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GG2011 Speakers        

Albert Abane   
M Badr Aboul-Ela   
George Afeti   
Pawan Agarwal   
Mukhtar Ahmed   
Dlawer Al’Aldeen   
Imad M Alatiqi   
Hilal Al-Hinai   
Jodi Anderson   
Tim Andradi   
William Archer   
Saeeda Asadullah Khan   
David Atchoarena   
John Atibila   
Mohammad Babury   
Jeremy Baker   
Nuha Baruti   
Phil Baty   
Martin Bean   
Amena Begum   
Tom Bewick   
Alex Bols   
Drummond Bone   
Doug Bourn   
Dave Burnapp   
Carolyn Campbell   
Gordon Campbell   
Andrew Cardozo   
Joy Carter   
Catherine Chan   
James Chau   
Francis Cheung   
Chiao-Ling Chien   
Jo Clough   
Robert Coelen   
Margaret Curran   
Nicola Dandridge   
Martin Davidson   
Nicole de Lalouviere   
Martin Doel   
John Donovan   
Allison Doorbar   
Andy Dougill   
Ewan Dow   
DZULKIFLI Abdul Razak   
Chris Evans-Klock   
Richard Everitt   
Charles Fadel   
FAN Yiu-kwan   
Tazeen Fasih   
Anna Fazackerley   
Ros Fenney   
Rozilini Fernandez Chung   
John Fielden   
Rachel Fletcher   
Warren Fox   
Alan P France   
Isak Froumin   
Julia Gaimster   
David Gani   
Shaun Gannon   
Philip Garrahan   
Pamela Gillies   
Jazreel Goh   
Allan Goodman   
Andrew Gordon   
David Graddol   
Martin Green   
Herbert Grieshop   
Ulrich Grothus   
Ali Hadawi   
Rick Hall   
Lynne Hammond   
Takoi Hamrita   
Emma Hardaker-Jones   
Ahmad Hasnah   
Barbara Hayward   
Paul Head   
Carina Hellgren   
Fabrice Hénard   
Stephen Hillier   
John Holm   
Ross Hudson   
Rebecca Hughes   
Chris Humphries   
Alice Hynes   
Janet Ilieva   
Martin Ince   
Tricia Jenkins   
Iman El Kaffass   
Rustam Kasimov   
Frances Kelly   
Neil Kemp   
Chris Kennedy   
Pat Killingley   
Gwang-Jo Kim   
Julia King   
David Kirby   
Beate Konze-Thomas   
Ping Kuang   
Tuula Kuosmanen   
Judith Lamie   
David Lammy   
Claus Lange   
Veronica Lasanowski   
David Law   
William Lawton   
Nina Lemmens   
Gerard Lemos   
Tom Leney   
Rebecca Loades   
David Lock   
Rupert Maclean   
Leapetswe Malete   
John R Mallea   
Mike Mannion   
Simon Marginson   
Paul Marshall   
Abdulhalem Abdulaziz Mazi   
Anthony McClaran   
Simon McGrath   
John McNamara   
David McPhail   
Ala’a Mecki   
Robin Middlehurst   
Jim Mienczakowski    
Tony Millns   
Sugata Mitra   
John Mumford   
Dennis Murray   
Bach Hung NGUYEN   
Trung Khanh NGUYEN   
Tuan Anh NGUYEN   
Muriel Oaks   
Don Olcott   
Julius Okojie   
Serik Omirbayev   
Alun Parry   
David Pardoe   
Geoff Pine   
Jonathan Pratt   
Nunzio Quacquarelli   
Roberto Rabel   
Elliott Rae   
Tony Reilly    
Rod Le Roux   
Inés Sáenz   
Elizabeth Scarborough   
Philida Schellekens   
Dominic Scott   
Madlen Serban   
John Sexton   
Nurilya Shakhanova   
Mahmoud Shakir Abdulhussain   
Anthony G. Shallcross   
SHI Jian   
Chris Sinclair   
Christina Slade   
Julia Smith   
Ben Sowter   
Helen Spencer-Oatey   
Mary Stiasny   
Laurence Solkin   
Michele Sutton   
John Tarrant   
Laurie Taylor   
Hanneke Teekens   
Manfred Tessaring   
Leandro Tessler   
Eric Thomas   
Nigel Thrift   
Tian Xiaogang   
John Tomlinson   
Timothy Tong   
Rick Trainor   
Amy Tsui   
Eileen Tyson   
Peter Upton   
Stéphan Vincent-Lancrin    
Teresah Nekesah Wafullah   
Catherine Walter   
Ben Watson   
Paul Webley   
Paul Wellings   
David L. Wheeler   
Craig Whittaker   
Myles Wickstead   
Stephen Williams   
Andrew Williamson   
John Wilson   
Judith Wilson   
Steve Woodfield   
Michael Worton   
XIE Weihe   
Christian Yeomans   
Rudolph Young   
ZHANG Xiuqin   

Professor Sugata Mitra    

Professor of Educational Technology, Newcastle University    

Professor Sugata Mitra is Professor of Educational Technology at Newcastle University. He works in the areas of Cognitive Science, Information Science and Educational Technology, and along with Physics and Energy he has been working in these areas for over 30 years. He has a PhD in Theoretical Solid State Physics from Indian Institute of Technology, Dehli.

Professor Mitra’s contributions include a number of inventions and first-time applications. He is credited with having started the database publishing industry (particularly the Yellow Page industry) in India and Bangladesh, as well as having implemented the first applications of digital multimedia and internet based education in India in the late 1980s. His ‘hole in the wall’ experiments with the internet and children have been reported worldwide since 1999.

One of the best known aspects of Professor Mitra’s work is his discovery that the internet, computers and children are literally “made for each other” with cognitive processes so similar that children need little or no instruction to master computing at the basic level. Mitra is currently building on this discovery through the design of hardware and software that enable children to reach an intermediate to expert level entirely on their own. His current research is leading towards an alternative primary education which uses self-organised learning, mediation and assessment environments.

Professor Mitra has received numerous international awards and honours, including the Raizada award for the best paper of 1999 from the Computer Society of India; the ‘Best ICT story’ award in 2000 from the IICD; the ‘Best Social Innovation of the year 2000’ award from the Institute for Social Inventions; finalist in the ‘World Technology Awards’ education category from the World Technology Network in 2003; the Dewang Mehta award for innovation in IT from the Ministry of Information Technology, Government of India in 2005; ‘Best Education Research Article’ in an Open Access Journal for 2005 from the Communication of Research Special Interest Group of the American Educational Research Association; Alumni Award for Outstanding Contribution to National Development from the Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi in 2006 and Best Book award from the Indian Society for Training and Development in 2007.

Professor Mitra’s work inspired the 2005 book ‘Q & A’, which went on to become the Oscar winning film Slumdog Millionaire.

Professor Sugata Mitra is participating in the Opening learning: new ambitions for higher education in a Web 2.0 world session.

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