



|
|
People:
Graduate
students
Undergraduate
students
Community
partners
Faculty
advisor
Alumni
Graduate Students
Matthew Kam is a
Ph.D. candidate in Computer Science at the University of California,
Berkeley (USA) affiliated with the Berkeley Institute of Design. His
research integrates his interests in economic development, education and
information technology. For his doctoral dissertation, Matthew is working
on educational computing using smartphones to improve English language
learning for children from the rural areas and urban slums of India.
Matthew previously participated in a third-party field evaluation of a
microfinance transaction technology developed and piloted by
Hewlett-Packard in Uganda, under the auspices of a fellowship program
between the United Nations and UC Berkeley. For his M.S. thesis, Matthew
developed and conducted learning assessments of Livenotes, a cooperative
note-taking system to promote small-group learning in large lectures via
wirelessly-connected handheld devices. For his B.A. honors thesis in
economics, he worked with non-profit organizations in the USA and his home
country Singapore to evaluate the socioeconomic and educational impacts of
computer donations on low-income households.
As a child, Matthew was a robotics enthusiast who was fascinated that
computers could “think.” But living on the other side of the digital
divide meant persisting through numerous obstacles, including the lack of
a home computer, to learn computer programming. Moreover, growing up in an
environment which is not conducive to the professional development of the
engineer made him dream of becoming an outstanding development economist
instead. Matthew's aspirations shifted after he encountered John Canny's
human-centered computing initiative at UC Berkeley as an undergraduate
there. This is a fertile intersection where he can finally reconcile his
disparate academic interests.
Matthew graduated in 2001 with a B.A. in Economics and a B.S. in
Electrical Engineering & Computer Sciences from UC Berkeley. He has
completed graduate classes on literacy theory, reading science and second
language acquisition at UC Berkeley's Graduate School of Education. He is
also completing a part-time diploma course in Teaching English as a
Foreign Language.
Divya Ramachandran is a Ph.D. student in
Computer Science at the University
of
California,
Berkeley
affiliated with the Berkeley Institute of Design. In the summer of
2005, she carried out a two-week design workshop with rural school
children near Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh as a part of her current research interest in educational
computing for English language learning.
Over the summer of 2005, she worked as an intern at Mitsubishi Electric
Research Labs (MERL) where she designed a user-interface in the Tamil
language for the speech-operated voice mail Combadge device, which was
specifically designed by MERL to target inexperienced and/or illiterate
users of technology. Following this, she conducted fieldwork in the village
of Pudupalayam
in the state of Tamil Nadu,
India
to observe the ways in which residents interacted with the device, so as
to better understand their needs and practices.
Divya graduated magna cum laude from the University
of Utah
with a B.S. in Computer Engineering in May 2004. In 2002, she
co-founded the Salt Lake City
chapter of Asha for Education, an organization dedicated to promoting
socioeconomic change in India through the primary education of underprivileged children.
Undergraduate Students
Ruth Alexander is
a graduating senior at the University of
California, Berkeley majoring in psychology. She enjoys being able to work
with students from other majors on the same project and contributing to
the interdisciplinary approach of the MILEEE project. Ruth has past
experience working with children and is glad to be applying that knowledge
to mobile and immersive learning.
Anjali Koppal is a
graduating senior in Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences at the
University of California, Berkeley. She is an international student, and
has lived in India and Kuwait before coming to Berkeley on a Regent’s
and Chancellor’s scholarship. Anjali is passionate about technology and
its applications to solving real-world problems. She is graduating in
Spring 2007, and hopes to attend graduate school in Fall 2007. Anjali is
fluent in English, Hindi and her native language Kannada.
Anand Raghavan
is a Regent’s and Chancellor’s scholar at the University
of California,
Berkeley, working towards a B.S. degree in Electrical Engineering & Computer
Sciences. Anand, an international student from
India, is fluent in English, Hindi, Tamil and Arabic, and has a passion for
software design and computer programming. As a former Student Body
Leader in his high school (Indian School Al-Ghubra), he has considerable
experience working with Indian school children of different ages.
Anand is currently an officer with the Berkeley
chapter of Asha for Education, a collaborative organization with over 50
chapters worldwide that focuses on basic education for disadvantaged
children in India.
Priyanka Reddy is
in her sophomore
year at the University of California, Berkeley, where she is working
towards a B.S. degree in Electrical Engineering & Computer Sciences.
She has always been interested in Computer Science and enjoys being
involved in the MILLEE research project because it combines her passion
for computer science with her interest in helping others. Although
Priyanka moved from India to the United States in her childhood, she
visits India regularly in order to maintain her knowledge of the Indian
culture and values. Priyanka is also a participant in the Intel Undergraduate
Research Program administered by UC Berkeley's College of
Engineering.
Anuj Tewari is an undergraduate student at the Dhirubhai Ambani Institute of Information and Communication Technology
(DA-IICT) in India, pursuing his third year of B.Tech in Information and Communication
Technology (ICT). His primary interests are in the fields of programming languages, computer networking, operating systems, graphics design, human-centered learning and analog electronics. Anuj is currently also working in the field of operational amplifiers and MOSFETs. Anuj worked under the Tata Institute of Social
Sciences (TISS), in the summers of 2005 and tried to understand the social setup of Indian villages. He also conducted a survey in a village called Kantekur aimed at recording the different means of livelihood in Indian villages. He spent almost one month living in villages and working with NGOs and was awarded a certificate by the Panchayat in recognition of his work.
