US and 7 Other Countries Adopt Brazilian Way of Teaching Computer Skills

Brazil is exporting a successful model for schools teaching information technology and citizenship in needy communities. Responsible for this is the Brazilian non-governmental organization Committee for Democracy in Information Technology (CDI).

The CDI created a teaching system through which children, youngsters and adults from poor neighborhoods learn computer skills from discussing the problems in their communities.

The project was created in Brazil in 1993 and was taken abroad in 1999. Today there are 891 schools following this model in the world, 716 in Brazil and 175 in another eight countries.

Learning IT starts with conversations about day-to-day life in the community where the course is being taught. If a local problem is pregnancy amongst teenagers, for example, the students will research the topic on the Internet and thus learn how to work with the world wide web, or even prepare a newspaper on contraception methods, for which they will have to learn how to use text editing programs.

The teaching is based on the method by the educator Paulo Freire, who says learning should start from the reality lived by the pupils. According to the operations director at the CDI, Mário Vieira, there is the case of a school, for example, which has, with the classes, a project for the people to stop throwing garbage in the community’s river.

The NGO offers basic course that lasts about four months. The pupils learn how to work with the operating system, Internet, text editors, presentations (Power Point) and spreadsheets (Excel).

For pre-school children there is a different course, in which notions of IT is given through games. They also have courses for elderly people, but these follow the same method used with teenagers and adults.

In most of the schools, people don’t pay tuition. In some of them, they pay only a basic fee of about US$ 2.30 for the unit’s expenses. All the work done by the CDI is maintained today with support from companies and foundations.

The project works as a system of franchises, but without charging values. To open a school, for example, there has to be some other institution, like an NGO, church or school, representative of the local community, to become a partner of the CDI.

The Committee enters the project supplying the teaching methodology, lending the computers free of charge and capacitating the teachers, who will be youngsters from the local community. The partner institute is responsible for the place and infrastructure for the classes.

The CDI was created officially in 1995 and currently has a whole structure in the country. There is the main headquarters, in Rio de Janeiro, and also the regional CDIs, which coordinate the work in the schools.

Both the NGO and the regional offices have financial support from foundations and companies and the schools may find resources on their own. The network has great enterprises supporting their work in Brazil, like the mining company Vale do Rio Doce, Microsoft, Esso and Philips.

In the World

The CDI was created by the IT professor and entrepreneur Rodrigo Baggio. Today there are schools of the CDI in 290 cities and 19 states in Brazil.

Abroad, the chain is in Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Uruguay, South Africa, Mexico, Ecuador and United States. In Ecuador, for example, the CDI partner in the work is the Rotary Club. In Colombia, it is an NGO in the education area called Escuela Nueva.

According to Vieira, the CDI doesn’t have aims for expanding abroad. Normally this happens from the interest of potential partners. Both to open a school in Brazil as abroad, however, there are a series and pre-requirements and a selection process.

Anba – www.anba.com.br

Tags:

You May Also Like

ACM and Bahia's Governor Paulo Souto

Brazil: The Day I Played Hardball With Bahia’s Governor

My apartment overlooks an intersection in the center of Santo Antônio de Jesus, a ...

TB Has Cure, Says Brazil to 85,000 TB Carriers

This week, Brazil’s Ministry of Health is reviving its publicity campaign “Tuberculosis Has a ...

Brazil Wants Its Biodiesel Program to Be One of Social Inclusion

Contracts between Brazilian state-owned oil company Petrobras and four biodiesel refineries are expected to ...

Invasion of Brazilian Congress Caused US$ 45,000 in Damages

It is estimated that the damage caused by the members of the Movement for ...

Brazil Adopts Stick and Carrot Policy Towards China

The Brazilian government plans to publish China’s protocol of admission to the World Trade ...

Presidents Chavez, Kirchner and Lula

Brazil’s Lula Swings Through Chile and Argentina Under Chavez’s Shadow

Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, the president of Brazil is scheduled to visit Argentina ...

Rousseff’s Position on Abortion May Cost Her Brazil’s Presidency

José Serra, the Brazilian opposition presidential candidate from the PSDB party seems to be ...

Brazil’s Lula World’s 33rd Most Powerful Ahead of Japan and France Leaders

Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva ranks 33 in the list of world's ...

American President George W. Bush and the first lady arrive in Brazil

Snubbing Chavez and Seducing Brazil Are Two Sides of Same Bush Game

George W. Bush’s trip to Latin America this month is the most ambitious attempt ...

Something Wrong with Brazil’s Interest Rates

Interest rates are currently on the rise in Brazil. Earlier this week the Central ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`