Mobiles for Literacy in Developing Countries: An Effectiveness Framework
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mobiles
technology
developing countries
success
evidence
teachers
quality of education
Curriculum and Instruction
Education
Educational Administration and Supervision
Educational Assessment, Evaluation, and Research
Educational Methods
Instructional Media Design
International and Comparative Education
Language and Literacy Education
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Abstract
In recent years, the advent of low-cost digital and mobile devices has led to a strong expansion of social interventions, including those that try to improve student learning and literacy outcomes. Many of these are focused on improving reading in low-income countries, and particularly among the most disadvantaged. Some of these early efforts have been called successful, but little credible evidence exists for those claims. Drawing on a robust sample of projects in the domain of mobiles for literacy, this article introduces a design solution framework that combines intervention purposes with devices, end users, and local contexts. In combination with a suggested set of purpose-driven methods for monitoring and evaluation, this new framework provides useful parameters for measuring effectiveness in the domain of mobiles for literacy.