Hundreds of schools have already got
information and communication technology laboratories under the scheme. This
week, the first group of teachers, from various parts of the country, is in
Kampala for a seminar to train them to teach computer studies. This is a highly
commendable initiative. African countries like Uganda have some of the poorest
access to information and communication technologies in the world.
Today, many children in Uganda still join
secondary school without ever touching – let alone seeing – a computer, or
understanding what it does. This problem is especially acute in the countryside,
where many children do not know what the internet is. This means that as the
world, and many youngsters in Kampala and other urban centres march forward in
the ICT age, a significant portion of Uganda’s children and youth are being left
behind simply because of where, or to whom, they were born.Some of these children would be exceptionally gifted individuals capable of historic achievements, but because they found themselves at the wrong end of the chain of distribution of services and opportunities, humanity misses their gifts. That does not have to be the case, and this programme could go a long way towards improving access to these technologies.
Ayub Kalema Golooba together with students from Mengo and Rjukan |
Wandering re-establishes the original harmony which once existed between man and the universe. Cheap Flights to Entebbe
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