Submitted
2021 TPrize Challenge

SOLE: Let learning happen

Team Leader
Sanjay Fernandes
Solution Overview
Solution Name:
SOLE: Let learning happen
One-line solution summary:
To enable educators and communities with self-organized learning supported by tech so that groups can learn, engage in dialogue and act.
Pitch your solution.

Conventional schooling based on content-delivery has become obsolete in the face of the need for human connection which the pandemic has made evident. Educators need new pedagogies which are child-driven and supported by technology. We propose using SOLEs (Self-Organized Learning Environments): a space where children, families and communities can come together to discover and explore self-organised learning.The objective for SOLE is to provide educators with a tool to help seamlessly incorporate inquiry learning into the natural classroom/public space environment without any special preparation or extensive training. It aims to inspire people to become creative and curious problem-solvers with the confidence and skills needed to tap into the global network of tools available to them, as well as the knowledge of peers and educators. By doing so, groups can learn, engage in dialogue across differences and collaborate to create flourishing communities and a more equal and connected world.

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

Children and youth in Colombia are clearly the most affected by the pandemic and violence. Public schools and libraries, which were safe places for many of them, have been closed for more than a year without a clear timing for total re-opening. Most families lack internet connection and devices at home, which is highlighting precarious or non-existent remote learning. It is said that 42% of the country has no connection to the internet. This becomes even more drastic in rural communities where over 97% have no internet or very poor connection. Added to that, the public debate about opening schools and higher education does not include the voices of children and youth. Conventional schooling based on content-delivery has become obsolete in the face of the need for human connection which the pandemic has made evident. Educators need new pedagogies which are child-driven and supported by mixed technology. Re-thinking the new school for the pandemic and after the pandemic needs spaces for interaction and self-guided learning.

What is your solution?

SOLE (Self-Organized Learning Environments) is a disruptive learning methodology that empowers communities to develop autonomy, collaboration, deep learning, and most important of all, to solve real-life problems! A SOLE session is simple. You need a space (in-person, virtual or hybrid) with learners, a few computers with internet access and Big Questions. In a SOLE people self-organize to find answers to questions without the need for a teacher. In this intellectual adventure, learning emerges from the participants’ interest, developing life-skills like collaboration, expression and communication, creativity and innovation, critical thinking, self-direction, technological fluency.

Together with SOLE is the Granny concept. Research has shown that having limited intervention provided by an encouraging, un-trained, remote facilitator can promote thriving learning processes. A Granny's role includes provoking curiosity, asking questions, listening carefully, and providing a warm environment. The Granny Cloud is a network of volunteers from all walks of life who connect remotely to SOLEs to co-facilitate and provide participants with the opportunity to experience worlds far removed from their own.

Our work is inspired by the work of 2013 TED Prize winner Sugata Mitra who’s work in India leverages internet technologies to enable self-managed learning.

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

Our main focus is the disenfranchised: children, youth, families, educators and their communities all around Colombia, Latam and the world. We prioritize outreach to  indigenous, afro-descendant and rural communities, displaced, ex-combatants, migrants and people with disabilities and low-income urban communities.

Our mindset and approach is inclusive so we build bridges with many enabling constituencies as well. For most of these communities public education is poor. We have been engaging with these communities for over 5 years co-designing how SOLEs can be used in their public spaces with scarce connectivity. For example, we have setup SOLE as a nationwide program in public libraries where communities can gather to learn how to learn in groups using the internet as well as the library materials. Most of these communities face challenges which involve learning from their context, their needs and their interests to be able to promote self-management and self-organization. We allow them to ask the questions that previously were not heard, and motivate their curiosity.

Learning to ask questions and working in groups to answer them allows not only for the development of 21st century skills, but to actually explore emergent possibilities which formal planned curricula usually evades.We have accompanied farmers and FARC ex-combatants who ask: how can we make our crops more healthy and productive? Children in schools have found passion for topics like science, math and history connecting it to their local knowledge through SOLEs asking: How do living things affect our planet? Is it possible to rid the world of bullying? Do warring nations advance their technology quicker than peaceful ones?

We have also used SOLE to create nation-wide conversations with questions like: What kind of future do we want to create? Are we on track? What action is needed to bridge the gap?

Which dimension of the TPrize Challenge does your solution most closely address?
  • Support teachers and educational institutions with teaching and learning methodologies, tools, and resources that help develop future skills for students
Explain how the problem you are addressing, the solution you have designed, and the population you are serving align with the TPrize Challenge.

A SOLE takes a single class period in a public space (classroom, library or virtual call) and begins by having learners, organized in small groups  (3 to 5 on shared devices), consider an open-ended question provided by the educator or learners themselves. They research the question on internet-connected devices while preparing a presentation. Then, each group presents to the whole group and discussion follows. This process is iterated weekly with a different question. StartSOLE is a technology platform that facilitates the process of seamlessly incorporating inquiry learning into the natural classroom space environment without any special preparation or extensive training.

In what city, town, or region is your solution team headquartered?
Bogotá, Colombia
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.
Explain why you selected this stage of development for your solution.

With over 20 years of research from PhD Sugata Mitra, powered by proven  interventions using public infrastructure in Colombia to over 450,000 participants in 2500+ public schools, libraries and internet kiosks in the last 7 years;  as well as tech-based deployment in the US to over 10,000 teachers; d we have been able to prove how to "let learning happen" in very diverse contexts (from formal public education to community-empowerment) in an effective way. Such is the case that different strategies ranging from in-person to remote teacher training as well as training trainers, to the design and deployment of the StartSOLE app have allowed thousands of educators around Colombia and the world to implement SOLEs in their classrooms, public spaces or virtual settings.

Who is the Team Lead for your solution?
Sanjay Fernandes
More About Your Solution
About Your Team
Your Business Model & Partnerships
Partnership & Prize Funding Opportunities
Solution Team:
Sanjay Fernandes
Sanjay Fernandes
Founder and Director
Belén Sevilla Morillo
Belén Sevilla Morillo