Schools ordered to take back tablets

Schools ordered to take back tablets

The Office of the Basic Education Commission (Obec) has ordered more than 30,000 schools to recover more than a million tablet computers given to students to take home under the previous government's "one tablet per child" scheme.

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Prathom 1 (Grade 1) students from Don Thong School, in Chachoengsao's Muang district, learn how to use tablet computer they received in late 2012 from the Education Ministry’s Office of the Basic Education Commission. TAWATCHAI KEMGUMNERD

Obec wants back 1m tablets given out in Yingluck scheme

Bangkokpost.com

The Office of the Basic Education Commission (Obec) has ordered more than 30,000 schools to recover more than a million tablet computers given to students to take home under the previous government.

The junta's social and psychological affairs unit scrapped the controversial "one tablet per child" policy initiated by Yingluck Shinawatra's Pheu Thai government less than a month after the May 2014 coup.

The Obec now wants those tablets back from the 30,815 schools under its jurisdiction, saying the Chinese-made iPad knockoffs given to grade 1 and grade 7 students would be inspected and used as classroom materials instead of distributed to students to take home.

Daily News Online quoted Anusorn Fuchareon, deputy secretary-general of Obec's education committee, as saying future students would be permitted to use their own tablets or smartphones for educational purposes and the tablets purchased under the Yingluck scheme would be reserved for needy pupils.

The government saved 5.8 billion baht last year by ending the tablet programme. The money was diverted to other programmes, including a project to create "smart classrooms" in as many as 18,000 schools.

Apart from tablets, the government is also dropping plans to spend 1.2 billion baht to build computer rooms at Obec schools. Mr Anusorn said a research study found the computer centres weren't worth the investment.

Instead, the money will be used to expand the satellite-based Klaikangwon Palace distance-learning programme to cover schools nationwide and provide resources for impoverished schools.

"The scheme to build computer rooms has continued for more than 10 years in more than 20,000 schools, costing more than 10 billion baht," Mr Anusorn said. "A study found it's not worth it and the children only use them an hour a day."

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Vocabulary

  • affairs: political, social, and economic events that are happening now - กรณียกิจ, กิจธุระ, การเมือง
  • controversial: causing disagreement or disapproval - ซึ่งก่อให้เกิดการโต้แย้ง
  • coup: the seizure of power in a country by a group of people, usually members of the armed forces - รัฐประหาร
  • deputy: a person whose rank is immediately below that of the leader of an organisation - รอง
  • distance-learning (noun): a system of education in which people study at home or at schools with the help of special Internet sites and television and radio programmes - การเรียนรทางไกล
  • distribute: to give something out to many different places - แจกจ่าย
  • divert: to use something for a different purpose - เบี่ยงเบน
  • expand: to make or become larger - ขยาย
  • impoverished: very poor - ยากจน
  • initiate: to make something start - ริเริ่ม
  • inspect: to look at something carefully - ตรวจสอบ, ตรวจสอบอย่างละเอียด
  • investment (noun): the act of investing money in something - การลงทุน
  • junta: a group of military officers that governs a country, usually without having been elected - รัฐบาลทหาร
  • jurisdiction: the authority that an official organisation has to make legal decisions about somebody/something - เขตอำนาจตามกฎหมาย
  • knockoff (noun): a copy or imitation, especially of an expensive or designer product - ของเลียนแบบ
  • material: information or ideas used in books, songs, etc - ข้อมูล, เนื้อหา, ใจความ, สาระ
  • nationwide: throughout a whole country - ทั่วทั้งประเทศ
  • needy: not having enough money, food, clothing, etc. - ยากไร้
  • Office of the Basic Education Commission (OBEC) (noun): a Thai government agency, founded in 2003. Its responsibilities include the management of education from primary school until high school - สำนักงานคณะกรรมการการศึกษาขั้นพื้นฐาน
  • permit (verb): to allow someone to do something - อนุญาต, อนุมัติ, ยินยอม
  • policy (noun): a set of plans or action agreed on by a government, political party, business, or other group - นโยบาย
  • project: a planned piece of work that is designed to find information about something, to produce something new, or to improve something - โครงการ
  • psychological: connected with a person's mind and the way in which it works - ทางด้านจิตใจ, ทางจิตวิทยา
  • quote: to repeat the words that someone else has said or written - ยกคำพูดมา
  • recover (verb): to get something back (usually that has been lost or stolen) - ได้กลับคืนมา
  • research: a careful study of a subject, especially in order to discover new facts or information about it - การวิจัย
  • reserve: something currently not being used but that can be used when needed - สำรองไว้
  • resources: things that you need to achieve something - ทรัพยากรที่มีอยู่
  • satellite: an electronic device that is sent into space and moves around the earth or another planet. It is used for communicating by radio, television, etc. and for providing information - ดาวเทียม
  • scheme: a plan that is developed by a government or large organisation in order to provide a particular service for people - แผนการ โครงการ
  • scrapped: decided not to continue with something, such as a plan or event - ยุติแผนที่วางไว้
  • secretary-general (noun): the person who is in charge of the department that deals with the running of a large international or political organisation - เลขาธิการ, เลขาธิการใหญ่
  • worth (noun): useful, important or good enough to be a suitable reward for the time spent or the effort made - คุ้มค่า, คุ้มค่ากับความพยายาม

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