charts
Nations & States Empire Links & Resources
NGOs UN Reform  
Secretary General   DONATE NOW
 

Using ICT to Improve Rural Education in Mongolia

Asian Development Bank
July 14, 2004

ADB (the Asian Development Bank) is using information and communications technology (ICT) to help boost access to high-quality education for disadvantaged and remote populations in Mongolia, through a grant assistance approved for US$1 million.

The ICT for Innovating Rural Education in Mongolia project, from the Japan Fund for Information and Communication Technology, financed by the Government of Japan, will establish a model that uses ICT to bring modern education methods and content to poor rural schools and communities.

Under the project, CD-ROMs and an e-mail based bulletin board system will be used as part of a broader approach to

· Help rural teachers, especially in basic education grades, to provide a more innovative and pupil-centered learning environment and improve teaching skills
· Enhance school management and system equity, efficiency, and transparency
· Boost opportunities for high-quality, locally relevant nonformal education, and build new linkages between schools and the surrounding community.
"At present, ICT in Mongolian education tends to be largely confined to wealthy urban areas and to informatics classes in upper grades. The project will help address the growing internal digital divide and poverty of information in rural areas," says Christopher Spohr, an ADB Project Economist.

Staff in poor rural schools have cited isolation from information, teaching materials, and support mechanisms, such as communications with peers and official guidance, as a key hardship. It is also linked to the "brain drain" of talented teachers to urban areas. In-school trainings, content development, peer network building, and careful monitoring and evaluation will ensure that ICT tools promote the adoption of modern pedagogy and creative classroom techniques. In selected boarding schools, the project will also give poor children living in dormitories the opportunity to communicate regularly with children in other localities through e-mail.

At the end of the project, about 10,000 students in 36 target schools will benefit from improved teaching and school management. "The project will demonstrate that a new model can promote specific national education objectives more cost-effectively than existing approaches, particularly in meeting the needs of hard-to-reach groups," adds Mr. Spohr.

The project, to be executed by Ministry of Education, Culture and Science, supports the $63.8 million Second Education Development Project in Mongolia, approved in 2002. That project will improve access to, quality and sustainability of pre-school, primary, and secondary education in poorer rural and urban communities. The total project cost is estimated at $1,226,000, of which the Government, local communities, and other partners will contribute $226,000.


More Information on Social and Economic Policy
More Information on International Aid

FAIR USE NOTICE: This page contains copyrighted material the use of which has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Global Policy Forum distributes this material without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. We believe this constitutes a fair use of any such copyrighted material as provided for in 17 U.S.C ß 107. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond fair use, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.


GPF home page