Azcentral – Ditching paper to go all digital

July 25, 2011 in Articles

*Credit to YankoDesign

July 21, 2011 | By Sam Kim (AP)

$2 bil program lets schools in S. Korea take futuristic step

GOESAN, South Korea – Outside the classroom, a hot summer day beckons. But inside, fourth-grade teacher Yeon Eun-jung’s students are glued to their tablet PCs as they watch an animated boy and a girl squabble about whether water becomes heavier when frozen.

The small scene in this rural town is part of something big: South Korea is taking a $2 billion gamble that its students are ready to ditch paper textbooks in favor of tablet PCs as part of a vast digital scholastic network.

France, Singapore, Japan and others are racing to create classrooms where touch-screens provide instant access to millions of pieces of information.

But South Korea, Asia’s fourth-largest economy, believes it enjoys an advantage over these countries, with kids who are considered the world’s savviest navigators of the digital universe.

A 2009 study by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, a Paris-headquartered group of wealthy nations, found that 15-year-olds in South Korea scored highest in their ability to absorb information from digital devices, beating runners-up New Zealand and Australia by a large margin.

At Sosu Elementary School in Goesan, Principal Jo Yong-deuk speaks of a future in which his students interact in virtual reality with Ludwig van Beethoven and Abraham Lincoln. In the classroom, the children scribble answers in their tablet PCs with touch-screen pens as they watch the video clip explaining the scientific properties of frozen water.

“I liked this chapter, but my favorite clip is one where they show how flowers blossom and trees bear fruit in spring,” 11-year-old Jeong Ho-seok said with a wide grin.

More than 60 primary, middle and high schools are now using digital textbooks as part of their curriculum, according to the state-run Korea Education and Research Information Service, which provides technical support for the program.

Seoul believes it can finish the $2.1 billion program to build a single computer network packed with high-quality digital content by 2015. Replacing textbooks with tablet PCs will account for a quarter of that budget.

According to South Korean officials, France is handing out tablets in the Correze region and is pushing to expand digital material, while Japan began distributing tablet PCs in a primary school last year under a pilot program. Info-communications Development Authority of Singapore said on its website that Singapore began adopting tablet PCs in 2004.

But Kim Doo-yeon, a South Korean official leading the project, said his country will have no trouble competing.

South Korea is one of the most wired places on Earth. More than 80 percent of South Korean households have broadband access to the Internet, according to the statistical office here.

U.S. Web-hosting company Akamai said earlier this year that South Korea enjoys the fastest Internet connection in the world. South Korea also ranks first in wireless-broadband subscriptions, according to an OECD release last month.

Lee Sang-hyeob, a student at Sosu Elementary School, spends a lot of time at home playing online games and chatting with schoolmates. Another Sosu student, Jang Woo-dam, often surfs her school’s website to see messages from friends.

The 2009 OECD study says there’s a positive relationship between students’ use of computers at home for leisure and their digital-navigation skills.

“Proficient digital readers tend to know how to navigate effectively and efficiently,” the study said.

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Google Power at Website on Former PMs

January 11, 2010 in Articles, Media, Perdana Library, Spotlight

Google Mini
Google Mini

PETALING JAYA: Researchers will now find it easier to sift through archived information on the country’s former Prime Ministers at the Perdana Leadership Foundation website thanks to Google Mini Search.

Tan Sri Nik Mohamed Yaacob, executive director of the foundation, said Google Mini Search is able to index millions of pages in any database and return fast, accurate results.

“We believe this will be a boon to researchers and members of the public keen to know more about our leaders and the nation’s history,” he said.

There are already about 300,000 digital documents, comprising speeches, news clippings, journal articles, books and other materials about the prominent men, and the database is growing.

Nik Mohamed said Perdana received a special deal from US-based Internet search king Google Inc on the use of Google Mini Search because the foundation is a non-profit organisation.

Google Mini Search, he said, is also more user-friendly than the search engine included in the foundation’s library-management solution.

The foundation was set up in 2003 with the aim of preserving, developing and disseminating materials by and on Malaysia’s former Prime Ministers. It is located in Putrajaya.

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Perdana utilises Google Mini to Increase User-Friendliness of Library Searches

