JakartaPost-Sept 18, 2020

The government recently allocated Rp 7.2 trillion (US$ 532 million) to fund a subsidy scheme for mobile phone credits and mobile data packages to ensure the success of its distance education (PJJ) policy, as schools remain closed to prevent coronavirus transmission. But the gaping digital divide between schools, students and teachers across the country, especially in outlying rural areas, has proven a significant impediment to implementing the policy. Some schools, however, have come up with creative ways to bridge the digital divide by cutting out the “digital” component. One solution was seen in a recent viral video that shows students studying with the help of a device invented during World War Two: the walkie-talkie. In Punik, an inland hamlet with very poor internet connectivity located in Sumbawa, West Nusa Tenggara, students and teachers alike have revived the use of the two-way radio communication device in favor of on-air, rather than online, learning.

Read more athttps://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2020/09/17/remote-communities-find-alternatives-to-online-learning-bridge-digital-divide.html.