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TelecentresAfrica

Telecentre Women Digital Literacy Campaign Contest: Help us achieve the goal of training 1 million women by the year-end 2012!

Calling all partners! Telecentre.org Foundation (TCF) and the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) are hosting a contest (“Contest”) to award ICT equipment to the telecentre that trains the most  number of women to become digitally literate.  This Contest is in support of the Telecentre Women: Digital Literacy Campaign (the “Campaign”) (http://women.telecentre.org) under the Cooperation Agreement signed by TCF and ITU.

Since the Campaign was launched, you have already succeeded in training nearly one quarter of a million women to become digitally literate.  This Contest is designed to achieve our goal of training 1 million women by year end—both  ensuring that all women who were trained have been fully reported and to encourage telecentres to continue their training efforts.

All partners of the TCW Campaign are invited to submit to TCF verifiable reports of the digital literacy trainings they’ve conducted for women up through 1 September 2012. TCF will be responsible for tallying and verifying the reports and submit the final results to ITU for purposes of awarding the ICT equipment.  ITU will award the telecentre that succeeds in training the most number of women under the Campaign ICT equipment for their telecentre worth 15,000 Swiss Francs.

Mechanics of the Contest:

    The Contest is open to telecentres in the Campaign. Telecentre networks are excluded from this contest.
    Only Campaign partners who are also members of the telecentre.org community can participate in the Contest.  To become an official Campaign partner, a telecentre must complete the Campaign Reply Form available for download at the Campaign website. To become a member of the telecentre.org community, the partner must sign up for membership in any of TCF’s community sites no later than September 1 (Note: Membership is free but subject to approval by TCF management).
        English community
        Spanish community
        French community
        Arabic community
        Russian community

    Only reports submitted using the official TCW Data Monitoring Form and verified by TCF as complete will be counted. Once a report has been verified by TCF as complete, it will be shared on the women’s campaign website.  TCF reserves the right to request for additional material (e.g., photos, attendance sheets, etc.) to verify the report.
    Reports should be submitted to This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it no later than 1 September 2012.
    Training reports should cover only training that 1) took place within the campaign period (beginning no earlier than April 7, 2011) until September 1, 2012; 2) were provided to women of any ages (including teenagers); and 3) centered on providing digital literacy skills. Training of trainers for digital literacy programs are not included within the scope of this Contest.
    The equipment to be awarded by ITU under this Contest is exclusively for use in the winning telecentre (e.g., hardware or software such as laptops, PCs, printers, computer monitors, assistive technology for persons with disabilities, telecentre-related software, etc.) and must be identified by the telecentre as a need and agreed by ITU.
    The winning telecentre must provide ITU with contact details for three local suppliers by September 15 and a list of technical specifications for the equipment to be procured without identifying the brand and prices.
    ITU will select the supplier and issue a purchase order for the equipment in accordance with its rules and procedures.
    The winning telecentre will be required to sign 1) a receipt and ownership of the equipment procured by ITU through this contest, and 2) a waiver acknowledging that ITU bears no responsibility for the maintenance of the equipment following delivery to the winning telecentre.
    Once the ICT equipment is received, the recipient is requested to share a blog post in the TCF community site within one month demonstrating the use of this equipment to support their telecentre and to send information to ITU about women’s digital literacy training provided in the telecentre and photos of the equipment being used by women.
    ITU and/or TCF may wish to visit the telecentre and take photos/films of the equipment provided by ITU.


ictupdateWe would like to hear from anyone developing technology services - telecentres, ICT training facilities, cell phone services - to bring information, particularly agricultural information, to rural parts of African, Caribbean and Pacific countries.

If you are involved in providing such services then please get in touch with brief details on the technology you use, the communities served, and how the work contributes to rural development in ACP countries. We are especially keen to hear from self-sustaining enterprises who can share the details of the challenges they have faced and the lessons they have learned. We will send an article outline and a list of questions to cover in the article, or organise a time for a telephone interview.

The editorial committee of ICT Update would also like to thank those who responded to our previous calls for articles, and look forward to hearing more about your ICT projects in 2012.

For more information, send an email to :
Jim Dempsey
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

ICT Update (http://ictupdate.cta.int) is a bimonthly printed bulletin, web magazine, and accompanying e-mail newsletter focusing on the use of information and communication technologies in agriculture in African, Caribbean and Pacific countries. It is published in English and French, by CTA (Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation) in Wageningen in the Netherlands.

