2018-11-03 New Scientist Australian Edition

(lu) #1
42 | NewScientist | 3 November 2018

I


N 1999, an inquisitive physicist named
Sugata Mitra installed a computer in a slum
in New Delhi, India, and then walked away.
Local children congregated and began trying
to use the unfamiliar device. When Mitra
returned a few days later, they had already
taught themselves to surf the internet.
Mitra is now a professor of educational
technology at Newcastle University in the
UK. In the decades since the “hole in the wall”
experiment, he has found that groups of
children aged 8 to 12, left alone with the
internet, can teach themselves even technical
subjects such as evolutionary biology to a level
several years ahead of their school age. In 2013,
he won a $1 million TED prize to help his work.

Hey, teacher! Leave


those kids alone


In a Delhi slum two decades ago, Sugata Mitra discovered


that a computer with an internet connection was enough to


harness children’s curiosity and capacity to learn. We should


learn the lesson, he tells Bob Holmes


PHILIPPE TARBOURIECH

INTERVIEW


How can children learn on their own, without
guidance?
The learning I’m talking about appears
spontaneously in response to a query, which
may be posed by an adult, or by the children
themselves. I need the internet to be available
on large, publicly visible screens in a safe space.
I need to have mixed groups of children – boys
and girls of different ages together, not each
child on a different computer. Then I need to
remove all supervision. We have got to keep
the adults away.
Everybody says, who taught them? How
clever they are! But this doesn’t have anything
to do with cleverness or teaching. It has to do
with a hive-like mind with a common desire.

But are the children really learning, or just
repeating phrases they don’t really understand?
I could give them questions on quantum
mechanics, and they would come back, not
with the understanding that a physicist like
me would have, but with a child’s
understanding. I teased 9-year-olds by saying
something could be in two places at the same
time. They said no, if you have a pencil, it is
here when you put it here and there when
you put it there. I said there are some things
that can be here and there at the same time –
then I left. They came back with quantum
entanglement, and said it means that the two
particles know about each other, but we don’t
know how those particles know.

Can children discriminate between good and
bad information on the internet? Many adults
have trouble with this.
The children get as confused as you and I.
However, when they work in groups, they can
detect extreme points of view and avoid those.
Working in groups is key: the hive mind is
more discriminating and less gullible than
an individual in front of the screen.
If I show kids a picture of the Colosseum in
Rome and ask “what’s that building? And why
is it broken?”, they come back with a lot of
information about the Roman Empire. But
now I go on to ask “how do we know what you
said is true?” They start by saying that every
website says so, which is good, but then they
start going deeper, toward understanding
historical evidence.

Children in India
worked together to
teach themselves
when provided with
a “hole in the wall”
computer
Free download pdf