I think the importance of good teachers and direction, in today's world, is even greater. Especially in a situation where one could afford to just give every child a laptop and unlimited data.
Absolutely. For my kids' education (in this "information age") I devoted a great deal of time and effort, got involved in all sorts of things, looked into all sorts of this-and-that when it comes to learning, ... and I have grave doubts about any mindless belief in the power of technology. I'd first focus on the quality of teachers, nutrition (as in school meals, if necessary), pleasant or at least comfortable physical surroundings (certainly not rocks under a tree), exercises areas, etc.
I can't think of a worse way to learn than being exposed to the WWW and the information overload.
Unfortunately, there seems to be an increasing confusion between "access to more information" and real learning or even just the "acquisition of knowledge". And the confusion seems to be greatest among those least equipped to make the judgment.
Moreover, in a place like Kenya, even the information these kids have access to on their tablets is quite limited when compared to, say, a kid who has 24/7 high-speed access to the internet, along with access the digital contents of major libraries and all sorts of stuff like that. Not just limited, but also of questionable worth. Just what the Kenyan kids have on their tablets these days is not easy to determine, but when they started it looked like just a bunch of .pdf, .ppt, and that sort of files ... a mindless transfer from the stanrdard textbooks Just what fundamental difference that is supposed to make, beyond chalk wielded by a good teacher, is unclear.
I'm all for Kenyan kids getting into "high tech" early on in school. Technology can be helpful in learning, and there is something to be said having ready access to the treasure-trove of information that is the WWW. But the current laptops/tablets thing is little more than a bad (and, for Kenya, expensive) joke. An election gimmick taken too far. As for fuzzy predictions of technological wunderkinder populating Legoland Konza City (in its current form/conception, another bad joke) in 20 years, Kenyan tech colossi (with old Jubilee tablets under their arms) bestriding the earth, ... shall we focus on the "fuzzy"?