Jim Dempsey
Editor ICT Update

Giacomo Rambaldi
Sr. Programme Coordinator, ICT4D

@ict_update                                 
www.facebook.com/ICTUpdate

Contactivity bv
Stationsweg 28
2312 AV Leiden
The Netherlands 

Tel: +31 (0)71 514 1166  

CTA
P.O. Box 380
6700 AJ Wageningen
The Netherlands

Tel: +31 (0)317 467174

                                                         
                                                   

 

 

                                     



By Therese Burke, CTA; Koda Traoré, CTA

Photobanner1The telecentre movement is nothing new. As an effective service for improving the livelihoods of rural communities, it is a model which exists the world over. Picture a telecentre in Africa, and the image of a small building where people can go to get access to a computer, phone, fax, go online or charge a mobile phone springs to mind. This conventional scenario still exists in many areas, but in several parts of Africa, the telecentre concept is evolving into something much more..

 

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Mobile phone has certainly taken stage, in the discussion of telecentre future, becoming the focus and area of research as a critical and essential tool in information delivery and, but whether to stick with sms or innovatively extend the possibility of the voice services remains to be debated. Rural Africa may not boast of geeky computer skills let alone access to them, but they are king when it comes to mobile ownership. Mobile phone ownership is no longer the privilege of a few in the rural folks but rather a necesarticlessity in their daily life. The cost of mobile phones, competition amongst service providers which is bringing the calling rates down, low cost of maintenance, non reliance to constant power supply and mobility are some of the reasons why its penetration in Africa is high.

I have had a chance to use FronlineSMS to send bulk sms and liked it for that, however its limitation to text message was a challenge I had with the group of userssince some of them had problems reading sms but also preferred to call rather than type messages. It remains a good option if what you wish to do is manage and send bulk sms.

May I share with you another wonderful tool to think about, Freedo Fone,  it makes it easy to build interactive, two way, phone based information services using interactive audio voice menus, voice messages, SMS and polls. The DIY platform is accessible, user-friendly, low-cost global and does not require Internet access for users and callers alike. It takes advantage of audio to address language and literacy barriers when reaching out to the millions of people living on the margins of the information society. After spending a couple of days at Radio Maria in Dare salaam through support of COL (www.col.org) and Web Foundation - http://www.webfoundation.org/ to learn about this particular tool I must say it has a component that will help community radios, telecentres and any other organization interested in voice as an option to reach their clients.

Check out the demo - http://demo.freedomfone.org/freedomfone/ .

"Bart Sullivan of Farm Radio International. Bart is one of our earliest Freedom Fone users and has piloted the platform with radio stations in Tanzania & Ghana. His easy going, thoughtful approach to capacity building and commitment to integrating mobile technologies in the community radio sector has helped to raise Freedom Fone’s profile in this community" says Brenda Burrell. She is with Freedom Fone and is based at Harare, they came along with her colleague Tichafara Sigauke to conduct the training. Bart organised the training at Radio Maria, one of the radios where the system has been used.

Interactive Voice Response allows one to record their voice and leave a message. It has been used to provide market updates, weather, receive enquiries and react to them later - callers are able to leave their message by pressing preset key to do so among others. I also believe that it can be a perfect tool for agricultural extension service providers to reach out to farmers and also allow the farmers to listen to instructions via their mobile phones as well as leave voice messages for the service providers. Those working in advocacy issues can also use it to provide a hotline for leaving messages, recording campaign audio to be shared by their targeted groups. Edutainment is also an area that telecentres can take advantage of by creating educative audio content which people can retrieve by dialing a given number to listen to. Short skirts or plays can be recorded in various episodes to keep listeners calling in.

A typical IVR will be something like; thank you for calling Nyamata Telecentre, for market information press 1, for weather updates press 2, for today’s farming tips press 3, to Leave A Message press 4. Remember these recordings can be in any local language and context that your audience is comfortable with.

