Great. They are using technology to ensure dedicated teaching. They can detect if a teacher is absent. That is what TSC is grappling with..and now with tablet..in few short years...we can know who has turned off their tablet..and who is turned it on. We can even tell teachers to log in their presence....after ensuring every teacher is comput
As usual, it has all flown by you.
First, the point I was trying to make is that Bridge apparently considers teachers to be the most important component and does not believe that they can be replaced with technology.
Second, dealing with teacher absences is a management problem that cannot be solved by technology. The issue is not that of merely knowing who is absent----that information is already available, whence (using GoK's data):
Reports, including a recent one by the World Bank, have said Kenya has some of the highest incidents of teacher absenteeism which, compounded by poor pedagogy, undermine the quality of teaching.
Rather the issues are (a) immediate-term, what do do with absences on the day .... see the Bridge approach; and (b) long-term, what to do with lazy, and habitually absent teachers.