Submitted
Good Jobs & Inclusive Entrepreneurship

Open Content for Development (OC4D)

Team Leader
Tiffany Ivins
Solution Overview
Solution Name:
Open Content for Development (OC4D)
One-line solution summary:
OC4D opens entrepreneurial education for lower-literates using open educational resources (OER), localized ICTs & trained youth facilitators
Pitch your solution.

The greatest factor limiting good jobs and inclusive entrepreneurship is illiteracy. Today, 781 million illiterate adults--mostly women in Africa and Asia--face educational barriers that hamper entrepreneurship. 

Increasingly, new tech tools enable rural access to opportunity through OER (open educational resources). Localizable ICT tools increasingly improve to serve lower-literate learners on the fringe.

OC4D fills a specific niche by opening access to localized OER for lower-literate entrepreneurs in rural communities by a 3-pronged approach: 

  1. OER Portal: Digitized multilingual content curated for rural, inclusive entrepreneurship, particularly for lower-literates; 

  2. Localized ICT Centers: Solar panels, electricity, internet, computers localized user-friendly interfaces;

  3. Facilitator Mentoring for Local Youth: “Village Ambassadors” lead participatory discussions, localize content, mobilize problem-solving.

OC4D fills the paucity of access to entrepreneurial-education through tailored tech and curated content in youth-managed community centers. If scaled, OC4D will unlock the power of OER in unprecedented ways, thereby increasing  literacy, job creation & entrepreneurship.

Film your elevator pitch.
What specific problem are you solving?

Entrepreneurial advantage is hampered and poverty exacerbated in rural developing countries because of a paucity of educational opportunities and limited access to information. Congruent with this disparity, the rich-poor gap widens while another gap emerges: the elite with access to ICT and the poor without it.

In this post-Covid world,ICTs offer the best tech-driven solutions for education & entrepreneurship; yet they are denied to those in developing countries who need them most. How do we build capacity to share ed-tech with hardest-to-reach learners? How do we support low-tech communities to access such tools?

MIT is a forerunner in sharing open-educational-resources (OER) via OpenCourseWare (OCW). Other groups followed suit; OER now revolutionize higher-ed arenas. Lauded as a “satisfying drink...to quench [one’s] thirst,” OER tools rarely reach bottom-of-the pyramid users and aren't consumable by the “most thirsty” sector of the world's 781 million illiterate adults in non-formal sectors of Asia & Africa.

How can ICT support would-be entrepreneurs and empower disenfranchised groups? How do we increase access to knowledge that is available for free but inaccessible to those who need it most? How do we localize content & delivery mechanisms in order to maximize benefit for fringe peoples?

What is your solution?

OC4D is a digital education portal that unlocks the power of OER for underserved and lower-literate communities where poverty is rife.

OC4D bridges access to educational & entrepreneurial materials through improved tech-smart community centers and locally trained youth facilitators who are empowered to search, localize & disseminate educational content.

OC4D's specific niche is opening access to localizable, multilingual OER focused on business & self-reliance. Lower-literate entrepreneurs benefit by a 3-pronged approach: 

  1. OER Portal
    Digitized multilingual literacy tools curated for entrepreneurship and self reliance programs delivered through local partners. Content is tagged for search by region/language/topic (micro-enterprise, budgeting, savings) via online user-friendly website/app.

  2. ICT Centers
    Partner hubs in rural community centers and/or existing structures made available for community technological education, minimally including: internet & computer to enable access to online content tools. A pre-loaded content-hard-drive & simple solar panel/onsite battery may be used offline during load-shedding.

  3. Facilitator Training for Local Youth (“Village Ambassadors)”
    Defined as ages 12-35, youth lead out in communities due to their natural interest in ICT & their adaptability to new technologies. OC4D's power lies in the mentoring & deputizing of youth to lead participatory discussions, search & localize content, and mobilize intergenerational learning groups for interdisciplinary problem-solving.

Who does your solution serve, and in what ways will the solution impact their lives?

OC4D is focused on bottom-of-the-pyramid entrepreneurs (particularly women) in lower-literate and vulnerable communities of Africa & Asia.

This project aims to connect the dots between the powerful concept of Open Educational Resources (OER)--which have proved effective for higher-ed stakeholders--and a broader range of learners in new and multilingual contexts for ICT education, digital literacy, and better opportunities on the fringes of society.

OC4D addresses underprivileged populations facing educational barriers due to rugged terrain, weak infrastructure, and corrupt government. These forces have historically left rural people suffering from delayed dissemination of life-saving information.

OC4D involves vulnerable populations tempted by rural to urban migration for work/education by offering a new, local connection point to global information/training & entrepreneurial opportunities. 

OC4D supports indigenous and first-native communities by mitigating against loss of cultural heritage by connecting youth as mentors to and as liaisons with their elders/families.

OC4D responds to vulnerable groups by facilitating access to critical information, thereby increasing opportunities for untouchables and ethnic groups to generate income through community entrepreneurship in their native lands near ancestral homes/farms/villages. 

OC4D includes training/mentoring of youth as community mobilizers in remote villages, particularly the "youthquake" whereby youth become facilitators/mobilizers who empower others from their own disadvantaged/minority groups.

Which dimension of the Challenge does your solution most closely address?
  • Equip workers with technological and digital literacy as well as the durable skills needed to stay apace with the changing job market
Explain how the problem, your solution, and your solution’s target population relate to the Challenge and your selected dimension.

OC4D is a tech-based solution offering a collaborative approach toward digital & ICT literacy by exploring/applying content related to entrepreneurship/self-reliance. 

OC4D evolved organically since 2001 with locally-adapted iterations of online content tools, ICT design, training materials & localization/adaptation & dissemination approaches. Pioneered in communities of South Asia (Nepal, Pakistan, India, Bangladesh), we’ve been requested to globalize access & launch pilots in 5 West African countries (Benin, Togo, Cote D’Ivoire, Mali & Ghana). Before we do so, we’d like the SOLVE team to help evaluate our interface, training tools, & consider strategic scale in a parallel way to MIT’s OCW Initiative.


In what city, town, or region is your solution team headquartered?
Salt Lake City, UT, USA
What is your solution’s stage of development?
  • Growth: An organization with an established product, service, or business model rolled out in one or, ideally, several communities, which is poised for further growth
Who is the primary delegate for your solution?
Tiffany Ivins (tiffanyivins@comdevnet.org)
More About Your Solution
About Your Team
Your Business Model & Funding
Partnership & Prize Funding Opportunities
Solution Team:
Tiffany Ivins
Tiffany Ivins
Director, Co-Founder