Title: Enhancing Educational Goals through Information Technology
1Enhancing Educational Goals through Information
Technology
- The Creation of a Computer and Internet Access
Centerat the Catholic University of Angola - FILIPPO NARDINANGOLA EDUCATIONAL ASSISTANCE FUND
- MILLENIUM MINDS CONFERENCECAPE TOWN, SEPTEMBER
29 - OCTOBER 2, 1999
2AEAF Profile
- The Angola Educational Assistance Fund (AEAF) was
founded in Boston in May, 1996, by Michael
Kennedy, the late Chairman of Citizens Energy - Established as an IRS 501(c )(3) non-profit
organization, the AEAF administrates funds from
the Block 1 Production Sharing Agreement between
Citizens Energy, Energy Africa, SAGA, Mobil, and
Sonangol - Directors
- Rep. Joseph P. Kennedy, II (Chairman)
- Dr. Agostinho de Miranda
- Mr. James P. Hayward
3AEAF Mission
- To support the establishment of the Catholic
University of Angola (UCAN), - promote the collaboration between higher
education institutions and development
organizations, in Angola and abroad, - encourage the involvement of the private sector
in educational activities in Angola, and - serve as a point of reference for a modern
approach to development.
4AEAF Structure
- Small overhead, non-core activities outsource,
focused on delivering - Use proceedings from portfolio management and
income from programs to finance activities - Use exclusively information technology for
communication, project coordination, public
relations, marketing activities, etc - Use partners resources wherever possible
(accommodations, facilities, communication
network, etc)
5AEAF Activities
- Collaborate with and advise the Catholic
University of Angola on a variety of activities - Work with non-governmental organizations to link
their activities to the Catholic University (and
its information and communication technology
center) - Organize educational activities and training
programs for the private sector as a new way to
engage in socially responsible projects which
benefit both the companies and the local
population
6Catholic University of Angola
- It is an open university, with admission criteria
based solely on merit, its purpose being to serve
Angola and its people - Its presence creates an alternative that
encourages higher standards of academic education
in Angola - Preparatory classes for 320 students started on
February 23, 1999 - Official inauguration scheduled on October 19,
1999 - Faculties established Law, Economics
- Future faculties Computer Science, Medical School
7Catholic University of Angola (View)
8The Michael Kennedy Library
- Michael Kennedy helped the Cardinal ofAngola to
start the Catholic Universityof Angola project - The Conference of the Bishops of Angolahas
dedicated the library of the CatholicUniversity
to his memory in recognitionof Michaels
commitment and contributionto the project - AEAF helped shipping 50,000 books tothe library
in 1999
9The Michael Kennedy Library (View)
10Information Technology Project
- July 1, 1998 through June 30, 1999 collaborative
effort. The following organizations contributed
in various capacities - Catholic University of Angola (UCAN)
- Angola Educational Assistance Fund (AEAF)
- International Telecomputing Consortium (ITC)
- University of Trento, Italy
- International Development Research Centre (IDRC)
- USAID (specifically the Leland Initiative)
- Ebonet (a local ISP)
11Project Goals
- To bring the highest possible information and
communication technology standard to UCAN staff
and students, - create local expertise and transfer managing
responsibility to UCAN, - introduce the community of schools in Luanda to
the use of information technology, - create an access center for the surrounding
community, and - provide computer and Internet access related
services to non-governmental organizations and
businesses in Luanda
12Timelines
- First phase guidelines defined, servers
installed, LAN switched-on - 5 computers (incl. Compaq Proliant server)
shipped to UCAN by AEAF - PBX installed, dial-up connection to Ebonet
established - Second phase first classroom, external dial-in,
local management takes over - 15 computers shipped to UCAN by AEAF
- dedicated line for dial-up
- Third phase complete installation
- 1 Mbs wireless connection to Ebonet established
- 60 computers shipped to UCAN by AEAF
13Resources
- 100 personal computers (80 shipped by AEAF in
the course of the project) - 4 servers (network, backup, email, admin) - PII
- 2 classrooms with 121 computers - PII
- 2 classrooms with 61 computers - PI
- Additional access space with 61 computers at the
library - PI - 2 access spaces with 12 and 8 computers - 486
- Computers are linked together via Ethernet and
through a permanent 1 Mbs wireless connection to
a local ISP (Ebonet) - System administration and technical support is
local at UCAN, while networking tech. support is
provided by Ebonet
14Technology (Hardware)
- Personal Computers (PII, PI, 486) as servers and
workstations - Ethernet (LAN), Dial-up (into LAN)
- Wireless Bridge to Ebonet 1 Mbs (WAVENET IP
REMOTE and 23 dBI DIRECTIONAL ANTENNA) - Leased line from Ebonet to Angola Telecom _at_ 512
Kbs - Angola Telecom satellite line _at_ 1 Mbs
15Technology (Software)
- Windows NT Client/Server strategic decision for
security and easiness of use - Localized (Portuguese) MS Office Suite
- MS Access for administrative and cataloging
databases - Internet Explorer, Netscape, various multimedia
software for web access - Web sites are hosted by AEAF in Boston
- HTTP Red Hat Linux/Apache server
- FTP SUN IPX Solaris 4
16Technology (Diagram)
17Technology (Views)
UCAN Wavenet Wireless Bridge Antenna
Ebonet Building with Transmitting Antenna
18Technology (Views)
UCAN Server RoomCompaq Server, Backup Server,
PBX, etc
Computer Classroom 121 PCs, 1 Printer
19Technology (Views)
Computer Access area8 Pcs, 2 Printers
Computer Access area12 Pcs
20Cost Analysis
- Total cost of project 210,000
- Total cost of equipment 140,000 (2/3 of
total) - Number of computer installed 100
- Users currently granted access 400
- Cost per computer 2,600- (or 650-/user)
- Including only equipment costs 1,400- (or
350-/user) - Internet connection 900/month
- i.e. 9-/month computer
- i.e. 2.25-/month user
21Key success factors
- Listen to people and assess real needs
- Set realistic milestones, but deliver and show
results quickly - Make sustainability a VERY high priority
- Create local expertise that will eventually
manage operations and take over leadership - Work with local organizations, trade services
with them - Involve as many entities as possible (non
governmental organizations, private sector, local
community) to broaden support basis - With time, widen scope of projects (think beyond
immediate possibilities, or ... think big!)
22Challenges
- The need exists for wider use of IT, but the
motivation and the demand must come from the
users show the possibilities, people will
follow. Is it true? Do we need to do more? - What to do when telephone, ISDN, leased or
cellular lines are not reliable or available?
Are wireless spread spectrum or satellite
connections a valid alternative? - What about local ISPs dependable? Location?
Technology? - Is the telecom provider supporting the
development of Internet? What about licensing or
regulating the latest technologies ? - Should one plan for other marginal cities and
rural areas? How?
23How to contact us
- Angola Educational Assistance Fund1 (617)
951-04671 (617) 812-1055 (fax)filippo_at_aeaf.org
http//www.aeaf.org - Catholic University of Angola244 (2)
331973244 (2) 398759 (fax)info_at_ucan.eduhttp//
www.ucan.edu