SINGAPORE -- August 26, 1999 -- The UNDP Asia Pacific Development Information Programme (APDIP) and Cisco Systems, Inc., announced today an innovative partnership to bring Internet education to students in developing countries in the Asia Pacific region.
APDIP and Cisco Systems will jointly fund and set up ten Cisco Networking Academies in nine developing countries in the region to provide students with advanced IT curricula to leverage the enormous opportunities created by the Internet while creating a qualified talent pool for building and maintaining networks.
The partnership between UNDP and Cisco Systems builds upon NetAid, a global project that harnesses the Internet to battle extreme poverty in the world. UNDP is the world's premier provider of grant assistance to improve living conditions for the poor in underdeveloped countries and Cisco Systems is the worldwide leader in networking for the Internet.
"The Networking Academy Program is a pivotal point in our vision to use the Internet to bring new opportunities to the developing world, and to find new tools to defeat poverty. We are looking at this initial set as a pilot to be eventually expanded to other regions," said Gabriel Accascina, Regional Coordinator of APDIP in Kuala Lumpur, who also coordinates the long-term strategy for the Cisco-UNDP NetAid event.
"The information economy will demand an unprecedented level of technology literacy from tomorrow's workers. Yet in many Asia Pacific countries there is a severe shortage of trained networking specialists. While IT curricula are becoming more commonplace in developed countries, colleges and universities in developing countries are often not able to provide up-to-date IT curricula due to a lack of trained staff and equipment. Unless this changes, these countries run the risk of being left behind in the information age, widening the gap between rich and poor countries," said Phillips J. Young, Resident Coordinator of the United Nations System's Operational Activities for Development in Malaysia, Singapore and Brunei at a press conference in Singapore today.
Added Richard Freemantle, Senior Vice President, Asia Pacific, Cisco Systems: "Information technology, and particularly the Internet, is becoming a key differentiator for companies and countries. The two fundamental equalizers in life today are the Internet and education. Which is why the Cisco Networking Academy Program is so viable for developing nations. One way for these countries to compete in the Internet Economy is by developing a workforce with Internet skills and knowledge. We are teaming with APDIP to help them achieve that."
The Cisco Networking Academy Program is a not-for-profit education initiative designed to equip students with conceptual and practical skills that will enable them to design, build, maintain and troubleshoot the networks that connect computers.
The curriculum also prepares students for the Cisco Certified Networking Associate (CCNA) exam, a certification that positions them for immediate openings in a talent-hungry job market or for engineering- and science-focused college studies.
APDIP will serve as a Regional Networking Academy, supporting ten Local Networking Academies in Bangladesh, Bhutan, Cambodia, Fiji, India, Mongolia, Nepal, Papua New Guinea and Sri Lanka. The Regional Networking Academy teaches the instructors who oversee programs at the Local Networking Academies under its jurisdiction. Information is also provided on topics such as individual school performance, curriculum quality and effectiveness, and student progress.
In the past few years, engineers from Cisco Systems and APDIP have been working closely with many of these countries in helping them set up their Internet service provider (ISP) networks. The company also regularly holds ISP workshops, working closely with APDIP, for developing countries in the Asia Pacific.
About APDIP (www.apdip.net)
APDIP is the UNDP information technology programme in Asia Pacific and it is based in Kuala Lumpur, serving 42 countries. Countries in this region are implementing and relying more and more on the Internet and information technologies for their social and economic development and creation of new opportunities. In response to these needs, APDIP conducts highly-specialised seminars to answer specific needs and addresses important issues such as: IT-related policies; infrastructure building, funding, sectoral issues, such as IT in health, education, environment; security, e-government, tele-working, etc. APDIP also provides web hosting services to development organisations, technical and engineering services to governments, and a news service on Internet Governance.APDIP is implemented by the United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS).
Cisco Systems
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