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Internet improves education for Bangladesh's rural children

By Xinhua in Dhaka, Bangladesh | China Daily | Updated: 2014-12-02 07:49

A charming, yet revolutionary, television commercial has been garnering a great deal of attention on and off the airwaves and changing the way people in Bangladesh think about education, particularly in poorer, more rural areas. It shows students being taught by teachers hundreds of miles away in Dhaka, the capital, via the Internet.

The TV commercial was produced by a leading local film production company called Half Stop Down for Bangladesh's largest mobile carrier Grameenphone. It is based on the real-life activities of people in Bangladesh's southeastern Bandarban hill district, where the Online School has been established on top of a hill for underprivileged children.

The commercial, being shown on a number of prominent TV outlets, has been hailed by viewers as inspiring and revolutionary as it shows how a piece of technology many in the modern world take for granted can be used to educate and enhance the lives of those for whom nothing can or is taken for granted.

The commercial's protagonist, a young boy called Shekhar, can be seen, schoolbooks in hand, waving goodbye to his grandmother as he leaves for school, just a stone's throw away from his remote village. As Shekhar enters the classroom, the viewers can see he is welcomed by the smiling faces of his peers.

The twist lies in the fact that when the students are warmly greeted "Good morning" by their teacher, it is by way of a web camera and he is in Dhaka.

As the students see their teacher appear on the screen in front of them, they reply in unison "Good morning, sir," as would be the case at the start of any regular lesson in school.

The school was founded in March this year by Jaago Foundation, a local development organization, in association with Grameenphone and Agni Systems, a leading local Internet service provider.

Teachers from Dhaka instruct students at the Online School in Bandarban, about 320 km southeast of Dhaka, using video conferencing technology and with the aid of moderators in the physical class rooms.

Officials say the school was established in an effort to offer quality education for underprivileged children in Bandarban, a remote region, with mountainous terrain, yet boasting exquisitely beautiful scenery - albeit not conducive to the regular style of education for students in the far-flung region.

Within the local community, there are some 11 ethnic minorities, each with their own language, culture and traditions.

The Jaago Foundation, which is responsible for providing physical support in the classrooms and designing the online curricula for all the classes, said the school has nearly 100 students who had, along with their families, never previously dreamed that a basic education would ever be possible for them.

The Online School has created an opportunity for children because their impoverished parents don't have to bear the expenses for their education and they also don't have to commute far from their village either.

"Considering our financial situation, thinking about Mukti's education was a luxury we just couldn't afford. Schooling was too expensive. Moreover, my daughter needed extra care," said Afroja Khatun, Mukti's mother. "I always wished for a normal life for my daughter."

Mukti's parents then got to hear about a school in their vicinity where Mukti could get her education for free.

Many like Mukti's parents had completely given up hope for their children's education, but the school helped them re-evaluate their circumstances, their children's potential future successes and the power of technology to both influence and empower society for the better.

In Bangladesh, there is still a huge gap between urban and rural education systems, with many in rural areas simply not having access to technological advances like the Internet.

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