Fredom Fone runs on linux and requires a dedicated computer since its resource intense, you also need a GSM router to channel voice and sms. Whats recommenced is a mobigator or an office route. You also require an audio recorder, and simple audio editing software like audacity (http://audacity.sourceforge.net)


Kitwe District is located in the central part of the Copperbelt. The name Kitwe depicts the skull of an elephant (in vernacular [Bemba] Icitwe chansofu) which was found near the strearticles_thumbam alongside some copper ore deposits. Foreign settlers could not pronounce the name “Citwe” as local used to call it and pronounced it as “Kitwe”. The district is the most populated district on the Copperbelt province of Zambia and second most populated in Zambia. In 2000, the district had a total population of 376,124 accounting for about 23.8 percent of the total population of the province. The population was 410,448 in 2002 with an estimated growth rate of 1.1 percent per annum. The demographic trend of Kitwe shows that the population has been increasing at a decreasing rate. This trend is attributed to the rise in HIV/ AIDS parallel diseases such as Tuberculosis and diarrhoea. Additionally, the privatisation of mines and liberation of the economy resulted into massive job losses, causing people to migrate to other districts in search of employment and other economic opportunities.

The population of Kitwe like the rest of the country is predominantly young. Up to 70 percent of the population is below the age of 30.The age structure of Kitwe defines a young population with slightly over 66 percent of population below age of 25 years. The structure demands corresponding provision of social services such as schools, medical facilities, housing, recreation and other economic activities. Population increase has not been accompanied by development of basic infrastructure. However, the population for the district during business hours is about 700,000 because many people and business houses from other districts in the country and some countries conduct their trade in Kitwe.

The district has experienced the growth of the informal sector with people engaged in economic activities such as sand mining, charcoal production and illegal quarrying of slag dumps (A youth involved in quarrying of slug dumps is locally known as ‘Jeraboh’.) The district has about 159 learning institutions comprising both public and private. The number of high schools is however not sufficient to meet the demand for high school education. These are mainly situated in urban areas. According to Ministry of Education (MoE) records as of 2009 the district staffs were 2,905 of which 2,817 were teachers and 88 were non-teaching staff. However teaching staff are insufficient. In 2009, it was noted that there were more girls enrolled as compared to previous years. The increase in progression rates were also recorded from grade 7 to 8 of 49 percent to 69 percent. The increase in the progression rate can be attributed to the upgrading of schools from primary to basic .However, the upgrading of schools from primary to basic has its own challenges such as limited infrastructure, accommodation for teachers and competitive condition of service in private sector. Consequently, public schools have been disadvantaged and the quality of education has been negatively affected, contributing to the high dropout rate. The policy by MoE to increase the minimum number of students recommended per class to 63 has worsened the situation. Mining and mining related activities are the major economic activities .There is a number of shopping facilities including large and medium privately owned shops, professional services such as consultation are also available in the district. The growing number of illegal street vendors is at a rise due to the increasing number of people operating in undesignated places especially residential areas. There are also a number of hotels around the district.

Agriculture is one of the economic mainstays of the district. Most agricultural activities are rain fed and major crops grown include maize, ground nuts and vegetables. Urban backyard gardening and peri-urban farming crops such as groundnuts, maize, sweet potatoes and traditional vegetables are also practiced. There are farms including those for poultry, cattle and other animal husbandry, and fish farming. Three climate seasons prevail, hot and wet, hot and dry, cold and dry seasons. Average temperature is over 300C during day and range between 210 C and 260C during nights. The annual rainfall averages are 1,320mm. Energy sources include electricity, solar, bios and fossil fuels, charcoal and coal. Wood fuel in the form of firewood and charcoal is a major source of energy for most people. The increment of electricity tariffs by the only electricity supply company in the country and the introduction of prepaid bills, has led to the increase in the shift from the use of hydro electricity upon which most of the grid depend, to wood fuel.

Over the years, the district has evolved into an industrial centre for the province with core economic activities being mining. Besides mining and mining related activities, the district has light industrial areas for manufacturing building materials, furniture and consumer goods. It is connected to other towns by road and rail and to other destinations by air through the south down airstrip in kalulushi and Ndola airport as there is no airport in Kitwe.

Poverty levels are high due to the fact that the rate at which the population is growing exceeds the economic growth of the district. Consequently, majority of the total estimated district population resides in unplanned settlements. Due to the decline in the availability of formal wage employment, majority of residents in Kitwe work mainly in the informal sector.

