Educational Technologies
for DE in Developing Countries (OMDE
626)
'Knowledge
is critical for development'.
The term knowledge society not only points at the enhanced
role of knowledge in contemporary society, it signals a shift
in emphasis of where knowledge is located. This change is
not least due to the development of Information and Communication
Technologies (ICT) which facilitate improved information management
and, most importantly, communication at a distance.
Distance education is about managing technologically mediated
learning processes. That distance education plays an increasingly
central role in knowledge societies with advanced ICT infrastructure
is no wonder.
ICT
and the emerging infrastructure for the knowledge society
The emerging global information infrastructure (satellites
and cables, facilitating broadcasting, Internet-based or telephone
communication) allows improved information management and
communication at a distance. However, developments are uneven
and characterized by a great 'digital divide' both, between
industrialized and developing countries, and within developing
countries.
ICT infrastructure leads to new places where knowledge is
located and to new channels of knowledge distribution. Hence
educational processes take increasingly place outside the
realm of traditional (mostly formal) education and through
other agencies. Nonetheless, if we deal with sustained processes
of teaching and learning, methodologies of DE are applied.
ICT can play an important role in professional support for
the health service workers (e.g. Telemedicina, MARA), environmental
management (using bespoke Environmental Information Systems
(EIS)) and in agricultural extension. There is internationally
funded experimentation with community based education in the
form of Multipurpose Telecenters (e.g. Nakaseke MTC in Uganda).
The role of commercial access points like cybercafés
and i-kiosks is considered.
ICT
and Distance Education I: Scope of application
Nearer to home, we look at the various audiences of distance
education (cf. OMDE 625) and how educational technologies
can help to reach them and to support teaching and learning.
The analysis includes the use of broadcasting (especially
radio) both, because it provides a useful backdrop against
which more recent technologies can be analyzed, and because
it is widely used, especially in basic education. We report
on innovative approaches which combine radio and the Internet
(Kothmale community radio, Sri Lanka) or develop an altogether
new digital radio (Canal EF, France).
The various reasons for using computers will be examined and
case studies of their various uses will be included. They
include school linking (as in the Chilean ENLACES program)
or support of schools with databases relevant for the school
curriculum (e.g. the Pakistan EDUNET).
In higher education net-based university courses begin to
play a role in newly industrializing countries, e.g. at the
National Open University (NOU) of Taiwan. Moreover, the availability
of ICT within distance education will greatly accelerate international
cooperation and competition. There are a programs (like this
MDE) offered completely online to students around the world
who can afford the fees. While the majority of courses offered
across borders is coming from the industrialized countries,
some higher education institutions from the South market there
courses regionally and, indeed, internationally.
ICT
and Distance Education II: Outcomes
Outcomes can be evaluated according to various criteria,
including access, quality and costs (cf. OMDE 601 and OMDE
606). The use of educational technologies influences all outcome
criteria. The impact of ICT on distance education is examined
including changes in cost structure, the impact on unit costs
and the tendencies to devolve costs to learners which, in
turn, may limit access. The evidence of the impact of ICT
on quality is assessed. Educators and policy makers may have
to make choices which will require them to examine the values
they hold.
For the
full syllabus of the course click the link below:
OMDE
626
Educational
Technologies for DE in Developing Countries: The
Syllabus
|