Resumen
OLPC, the One Laptop Per Child initiative, was accepted by just a few countries, including Peru. The largest acquisition of computers has produced a fairly low impact in education and is now being quietly phased-out. Peru's government decision to adopt the computers, back in 2007, was not contested or questioned by the political class, the media or even teachers, with just a rather small number of specialists arguing against it. This chapters discussed the political and argumentative processes that brought OLPC into the public sphere, through the use of a specific narrative, that of hackerism, i.e., the hacker attitude towards computers, and how social and political validation resulted in adoption. An assessment of the process of framing OLPC as a hacker product and the perils of such reasoning lead to discuss the need for a counter-narrative about the role of computers in society.
| Idioma original | Inglés |
|---|---|
| Título de la publicación alojada | Handbook of Research on Comparative Approaches to the Digital Age Revolution in Europe and the Americas |
| Editorial | IGI Global |
| Páginas | 428-443 |
| Número de páginas | 16 |
| ISBN (versión digital) | 9781466687417 |
| ISBN (versión impresa) | 1466687401, 9781466687400 |
| DOI | |
| Estado | Publicada - 1 set. 2015 |