Rural App Builders
In the 21st century, mobile apps have played a key role in improving the lives of people around the world. While mobile technology has made great inroads in rural areas, app development continues to be in the hands of the urban elite. A lack of access to app development training and a lack of fluency in English is a barrier to making app building more inclusive. This leaves millions of rural people out of the opportunity of leveraging the power of mobile apps to improve their lives.
Our plan is to create the Hindi language version of Thunkable, a no-code app building tool, and train rural youth to use the tool to build apps. Having a no-code app building tool in local languages will help bring millions of people into the growing mobile economy and create new employment and financial opportunities.
India’s smartphone base is estimated to reach 820 million in 2022. The annual growth in rural areas has been significantly higher than in urban areas (35% vs 7%). Unfortunately, the barrier to entry for app development has left over 700 million people in rural Indian communities and 99.9% of the world’s population to be passive consumers of mobile apps rather than active creators. Since programmers are mostly urban elite who do not grasp the opportunities and challenges of rural areas, there are not enough apps that address the needs of rural communities, leaving smartphones underutilized by rural populations. Additionally, tools created for non-programmers to develop apps are mainly focused on the English speaking world, so they cannot be utilized by non-English speakers. The Covid pandemic has particularly highlighted the value of using apps that provide much needed services efficiently. For example, we saved lives during the pandemic by providing villagers with an app to connect to doctors remotely. There are many more solutions waiting to be built for these villagers. By giving them the tools and teaching them app building, we will empower rural villagers to develop their own hyperlocal solutions to their hyperlocal issues.
Thunkable, a product that came out from the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab and the Media Lab at MIT, has created a drag-and-drop app development platform that makes it easy for non-developers to create mobile apps. The tool can be used to create cross-platform applications for Android, iOS, and web. Thunkable already has empowered a large community of over 3 million users to create interesting applications. However, Thunkable’s interface is currently in English and Chinese. In partnership with Thunkable, our team at Ekal Vidyalaya will translate the interface into Hindi and use the Hindi version of the tool to teach app building to rural youth. Ekal Vidyalaya, an organization that has a presence in over 100,000 villages works on removing the rural-urban digital divide by providing digital literacy skills to youth at our computer training labs. We will add the Hindi version of Thunkable to our training curriculum. This will not only enable our students to build mobile apps but also teach them logic and concepts of computer programming. India is a multilingual country and after our pilot we hope to translate Thunkable into other local languages and enable rural youth all over the country to create apps.
Our focus is to empower non-English speaking people living in rural remote villages to have the ability to create mobile apps. Ekal Vidyalya is the largest education non profit in India organization that has been working to educate and empower over 100 million people living in 100,000 remote rural villages in India. Lack of roads and other infrastructure have made it difficult for these villagers to have viable access to education, health and economic opportunities. We run single teacher primary schools in 100,000 villages at the very low cost of $1/day. We have a health arm that focuses on preventive health care by training villagers on good health and hygiene practice. Our skill training arm has provided training that has brought significant economic benefit to the trainees.
The extensive reach of the mobile phone network has been a game changer for connecting rural villages to resources. Globally, mobile apps have had the ability to provide solutions to everyday challenges and improve process efficiencies. Unfortunately since the app developers are mostly urban elites, available apps do not address the challenges of rural communities effectively. The availability of no-code app development tools makes app building easily accessible. Making these tools available and accessible to rural villagers in a language that they understand will enable them to become app builders. This will allow them to build apps to target their own challenges thus allowing them to leverage the power of mobile phones to address their challenges as it has done for the urban elites.
The no-code app building tool Thunkable provides a huge opportunity to allow villagers to create apps. They already have a proven track record of empowering change at a local level. For example, Fast Company wrote the story of Thunkable user Anwar Al-Haddad from Yemen, who built PV Solar. Due to the war and the crisis that is going on in Yemen, the power grid that was supplied by the government was totally disconnected, hence, solar power systems became the main power supply for most homes and businesses in Yemen. However people in Yemen did not know how to install solar panels. Anwar could not find an app, especially in Arabic, to teach people how to do it. He used Thunkable to build an app to help him and his family, and now over 500,000 people have downloaded and used his app and got him recognition from Yemen's Minister of Power and Electricity. We will empower the next million Anwars in India to solve local problems that can change the lives of billions around them.
- Prepare those entering, re-entering, or who are already in the workforce for the future of work with affordable and equitable digital skills, training, and employment opportunities
While cell phone access and access to apps has been very available to rural remote villages in India, the people in these areas do not have the skills or the abilities to build apps. No-Code tools like Thunkable are easy to use and can enable even rural villagers to build apps. However the English interface for the tool makes it a deterrent. Providing a local language app building tool allows people in rural areas to including app-building in their skill set thus making them better prepared to be part of the work force of the future.
- I am planning to expand my solution to one or more of these ServiceNow locations
57% of India's population is fluent in Hindi. Thus over 500 million people speak the language. All these people will now be able to use the no-code Hindi version of Thunkable to create apps. Post the pilot we will expand the interface to include other local languages. This can be a huge opportunity to make no-code app building tools available to non-English speaking population.
- Pilot: An organization deploying a tested product, service, or business model in at least one community.
The tool is in existence and the Hindi version has been implemented . .We will be testing the tool in our Computer Training Lab in Karanjo in the state of Jharkhand in India. In partnership with Thunkable and our digital literacy trainers in India, we will create a curriculum to teach app building using the Hindi version of Thunkable. This will help us understand the effectiveness of the tool and the right business model to train the villagers. We will launch the pilot with 100 villagers from Karanjo and then scale the program to 5,000 villagers in the 100 surrounding villages over the course of 12 months. The curriculum will be designed using local examples of challenges. The curriculum will provide training on 1) identifying problems 2) designing an app prototype to address the problem 3) creating and deploying the app 4) marketing the app to target consumers.
