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After years of working in the education field, Julia Bello-Bravo, PhD., knows first-hand how innovations in science can benefit communities and vulnerable populations. In Africa, for example, 17 countries have literacy rates of 50 percent and below. Thanks to advances in technology like shareable video content, Bluetooth technology and the proliferation of cell phones, more people are able to access educational opportunities and resources.
Increasing Knowledge Access Through Smartphones
With approximately 750 million low-literate learners around the globe, education often marginalizes communities. Bello-Bravo, an assistant professor in the College of Agriculture and Natural Resources at Michigan State University, is using her research to help level the playing field.
“For the illiterate and isolated, I believe we may have found the next Gutenberg press of our century in cell and smartphone technology,” Bello-Bravo said. “The trend is towards greater accessibility for more people in the coming decade.”
Helping Communities Amid COVID-19
In partnership with Feed the Future, the United Nations and other partners, SAWBO produced several COVID-19 animations in more than 30 languages aimed at preventing and containing the virus.
Ensuring Equitable Access to Education
The goal of SAWBO is to help de-marginalize communities and to embrace and support diversity. To date, the program’s 90 animations in more than 145 languages have reached 45 million individuals in more than 100 countries across six continents.
The animations in the SAWBO library cover topics including health, agriculture, peace and justice, and women’s empowerment. The videos teach skills such as how to safely store beans in jerrycans to prevent post-harvest loss, how to develop charcoal water filtration systems to remove pollutants from drinking water and how to rebuild peace after civil strife.
SAWBO was developed by Julia Bello-Bravo and Barry Pittendrigh while at the University of Illinois as an output of the Feed the Future Legume Innovation Lab managed by Michigan State University. SAWBO is Bello-Bravo and Pittendrigh’s collaborative research program and currently resides at Michigan State University.
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