Download PDFOpen PDF in browser

Self-sustaining Crowdsourcing: Beyond the Wikipedia Model to Make pK-12 Computer Science Education Universal in Developing Countries

4 pagesPublished: February 12, 2020

Abstract

Progracademy (PRG) is a program that seeks to make universal the development of 21st-century competencies (6Cs) -with emphasis on computational ones, in underprivileged pK-12 students of developing countries. PRG proposes a self- sustaining crowdsourcing solution applied to education, with the two key innovative components: i) extra-supported online Computer Science courses (MaxiMOOCs on Collaborative Programming) for pK-12 students who work in teams during school time (PRG Lab) and/or after school (PRG Club), and ii) an online platform that empowers and coordinates online volunteers, teachers, and parents in order to support students. PRG is a solution for underprivileged schools’ severe limitations of resources and institutional capacity to develop 6Cs in students. PRG’s seeks a quadruple social impact at scale and cost-effectively: i) achieve students’ 6Cs educational objectives, ii) build capacity in the schools’ teachers and administrators to educate in 6Cs, iii) develop 6Cs in the volunteers that support the students, and iv) mobilize sustainable support from the for-profit sector and civil society to the public education system. After a successful pilot in a Venezuelan school belonging to the largest educational NGO in Latin America –Fe y Alegria, PRG is now being piloted in Ecuador in two schools from the same NGO.

Keyphrases: 21st century skills, Crowdsourcing, digital learning, digital skills, education equity, educational technology, online education, Social Collaboration

In: Claudia Urrea (editor). Proceedings of the MIT LINC 2019 Conference, vol 3, pages 200--203

Links:
BibTeX entry
@inproceedings{LINC2019:Self_sustaining_Crowdsourcing_Beyond_Wikipedia,
  author    = {Armando Sanchez and Javier Peraza},
  title     = {Self-sustaining Crowdsourcing: Beyond the Wikipedia Model to Make pK-12 Computer Science Education Universal in Developing Countries},
  booktitle = {Proceedings of the MIT LINC 2019 Conference},
  editor    = {Claudia Urrea},
  series    = {EPiC Series in Education Science},
  volume    = {3},
  pages     = {200--203},
  year      = {2020},
  publisher = {EasyChair},
  bibsource = {EasyChair, https://easychair.org},
  issn      = {2516-2306},
  url       = {https://easychair.org/publications/paper/VVrS},
  doi       = {10.29007/gcg8}}
Download PDFOpen PDF in browser