- No, I do not wish to be considered for this prize, even if ServiceNow is specifically interested in my solution/I do not qualify for this prize
- A new application of an existing technology
No-code development tools have transformed software development. Gartner says that by 2024, 65% of all app development will be done using such tools. While many of these tools are focused on selling to businesses, no one has used these tools at scale in rural environments. By training rural youth to use these tools today, we can leapfrog app development in rural areas. While no-code development tools are easy to use, their English language interface is a big barrier to entry. Our innovative approach uses a version of the tool that has a local language interface. Ekal is running computer training programs in rural areas and has trainers who know how to provide training to village youth. Adding the training on the localized no-code development tools, we expect to create rural app builders who will create a tremendous amount of new applications that address the challenges facing rural communities. This effort will have a dramatic impact on increasing the effective use of mobile phones in rural areas. This can present a whole new opportunity to dramatically improve the economy of rural areas.
We have partnered with the leading no-code mobile app development platform, Thunkable, which grew out of an MIT and Google research collaboration. Thunkable is a best-in-class tool that provides a platform for users to build once and deploy apps to iOS, Android, and the web. Their live testing and native capabilities make it so people can quickly iterate and develop apps for any major platform and use hardware and offline capabilities. The tool is web-based, so it does not require special hardware or software like the development tools from Apple and Google do. As long as the villagers have access to a browser and creative thinking, which we are ensuring with our mobile computer centers, they will have everything they need to build an app that they can install on their own phones.
Thunkable has been widely used by over 3 million users worldwide to create a plethora of apps. Thunkable has been well received in the academic and commercial world and has received funding from the National Science FoundationThe Chinese interface has been well used and has enabled non-English speakers in China to have easy access to no code development. Thousands of apps have been created using the Chinese language version of Thunkable.
Here is an article that describes technology and the impact it has had on app development. https://www.forbes.com/sites/f...
- Software and Mobile Applications
We do not anticipate the solution to introduce any notable risks.
- Rural
- Poor
- India
- Nepal
- India
- Nepal
In the pilot phase we will be training 100 people. We hope they develop apps that are useful to the population of 60,000 who live in the 100 villages that the trainees are drawn from to address needs that are specific to their lives. There are over 500 million Hindi speakers in India. These apps could have the potential to have greater impact amongst much of the Hindi speaking rural areas. In the next year we will translate the tool to 3 more languages and potentially to all 22 Indian languages in the next five years. This will have the potential to build apps that impact the lives of 700 million people who live in remote rural areas. The multi-lingual no code interface has the potential to have a greater impact.
Ekal has a presence in 100,000 remote rural villages. We have computer training labs in several Indian states and can easily replicate the project in different areas. The translation process in Thunkable is fairly simple and hence we can create it in multiple languages. We expect the Indian language interface to have an impact beyond the rural areas and spur the creation of apps by a whole new set of app builders, who bring a new set of experiences and expertise to the app development.
We will look at the number of apps that are built and deployed. We will also monitor the and the engagement the rural people have with the apps via the number of downloads and usage measures. We will monitor the apps and document they opportunities they provide in the areas of education, health and access to government services in a way that has not been seen to date.
- Hybrid of for-profit and nonprofit
This pilot project will have a team of 5 as follows
1. Team lead - Executive director
2. Project manager
3. 2 Trainers
4. Thunkable product and customer support person.
Ekal is the largest NGO working on education and empowerment of villagers living in 100,000 rural remote villages in India for over 35 years. We are the recipient of the Gandhi Peace Prize, the highest prize given by the government of India to any non profit organization. Our efforts to bring digital literacy was recognized with the Digital Trailblazer award from HP and KPMG. Our trainers are chosen from the local areas and have deep knowledge of the communities they work in. Thunkable is the world's leading no code app building tool. Ekal's access and knowledge of rural India combined with Thunkable's technical expertise makes us the perfect team to implement this solution.
Ekal USA works and our counterpart in India has a very diverse pool of people in leadership roles. Our leaders come from the communities we serve. The diversity is key to our success in understanding the communities we serve and building trust.
- Individual consumers or stakeholders (B2C)
Issues facing rural remote villagers in India does not get the attention of the world. Development is lacking and these villagers do not have significant opportunities to becoming active members of the economy. We feel strongly that mobile technology can be a game changer that can spur development in the rural areas. Ekal has been working for over 35 years in the rural areas by providing literacy, health and skill training in over 100.000 villages. Yet our work is not that well known. By becoming a solver we hope to present our story to world we hope to attract the attention of the world. MIT solve community has brilliant minds and technology innovators who we hope will read about our work and bring new ideas and resources to spur development. These ideas could include unique ways to bring power and connectivity to entire rural populations.
- Financial (e.g. improving accounting practices, pitching to investors)
- Public Relations (e.g. branding/marketing strategy, social and global media)
- Technology (e.g. software or hardware, web development/design, data analysis, etc.)
Our work has so far been known only in the Indiaspora community. This limits our ability to gather funds. Our Public Relations effort could use much help. We are not currently using social media effectively to build our brand. We need advice on innovative low cost solutions to for hardware and connectivity.
We would like to partner with the following companies
1. Google - We expect our apps to use google services for maps etc. We would like their help to provide support for these tools. We also expect our users to use Android tools and their support to get the hardware would be very helpful
2. Telecom companies -We need data and connectivity in rural areas.
3. Social media, branding and marketing companies
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