Since August 2010, I have had a memorable, inspiring and challenging expedition around Kitwe district and its neighbouring districts, Kalulushi and Lufwanyama, which historically were once part of Kitwe district, and depend on Kitwe for most social and economic activities. My concentration or rather main interest has been in understanding the way of life for the youth in terms of education-primary and secondary, post secondary training, participation in politics and governance and other democratic processes, their social and economic integration into society, and more importantly their livelihood.

North of Kitwe, along Kitwe to Chingola Road is an interesting and busy suburb, Sabina, with a beautiful stream that provides water for agriculture and domestic use. The river has attracted the people of the suburb to live along it. The central business place of the suburb is the roadside, which has a ‘T’ branch of roads providing access to three different mining districts of the Copperbelt province of Zambia. It’s a busy business place with the main commodities being a variety of crops including carrots, maize, potatoes, vegetables, groundnuts, pumpkins, cassava, tomatoes, onion, and many other crops. Taking a walk along the river, I witnessed the dedicated invested of time and resources in the growing of a number of crops to earn a living. With 90 percent of the gardens along the stream cultivated by the youth, their produce is not only sold at the road side to the motorists and passengers, but also supplied to the three mining districts surrounding the suburb. Within the suburb are farms involved in poultry farming, animal husbandry, and growing of a few varieties of crops and these provide employment to many other youths and other residents. I had an opportunity to interact with the people of this suburb for about two weeks.

A few kilometres on the way to Mufurila district east of this suburb is another small but densely populated and youthful village,Salamano, surrounded by a mighty river, one of Zambia’s biggest rivers ‘Kafue’ and a seasonal stream. I had an opportunity to interact with the people of this suburb for about two weeks as well. Though surrounded by water sources and abundant land, the youthful suburb’s families cannot even manage to grow crops to feed themselves, instead depend on charcoal burning and beer brewing and some illegal activities to raise money to buy essential needs and food to feed their families. For the few who are dedicated, they grow tomatoes, onion, vegetables, pumpkins which they sale to motorists along the main road to the nearby district. This suburb has poor sanitary conditions and entirely depends on river water for domestic use.

From there, I headed to Kalulushi district, a small district branching from Kitwe. This is classified a rural district because most of its boundaries are typical rural with some of the roads being impassable during the rainy season. Upon arriving at the market, one can tell that they are in the land of subsistence farmers, a lot of bicycles packed around and farmers are busy displaying and selling their produce to the marketers. Some take advantage of light trucks owned by farmers who have farms near to them and use that to transport their produce even as far as Kitwe. Going beyond the district headquarters, I headed towards the Lufwanyama district bordering with the Democratic Republic of Congo. The recently, declared district is the home of a number of gemstone mines and many agricultural activities. The district is surrounded by rivers and seasonal streams providing people with water sources for domestic and agricultural use. Most of the land in the district is customary owned (controlled by local Chiefs), and the local people have obtained reasonable pieces of land as subordinates to the Chiefs. With this land they are free to grow different varieties of crops and conduct other farming activities. However, for other economic activities such as gemstone mining to be practiced, the Chief of the particular Chiefdom is supposed to be informed and permission has to be obtained from relevant government authorities. Subordinates of a particular chiefdom pay a certain contribution whenever a new chief is installed as a successor, for them to continue owning that farm and receive a paper from the Chief to signify their customary land ownership. On one of the land ownership letter I read, the reason was indicated as I Chief ……….. wish to maintain and extend your farm at ………….. to ensure that ‘You expand your farming activities and grow more crops’……..

In the swampy areas surrounding one of the villages I visited, crops are grown which are taken to the district headquarters for sale. Many people grow crops to feed their families and they sale the excess. The money raised from the sale of produce is used to buy essentials and pay for their children’s school fees. Good enough, I came across a young man whom I met as I was visiting a school just few kilometres from Kalulushi, in his early twenties attending his nineth grade. This was because as I spoke to few pupils from this school about their career goals, way of life and families, I could not have enough time to have a meaningful chat with him. He concluded an account of a series of stories that I had learnt about the way of life in this village. I was challenged as the young man narrated how he struggles to combine raising money to pay for his school fees and concentrating on school work. He said that he depends on charcoal burning and sales this merchandise to Kalulushi district more than 30 kilometres away from his village, and depending on a bicycle as the mode of transport. Since he carries charcoal packed in about four 25 kg bags on his bicycle, the entire distance is covered on foot. The young man explained to me that engaging in agriculture would be much better but lack of proper skills and income to buy input resources, are the main constraints himself and his family has been facing.