Community Partners
Babu Mathew started
his career in marketing. After serving Bata India for more than 10 years,
he moved to Saudi Arabia to take up the job of a Recreation Manager.
During his 9 year stint in Saudi Arabia, he planned and executed several
events for the group of American consultants and their families based
there. As a Pygmalion volunteer Babu
contributed enormously to spreading the project far and wide. He
meticulously planned and installed hundreds of computers in rural schools.
Truly, Babu is the face of project Pygmalion! Babu Mathew is one of
the founders of Mysooru Literacy Trust, a new not-for-profit initiative to
promote literacy among the poor.
N.S. Soundara Rajan (aka
Soundar) is one of the founders of Pygmalion, a project to
complement the work of English teachers at Government-run schools in
Karnataka, India. The teaching methodology was evolved out of the one
developed and practiced by Soundar, a couple of years ago. The methodology
comprises among others multi-media based lessons, curriculum and
non-curriculum, specially developed for 5th, 6th and 7th standards.
Project Pygmalion is being implemented in dozens of schools in the state
of Karnataka, in India.
As a columnist Soundar hosts weekly columns related to freeware and
Internet in 'Deccan Herald,' a leading English news daily published from
Bangalore. He is one of the founders of Mysooru Literacy Trust, a
new initiative to promote literacy among the poor. This not-for-profit
trust is a key local collaborator in India for the University of
California, Berkeley’s MILLEE project to enhance English Language skills
among the poor students in rural schools.
M.L. Ramanarasimha
(aka RN) has served as an English language teacher for 30 years in
Primary and Higher Secondary Schools, Junior Colleges, and Teachers
Training Institutions in India. Trained in Language Teaching Methods at
the Regional Institute of English, Bangalore, RN, a professional ELT
consultant, has conducted several English Language Training Courses for
middle and upper level management personnel in many Industries, in and
around Mysore. As a Pygmalion volunteer RN
has contributed a lot to the development of the teaching
methodology. He is also the main author of the curriculum developed for
imparting English skills at Rural Community Learning Centres. RN is
one of the founders of Mysooru Literacy Trust, a new not-for-profit
initiative to promote literacy among the poor.
Urvashi Sahni has been widely recognized
for her efforts to reform education in India
and to improve educational opportunities for girls. She pioneered
the use of computers in rural schools in her native state of Uttar Pradesh
(UP),
India. To date, this model has been replicated by the state government in
1,400 rural schools. She is currently engaged in the Digital
StudyHall, a distance learning project using technology that targets
children in rural areas and the slums, in collaboration with the computer
scientist Dr. Randolph Wang.
Her other accomplishments include: initiating and managing a school reform
project involving 62 schools, 16,000 students, and 258 students in rural
areas of UP; launching an innovative in-service program for the United
Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) with 30,000 kindergarten and
first-grade teachers in 28 districts within Uttar Pradesh; working as the
director of an action research project to bolster girls’ education and
serving on the UP state government’s Girl Child Mission to promote
girls’ education; founding and running the highly regarded Study Hall
school in Lucknow (UP) and its affiliated afternoon school for girls from
the urban slums in Lucknow.
Urvashi received her Ph.D. in 1994 from the Graduate School of Education
at the University
of
California,
Berkeley. As part of her doctoral dissertation, Urvashi conducted
ethnographic fieldwork at a rural Indian school and taught English there
for eight months.
In 1999, Urvashi received the prestigious Haas International Award, which
is given to a UC Berkeley graduate who has made major contributions to the
betterment of the world community and is not a United States
resident.
Faculty Advisor John Canny is a Professor in Computer Science at UC Berkeley. He holds the Paul and Stacy Jacobs Distinguished Professorship in Engineering. His Master's thesis on edge detection (computer vision) received the “test of time” award from the American Association for Artificial Intelligence 20 years later, and his Ph.D. work on computational robotics received the dissertation award from the Association for Computing Machinery in 1988. Since then he has worked in robotics, computational algebra and geometry, simulation, human-computer interaction and collaborative work. His main interests now are computer-assisted learning, collaboration technologies, privacy, and technology for developing regions. He supervises two Ph.D. students with a primary interest in technology for developing regions, two more with primary interest in education, and two with primary interest in speech-based user interfaces.
Alumni
Maksim Lirov graduated
from the University of California, Berkeley in December 2006 with a B.S.
degree in Electrical Engineering & Computer Sciences (focus in
Computer Systems). Maksim joined the MILLEE research project because he is
interested in learning about foreign language teaching as well as
participating in the process of developing English language learning games
on the smartphone platform. As an immigrant to the United States, Maksim
himself went through the process of learning the English language and is
interested in applying his own experiences with English acquisition to the
MILLEE project.
Vijay Rudraraju graduated
from the University of California, Berkeley in
December 2006 with
a B.S. in Engineering Physics. He believes strongly in the ability of
technology and a free internet to become a global democratizing force and
reduce the barriers to education and economic power in developing regions
around the world. Vijay currently works at Seeqpod Inc. as a developer for
their array of web services and applications.
|