Toward Learning at Scale in Developing Countries: Lessons from the Global Learning XPRIZE Field Study - Robotics Institute Carnegie Mellon University

Toward Learning at Scale in Developing Countries: Lessons from the Global Learning XPRIZE Field Study

Andrew A. McReynolds, Sheba P. Naderzad, Mononito Goswami, and Jack Mostow
Conference Paper, Proceedings of 7th ACM Conference on Learning @ Scale (L@S '20), pp. 175 - 183, August, 2020

Abstract

Advances in education technology are enabling tremendous advances in learning at scale. However, they typically assume resources taken for granted in developed countries, including reliable electricity, high-bandwidth Internet access, fast WiFi, powerful computers, sophisticated sensors, and expert technical support to keep it all working. This paper examines these assumptions in the context of a massive test of learning at scale in a developing country. We examine each assumption, how it was broken, and some workarounds used in a 15-month-long independent controlled evaluation of pre- to posttest learning and social-emotional gains by over 2,000 children in 168 villages in Tanzania. We analyze those gains to characterize who gained how much, using test score data, social-emotional measures, and detailed logs from RoboTutor. We quantify the relative impact of pretest scores, literate aspirations, treatment, and usage on learning gains.

BibTeX

@conference{McReynolds-2020-126657,
author = {Andrew A. McReynolds and Sheba P. Naderzad and Mononito Goswami and Jack Mostow},
title = {Toward Learning at Scale in Developing Countries: Lessons from the Global Learning XPRIZE Field Study},
booktitle = {Proceedings of 7th ACM Conference on Learning @ Scale (L@S '20)},
year = {2020},
month = {August},
pages = {175 - 183},
}