Low levels of literacy have haunted this neighbourhood, as a result of parents lacking income to support their children. The land and water resources are abundant but people do not have the knowhow skills and input resources for them to effectively engage in agriculture which happens to be the only environmental friendly and sustainable income generating activity than charcoal burning as most of the trees have been used for charcoal and fire wood. The people of this neighbourhood know that agriculture can work for them but means of engaging in the practice are limited. For the few who have the knowhow skills and finances to buy crop growing inputs, they have small fields in which they engage youths on piece work basis and pay them.

Agribusiness can create employment for the many poor urban and peri-urban youths, and provide for them an opportunity to improve their livelihood and that of their families. It can also provide skills and opportunities, making available a number of skills in which youth should engage in the world of work, while providing income generating opportunities for the improvement of their livelihoods and enabling them to be integrated into society socially and economically. Once self-sustainable, literate and independent and by participating and being in-charge of their lives as well as frontiers of change, the youths will become effective community leaders who would be able to drive sustainable development of their communities , environmentally, socially and economically. This way the youth will participate in development and will prove to be actors and resources in development cooperation.

Effective, meaningful and profitable engagement of youth in agribusiness requires the availability of a number of issues .The youth should acquire skills that will enable them to; carefully choose the right venture to undertake; prepare their fields and be able to handle their crops or livestock; market and sale their product, and this should be backed up by continuous extension support. They should have access to reliable land for their agricultural/livestock activities. They should have easy and affordable access to input resources. In addition, the youth should be helped to have access to the readily available market where they can sale their produce, engage in networking for information and knowledge sharing and exchange coupled with business development and field expansion incentives made available to them.

Considering the lessons I have learnt in this my mini expedition, there are a number of constraints that youth are facing and would face if they engage in agribusiness. Constraints include: skills acquisition, land acquisition, agricultural, livestock and fisheries inputs and other resources acquisition, production know how skills and continuous extension support, market sourcing, networking for information and knowledge sharing and exchange , business development and field expansion.

However, applying a number of aforementioned issues for effective, meaningful and profitable engagement of youth in agribusiness, agribusiness has the potential and can provide employment and income opportunities and improve the livelihoods of the poor and unemployed rural, peri-urban and urban youths. Furthermore, the application of Critical thinking, Creativity, Teamwork, Cross-Cultural Understanding, Self-Direction, Communication and Technology, should not be left out if this intervention has to be successful. Fore-instance Continuous learning, this becomes more workable with the support and availability of ICTs, has proved to be essential if agricultural ventures have to be successful. This is evident in the results of a study carried out by the United States of America based International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) in which it is estimated that variable climate reduces Zambia’s rate of economic growth by 0.4 percentage points on average each year. This is because those venturing in agriculture cannot adapt to the variable climate patterns which are cardinal to agriculture. Continuous learning and the availability of up to date information would largely contribute to the adaptation of these variable trends in climate.

Therefore, researchers, professionals, knowledge managers, ICT4D practitioners and professionals, donors and micro-financing institutional, agriculture/livestock and fisheries experts and other stakeholders should engage in closing the gap to ensure sustainable solutions are put in place in both short and long term. More so, it should always be noted that we are still celebrating and advocating for dialogue and mutual understanding as the theme for the International year of the youth and are besides being reminded to consider the ‘youth perspective and youth 21st Century Skills’ approach if we are to effectively and sustainably engage the youth in development.

By Wandila Simon Kamukwape
Zambia Telecentre Network member
Linkedin: Wandila simon
Facebook: Wandila
simon @kamukwape
www.youthskills4dev.interconnection.org
www.i-am-the-story.ning.com

www.world-virtual-school.com


This inventory of Community Multimedia Centres of Senegal complements the CMC study that CTA undertook in Senegal in 2007. It covers 27 CMC centres that were established by the government of Senegal with the support of international partners including UNESCO. 

All these centretelecentre_map2s have been plotted on a Google map in an initiative that seeks to identify the location of all CMCs and rural telecentes in Africa.

The Community Multimedia Centres project of Senegal is an initiative of UNESCO and SIDA (Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency).   They are part of the effort to reduce the digital divide by making ICTs available to marginalized communities.


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