This year’s
Nobel laureates Abhijit Banerjee, Esther Dufloand Michael Kremer are amongst
the pioneers of Randomized Controlled Trials (RCTs), an ‘experimental approach
to alleviate global poverty’. Essentially, it transports societal economics from
desks and theories and brings it on-ground, where it is ideally expected to
make an impact. In fact, the husband-wife duo of Abhijit and Esther practiced
their study in Indian hinterlands, collaborating with non-profit organizations
like SevaMandir and Pratham, and conducted RCTs to scientifically evaluate various
targeted anti-poverty programmes in India. This radically new approach sparkedEducational
Initiatives’implementation of the Mindspark programin Rajasthan, associating
with the state government to test the impact of classroom-based ICT program
amongst the most underserved and resource bereft children of rural India.
The
implementation of the program was sponsored by Global Innovation Fund –where Michael
Kremer and Esther Duflothe winners of Nobel SverigesRiksbank Prize in Economic
Sciences were among the founding Board Members. This grant was on the basis of
the Mindspark program demonstrating strong results in a J-PAL RCT of the
program in Delhi urban slums. The proposal was to do a pilot in government
schools to show the blueprint of how EdTech can be integrated into the govt
school system to improve learning outcomes at scale.
The ground reality
Despite high
enrolment rates in recent years, improvement in reading outcomes and arithmetic
ability remain alarmingly low. The Annual Status of Education Report (ASER) 2018reveals
56% of students in Class VIII struggle to solve simple numerical division
problems, whereas 72% of students in Class V do not even know how to divide.
The report, released by NGO Pratham earlier this year, clearly indicate that learning
levels of students in India are well below age-appropriate levels.
In response
to this widespread learning crisis, the Government of India has allocated a
great deal of funding to support classroom-based ICT programs that promote
computer literacy and develop innovative curricula in electronic formats.Yet,
there is little evidence to date that suggests a strong correlation between
public investment in education and learning outcomes.
EI’s primary
objective in implementing the Mindspark program was twinfold- to understand the
roadblocks that have created such a scenario, and attain practical insights
acquired from real-life implementations of EdTech-based solutions at a scale
that imitates real situations.
What is Mindspark?
Mindspark is
an AI-powered personalized adaptive learning tool that curates a tailored
learning path for students, based on the information generated by an individual
student’s responses to questions and activities. It then adjusts the type and
difficulty of content delivered as per the child’s need, style and pace of
learning. The dynamic platform culls relevant and customized intelligence from
over a billion data points and delivers content in the form of questions,
activities, games and videos to test students and provide explanations, feedback
and learning inputs that are useful to students as well as teachers.
Benefits:-
The
Mindspark software assists children in learning the fundamentals of the topics
before calibrating to the next logical step that he/she should take in
mastering the particular topic. The teacher can, therefore, focus on common
misconceptions or learning gaps that the group as a whole faces, whereas
Mindspark can address and fine-tune specific learning challenges of individual
students.
How it happened?
In October
2017, EI set up Mindspark Labs in 40 government-run Adarsh schools across four
districts of Rajasthan, namely Churu, Jhunjhunu, Dungarpur, and Udaipur. To
ensure there is buy-in among all school stakeholders, EI organised several
orientation and training workshops – both centrally and at school. Seven such district-level
teacher workshops were organized in 2019 itself, with the aim to orient
teachers about the program and provide pedagogical and logistical insights
about EdTech. In addition, a mobile monitoring dashboard was created along with
unique login IDs and passwords for principals of schools and government
officials, enabling them to view Mindspark data on any mobile phone. The
program included 6677 and 6276 students from October 2018 to April 2019 (part
of Academic Year 2018-19) and July 2019 to September 2019 (part of Academic
Year 2019-20)respectively.
Initiatives for teachers
The EI team
conducted several focused group discussions and personal interviews with
subject teachers to help them integrate Mindspark into the school eco-system. On
soliciting teachers’ feedback regarding how Mindspark can help them complete
their syllabus and achieve a better school result, EI introduced a “Textbook
Module Feature” called “Worksheets” from February 2019. These worksheets were
made available for Grades 1-8 for all topics recommended by the teachers,
enabling them to practice the topics already covered in class and take unit
tests to know students’understanding. Moreover, EI’s team designed an academic
calendar for all subject teachers (Hindi and Math) of Grades 1-8.
Student engagement initiatives
EI’s project
management appointed two students each from Grades 4 – 8 as Mindspark Monitors and trained them on
how to start the server, use a Chromebook, handle connectivity errors, sync the
data, and navigate Mindspark.It was a moment of great excitement for the kids,
and an instant of empowerment as well. Additionally, the team participated in
the ‘Balsabha’meeting held every
month by the government to recognize students’ performance on Mindspark. The EI
team presented the monthly school report at the meeting and, along with the
respectiveschool principal and teacher, felicitated the top student performers,
called Sparkie students, from each
school.Sparkie students are those who receive the highest number of Sparkie
points on Mindspark. TheseSparkie points are awarded when a student correctly
answers three questions in a row.
Outcomes
The Abdul
LatifJameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL) wasformed by Abhijit Banerjee and Esther
Duflo.The Mindspark program improved learning levels across all groups of
students and proved to be cost-effective compared to other instruction types
according to the J-PAL RCT led by Prof.KarthikMuralidharan which did the third-party
evaluation of the Mindspark program in the 40 schools across Rajasthan.In May
2019, J-PAL shared preliminary results from its Year 2 randomized control trial
(RCT) of Mindspark at the RISE Conference, Washington DC. Prior to the program,students
in the sample were many grade levels behind, and learning deficits increased
with each grade. Between start of Mindspark instruction in November 2017 and
endline testing in February 2019, students’ performance in both math and Hindi
were improved across multiple grade levels. Mindspark students scored 0.2
standard deviations more compared to a control group in both the subjects. In
other words, learning gains for students that received Mindsparkwas twice as
much as students in the comparison group (that didn’t receive Mindspark). It’s
estimated that Year 3 results would be more prominent, given the implementation
is now stable. Based on these results, Dr. Shawn Cole, who is the John G McLean
Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School (Executive
Committee of J-PAL) also wrote a case study that is now taught to students of
Harvard Business School and Harvard Kennedy School of Government.
Given a
growing cognizance of the skills and competencies required, as well as the push
on digital technologies, India has seen increased interest from all
stakeholders ranging from the Prime Minister and MHRDto parents towards
improving the learning outcomes of students, especially in public school
setups. With this shift in mindset, along with the revised NEP and appropriate
line items for operational expenses, it is safe to say that the technology
behind personalized adaptive learning will be implementable, scalable and one
that promises limitless improvement in the way India learns today.It only needs
individuals and organizations with vision and good intentions to act on them,
and prove the effectiveness and viability of such structures in our current
educational framework.
Speaking on
Mindspark success in Rajasthan, Mr.SriniRaghavan,Co-Founder and CEO,
Educational Initiatives commented, “EI was conceived with the goal to help
children everywhere learn with understanding. Our work in Rajasthan has shown
that Mindspark, which integrates latest developments in pedagogy and technology
through continuous research, has helped us make progress towards this goal. We
are thrilled that the JPAL study has validated this.”
Furthermore,
Mr.KarthikMuralidharan, Tata chancellor's professor of economics University of
California, Sandiego Education sector, Co Chair, JPAL, Honorary
adviser(education and social),NITI Aayog said,
"In 15 years of education research, I've never seen something that
has had such a large effect in such a short amount of time. The reason why this
is so effective is that you are getting complete customisation in a setting
where the vast majority of children are so far behind the textbook and the
syllabus that is taught in their class.”
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