Poor educational achievement of children living in rural communities is one of
biggest obstacles to boosting employability — and therefore economic success —
in developing countries. Millions of children receive little or no education,
and many leave school before finishing their studies — heading to the fields,
farms and factories to start work. According to UNESCO, roughly 80 percent
of school-age children who do not attend school live in such rural communities.
The educational divide between those living in towns and cities, and those in
rural communities, is not improving. The knock-on effect of poor literacy and
numeracy continues to create significant barriers to reducing poverty,
improving livelihoods and eradicating hunger within the affected
communities.
As long as education standards lag in rural areas, the gap between those that
have and those that do not will only get wider.
For example, in Bangladesh, around 20,000 primary schools in remote areas
have limited, or no, access to electricity. In fact, roughly 40 percent of the
country is still not connected to the grid. This presents a serious problem: How
do teachers deliver quality, multimedia curricula — the type of teaching method
that delivers the best education — without any power.
The country also suffers from a high rate of cyclones in its coastal areas,
which have completely destroyed many schools. Bangladesh also hosts the world’s
largest refugee camp, where 300,000 Rohingya refugee children are currently
deprived of any quality-learning opportunity.
Local NGOs have been attempting to tackle the area’s education issue for a
while. The Bangladeshi government has also stepped up, invested in setting up
multimedia classrooms in 26,000 schools. But that didn’t help the schools in
off-grid areas.
Step forward, Light of Hope — a nonprofit with
the rather ingenious idea of fitting a solar panel-powered classroom into a
backpack.
“Children learn best when the learning content and method is interesting,
engaging and fun,” says Waliullah Bhuiyan, co-founder and CEO of the
enterprise, whose innovation comes complete with projector, pop-up screen,
Internet connectivity, a power bank and bluetooth speaker — all small enough to
fit in a backpack.
Known as Sputnique, the whole package is run off of a
flexible, fold-up solar panel. It weighs just 6kg, so teachers can literally
pack it all up and carry it under their arm and transport it just about
anywhere. Plus, teachers can take ‘live’ classes from a central location to
multiple locations, using the low-bandwidth video-calling software developed for
Sputnique.
The idea came to Bhuiyan while working for an NGO in the wake of a massive
cyclone that hit the coast of Bangladesh. In organising training sessions for
farmers who had lost their crops and health awareness programmes, he was
struggling to transport his bulky kit from place to place.
“We desperately needed a multimedia solution that can be used for showing
training videos and interactive learning content for children,” he adds. “We
ended up with a huge and bulky solution of a typical generator, projector and
laptop system that weighed more than 80kg. We couldn’t take it to most areas,
and often the generator would run out of fuel and make a loud noise that hampers
the sound of the videos.”
It was during this time that inspiration hit — and two years of R&D later,
Sputnique was born.
Light of Hope’s four co-founders all graduated from the Department of
Electrical and Electronic Engineering (EEE) at the Islamic University of
Technology, the only international university in Bangladesh. It began life as
a student project back in 2014 when the team applied for the Dell Education
Challenge to develop a solar-run multimedia solution for off-grid schools.
“We received $2,500 to pilot our first solution,” Bhuiyan says. “We raised
another $4,500 through crowdfunding. With this amount we developed two static
versions of Sputnique to set up in two schools.”
Alongside Sputnique, the social enterprise also has a range of other products
and services designed to make learning interesting, engaging and fun for
children around the world. It is working in partnership with the likes of the
Bangladesh government, Save the Children, the **Sesame Workshop**,
UNICEF, UNESCO and local schools to deliver interactive materials to
students that wouldn’t otherwise be able to access them.
But it is through Sputnique that Bhuiyan and his team has really captured the
imagination. So far, the organisation has helped provide better, more
stimulating education to 75,000 children in Bangladesh, with Sputnique already
working in rural areas, slums and in the Rohingya refugee camp. In the next two
years, a small assembling unit will be established locally for Sputnique
production. And there are plans to expand and take the innovation to remote
areas of Southeast Asia and Africa.
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Tom is founder of storytelling strategy firm Narrative Matters — which helps organizations develop content that truly engages audiences around issues of global social, environmental and economic importance. He also provides strategic editorial insight and support to help organisations – from large corporates, to NGOs – build content strategies that focus on editorial that is accessible, shareable, intelligent and conversation-driving.
Published Feb 4, 2019 1am EST / 10pm PST / 6am GMT / 7am CET