Interactive Flat Panels Make Learning Easier for Students, Reaching Even Remote Areas
- 26 Jan 2026 13:19 WIB
- Voice of Indonesia
RRI.CO.ID, East Ogan Komering Ulu Regency - The Indonesian government is increasingly intensifying efforts to digitalize education. It also includes introducing Interactive Flat Panels (IFP) in schools to support student learning processes, particularly in science subjects.
As reported in a press release issued on Sunday, 25 January 2026, the Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education, stated that through the use of Interactive Flat Panels (IFP), learning is shifting from mere abstraction to visualization, allowing students to see and understand scientific processes more concretely.
The ministry stated that the transformation in learning methods is part of the Ministry’s efforts to improve the quality of education in Indonesia by applying a deep learning approach through the Digital Learning Program.
Through this initiative, technology is not positioned as an end goal, but as a means to strengthen conceptual understanding, foster critical thinking skills, and present learning processes that are relevant to scientific developments and the needs of the times.
“Technology is not positioned as a goal, but as a means to strengthen conceptual understanding, foster critical thinking skills, and deliver learning processes that are relevant to the development of science and the needs of the times,” the ministry wrote in the press release.
Furthermore, Minister of Primary and Secondary Education, Abdul Mu’ti, emphasized that the initiative is not merely aimed at fulfilling infrastructure needs. More than that, the program is expected to serve as a vital strategy to reach regions that are geographically difficult to access.
“Digital Learning reaches more than 288,000 educational units across Indonesia. And we certainly hope that fulfilling these infrastructure needs can become a source of motivation for us to provide quality education services,” Minister Abdul Mu’ti stated.
He added that for particularly hard to reach areas, the government will provide complete assistance packages. These include electricity and network infrastructure.
“We do not only send IFP devices, but we also help provide electricity and network access through Starlink, so that IFP can be used to support distance learning,” he conveyed.
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