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2007 – Randy Wang
Microsoft Research, India (2007)
Citation
For
founding and leading the Digital Study Hall Project, a computer systems
technology based approach to creating, distributing, and collectively
improving the digital teaching materials used by teachers serving the
rural poor children in the third world. Press Release
Full Citation
Randy
Wang is selected as the recipient of the ACM Eugene Lawler Award, for
founding and leading the Digital Study Hall Project, which uses
computer systems technology to improve the education of poor children
in the rural third world. Randy's insight was to put the tools of
computer science at the fingertips of the large number of local people
struggling to address problems of rural education. Digital Study Hall
(DSH) is a bit like YouTube meets Netflix, in a rural schoolhouse with
a dirt floor. DSH provides tools to help local NGOs make videos of
excellent teachers teaching the standard textbook material, which are
distributed via DVD using the postal system to local schools, for the
local teacher to use in the classroom. More than "just TV," but that
doesn't begin to capture the rich interaction between the video, the
teacher and the students. Instead of students passively watching a
video, the video is of an actual classroom, showing how the topic
should be taught, complete with student interaction. When a local
teacher has a better idea how to teach some material, the local NGO can
videotape them for distribution to other schools. In other words, the
system gets better the more it is used. DSH has had an astounding
success rate. Over thirty "spoke" schools are now participating in the
project, clustered around "hubs" that provide the technical assistance
in Lucknow, Pune, Bangalore, Calcutta, and soon, Dhaka. Over three
thousand students are participating just in Lucknow alone. Students in
the project, whose older brothers and sisters are barely literate even
after years in school, are often progressing at a rate comparable to
middle class children in urban settings.

ACM President Stuart Feldman, Randy Wang, and ACM CEO John White at the 2008 ACM Awards Banquet.
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