December 21, 2009 in Media, Perdana Library

Google Mini

Google Mini

PRESS RELEASE

PERDANA LEADERSHIP FOUNDATION USES GOOGLE MINI SEARCH APPLIANCE
TO IMPROVE AND INCREASE USAGE OF PERDANA LIBRARY
Putrajaya, 21DECEMBER 2009 – Perdana Leadership Foundation is now utilising the
Google Mini Search Appliance to make searches through its extensive digital library
more efficient, accurate and user-friendly. Installed in early 2009, the Google Mini is an
asset to the Foundation’s information infrastructure and has indexed the Perdana
Library’s vast collection of approximately three hundred thousand digital documents,
comprising speeches, news clippings, journal articles, Parliamentary Hansards and
books. The Foundation made the commitment to install the Google Mini on top of its
dedicated Library server to increase user-friendliness and accessibility of its materials.
“We wanted the ability to search through the documents themselves instead of
depending only on their keywords, and the Google Mini is able to index the millions of
pages in our database and return fast, accurate results. We believe this will be a boon
for researchers and members of the public keen to know more about Malaysia’s leaders
and history. With the Internet the search medium of choice, and with most of our
materials already available online through our website (www.perdana.org.my), it makes
sense to invest in the Google Mini to significantly improve the user experience,” said Tan
Sri Nik Mohamed Nik Yaacob, the Executive Director of the Foundation.
The Foundation began digitising documents related to Malaysia’s past Prime Ministers
and nation-building since 2005 as part of its mission to archive materials of historical
importance and highlight leadership lessons from the past. It is proud to be part of efforts
to preserve Malaysian history for reference by future generations and counts as its
partners in the digitisation quest the National Archives and the National Library. In terms
of number of pages, the Foundation has successfully digitised an impressive 8.8 million,
a number which grows daily.
The Foundation was set up in 2003 as an independent non-profit Foundation to collect,
preserve, research and disseminate materials by and on the past Prime Ministers of
Malaysia. Believing that past leadership can yield valuable insights for future
development, the Foundation’s objective is to increase awareness and appreciation of
Malaysia’s intellectual heritage. The Foundation’s Honorary President is Tun Dr.
Mahathir Mohamad, the fourth Prime Minister of Malaysia. The Foundation is located in
a scenic enclave in Putrajaya, the administrative heart of Malaysia.
The Foundation’s website is at www.perdana.org.my.
________________________________________________________________
Media Enquiries, please contact:
Zarina Abu Bakar Rose Halim
Tel : 03-8885 8957 Tel : 03-8885 8953
E-Mail : zarina@perdana.org.my E-Mail : rose@perdana.org.my

PERDANA LEADERSHIP FOUNDATION USES GOOGLE MINI SEARCH APPLIANCE TO IMPROVE AND INCREASE USAGE OF PERDANA LIBRARY

Putrajaya, 21DECEMBER 2009 – Perdana Leadership Foundation is now utilising the Google Mini Search Appliance to make searches through its extensive digital library more efficient, accurate and user-friendly. Installed in early 2009, the Google Mini is an asset to the Foundation’s information infrastructure and has indexed the Perdana Library’s vast collection of approximately three hundred thousand digital documents, comprising speeches, news clippings, journal articles, Parliamentary Hansards and books. The Foundation made the commitment to install the Google Mini on top of its dedicated Library server to increase user-friendliness and accessibility of its materials.

“We wanted the ability to search through the documents themselves instead of depending only on their keywords, and the Google Mini is able to index the millions of pages in our database and return fast, accurate results. We believe this will be a boon for researchers and members of the public keen to know more about Malaysia’s leaders and history. With the Internet the search medium of choice, and with most of our materials already available online through our website (www.perdana.org.my), it makes sense to invest in the Google Mini to significantly improve the user experience,” said Tan Sri Nik Mohamed Nik Yaacob, the Executive Director of the Foundation.

The Foundation began digitising documents related to Malaysia’s past Prime Ministers and nation-building since 2005 as part of its mission to archive materials of historical importance and highlight leadership lessons from the past. It is proud to be part of efforts to preserve Malaysian history for reference by future generations and counts as its partners in the digitisation quest the National Archives and the National Library. In terms of number of pages, the Foundation has successfully digitised an impressive 8.8 million, a number which grows daily.

The Foundation was set up in 2003 as an independent non-profit Foundation to collect, preserve, research and disseminate materials by and on the past Prime Ministers of Malaysia. Believing that past leadership can yield valuable insights for future development, the Foundation’s objective is to increase awareness and appreciation of Malaysia’s intellectual heritage. The  Foundation’s Honorary President is Tun Dr. Mahathir Mohamad, the fourth Prime Minister of Malaysia. The Foundation is located in a scenic enclave in Putrajaya, the administrative heart of Malaysia.

The Foundation’s website is at www.perdana.org.my.

________________________________________________________________

Media Enquiries, please contact:

Zarina Abu Bakar / Rose Halim

Tel : 03-8885 8957 / 03-8885 8953

E-Mail : zarina@perdana.org.my / rose@perdana.org.my

Perdana Leadership Foundation Hands Over 21,000 Digitised Historical Records To National Archives

March 1, 2008 in Articles, Events@PLF, Spotlight

Tan Sri Nik Mmohamed Nik Yaacob (Executive Director, PLF) presenting the digital materials and PLF-produced Bibliography of Tun Dr. Ismail to Encik Sidek Jamil (director-General, National Archives) at the handover ceremony

On 28th February 2008, the Perdana Leadership Foundation (PLF) presented to the National Archives (Arkib Negara) the results of the Foundation’s resource-sharing collaboration with the National Archives: digital copies of over 593,700 pages comprising more than 21,000 titles that were scanned and converted to digital form by PLF. These pages consist of news clippings, magazine articles, books, and photographs that were obtained from Arkib Negara’s massive warehouse of historical documents under a collaboration arrangement that allowed PLF to site its digitisation unit in-house at Arkib.

The presentation took place in conjunction with a discourse on the country’s second Deputy Prime Minister, Tun Dr Ismail, organised by Arkib Negara, in partnership with PLF and Universiti Utara Malaysia. At the Discourse, friends and colleagues of the late Deputy Prime Minister shared their recollection of this leader, his personality and contributions to the country.

The Foundation has a similar arrangement with the National Library (Perpustakaan Negara Malaysia or PNM) and materials digitised from PNM are also included in the discs presented to Arkib. Dedicated to national leadership and leadership history, the Foundation makes digitisation of historical documents one of its key thrusts. With the PNM and Arkib collaborations, the Foundation hopes to make Malaysia’s history more accessible to the Malaysian public, and secure the country’s records for future generations. To date, the Foundation has over two hundred thousand digital titles of news, articles, and photographs, in its Library.