JALN Introduction to the special issue on the right to education
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John R. Bourne, Janet C. Moore, Claudine Schweber
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John R. Bourne, Janet C. Moore, Claudine Schweber
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Abstract
The eight papers in this special issue of the Journal of Asynchronous Learning Networks
examine some of the roles that online education plays in implementing the right to education.
The 1948 Declaration called for free and compulsory education with choice and equal access based on merit.
The studies in this issue propose identifying metrics for progress towards universal access, using online
education for continuity of learning despite disasters, stewarding resources, marshalling partnerships,
and designing learning that promotes the values of the Declaration: ‘respect, understanding, tolerance,
friendship, and peace.’
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Keywords
editorial, introduction
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Access and Equity to Education in India through Synergy of Conventional
and ODL Systems: A Step towards Democratization of Education
- Purnendu TRIPATHI, Siran MUKERJI
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Purnendu TRIPATHI, Siran MUKERJI |
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Abstract
India has witnessed tremendous
development in educating and training its vast
human resource of over one billion through
sustained effort of conventional and distance mode
of education. In pursuit of making Right to
Education a reality, the Government has been
initiating efforts for developing the educational
infrastructure and training human capital.
Consequently, the Country with a literacy rate of
64.84%, has 767520, 274731 and 152049 schools
along with 12 open schools at primary, middle and
secondary/ higher secondary levels catering to
130.8, 51.2 and 37.1 million students respectively.
At higher education level, 13578 colleges and 407
universities along with 106 distance education
institutions address needs of 11.7 million students.
These institutions of learning, in true sense
have been instrumental in educating the vast human
resource of over one billion but democratization of
education i.e. access and equity to education is still
a dream to be realized. This paper endeavours to
explore the achievements so far and identify the
challenges and constraints that have prevented the
country to achieve the goal of universalisation of
education and high level of literacy.
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Keywords
universalisation, access, equity, democratization of education
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Brics and clicks - Mary Bold, Lillian Chenoweth, Nirisha K.Garimella
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Mary Bold, Lillian Chenoweth, Nirisha K.Garimella |
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Abstract
Projections for the global economy frequently center on the BRIC countries: Brazil, Russia, India, and
China. As futurists and economists alike define and re-define both formal and informal coalitions (for
example, by broadening the R in BRIC to include all Eastern European economies or instead re-directing
the discussion to G-8 countries or to World Trade Organization members), the education profiles of the
individual nations sometimes resemble economic indicators: what is imported, what is exported, and what
is the potential for expansion. Higher education, and specifically distance learning (the Clicks element of
this paper), can already be charted in these terms for some nations. This paper describes the current role
of distance learning in countries described as growing economies and proposes a typology for describing
change as additional data become available. The paper informs readers of global developments in distance
education, using the BRIC nations as examples.
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Keywords
cross-border education, globalization, BRIC, GATS, internationalization, distance learning, access, right to education
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Access to education with online
learning and open educational
resources: can they close the GAP?
- Dr. Christine Geith, Karen Vignare
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Dr. Christine Geith, Karen Vignare |
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Abstract
One of the key concepts in the right to education is access: access to the means to fully develop as human
beings as well as access to the means to gain skills, knowledge and credentials. This is an important
perspective through which to examine the solutions to access enabled by Open Educational Resources
(OER) and online learning. The authors compare and contrast OER and online learning and their potential
for addressing human rights “to” and “in” education. The authors examine OER and online learning
growth and financial sustainability and explore potential scenarios to address the global education gap.
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Keywords
online learning, Open Educational Resources, OER, OpenCourseWare, sustainable business models, innovation
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Open educational resources for
blended learning in high schools:
overcoming impediments in developing
countries
- Richard C. Larson, M. Elizabeth Murray
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Richard C. Larson, M. Elizabeth Murray |
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Abstract
With today’s computer and telecommunications technologies, every young person can have a quality
education regardless of his or her place of birth. This is the dream that Open Educational Resources
(OERs), when viewed as a right rather than a privilege, are directed to realize. For developing countries,
we propose a type of OER initiative that leverages not only technology but also the skills of the in-class
teacher, that utilizes not only the Internet but also lower-tech delivery platforms, and that is created not
only by developed countries of the West but also by educators in many countries worldwide. We outline
the design of a cross-border, collaborative learning and teaching system called the Blended Learning
Open Source Science or Math Studies Initiative (BLOSSOMS), with an associated partnership network
established for its implementation in developing countries. BLOSSOMS is to develop a large, free
repository of blended-learning video modules for high school math and science classes, created by gifted
volunteer educators from around the world and designed to offer potentially transformative learning
exercises that will enhance critical thinking skills and retain students’ interest in math and science. The
initiative has been designed and developed within a multinational network of partner organizations in the
developing world, a characteristic that distinguishes it from many other OER projects.
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Keywords
Open Educational Resources, OER, blended learning, online repository, international collaboration, high school education, mathematics and science, critical thinking
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Bringing the real world of science to
children: a partnership of the
American Museum of Natural History
and the City University of New York
- Anthony G. Picciano, Robert V. Steiner
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Anthony G. Picciano, Robert V. Steiner |
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Abstract
Every child has a right to an education. In the United States, the issue is not necessarily about access to a
school but access to a quality education. With strict compulsory education laws, more than 50 million
students enrolled in primary and secondary schools, and billions of dollars spent annually on public and
private education, American children surely have access to buildings and classrooms. However, because
of a complex and competitive system of shared policymaking among national, state, and local
governments, not all schools are created equal nor are equal education opportunities available for the
poor, minorities, and underprivileged. One manifestation of this inequity is the lack of qualified teachers
in many urban and rural schools to teach certain subjects such as science, mathematics, and technology.
The purpose of this article is to describe a partnership model between two major institutions (The
American Museum of Natural History and The City University of New York) and the program designed
to improve the way teachers are trained and children are taught and introduced to the world of science.
These two institutions have partnered on various projects over the years to expand educational
opportunity especially in the teaching of science. One of the more successful projects is Seminars on
Science (SoS), an online teacher education and professional development program, that connects teachers
across the United States and around the world to cutting-edge research and provides them with powerful
classroom resources. This article provides the institutional perspectives, the challenges and the strategies
that fostered this partnership.
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Keywords
science education, teacher education, pre-service, in-service, teacher shortage, distance learning, online learning, blended learning, multimedia
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Roles of distance education in the implementation of the right
to education in Indonesia: analysis and lessons learnt from the
sociological, political and economic points of view
- Aminudin Zuhairi, Ida Zubaidah & Daryono
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Aminudin Zuhairi, Ida Zubaidah & Daryono |
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Abstract
This paper addresses the roles of distance education in the implementation of the
right to education, presenting sociological, political and economic analysis and
lessons learnt from the specific context of Indonesia. Diversities in geographic,
demographic, social cultural and economic conditions of the country provide
specific challenges for its distance education practice and the process of social,
political and economic transformation to which distance education can contribute.
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Keywords
distance education, right to education, challenges, socia, political and economic transformation
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Distance Education in Rural China achieves Inter-School
Collaboration and Increased Access to Education
- Xiaoying FENG, Weiyuan ZHANG, Li CHEN
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Xiaoying FENG, Weiyuan ZHANG, Li CHEN |
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Abstract
This Paper reports the use of forty-five learning scaffold strategies in a network of thirty-six schools across China.
The collaborative network helps to provide access to school-children in rural regions by linking them together with school
children in developed cities. The teachers involved asserted that the templates and scaffold strategies were effective for learning.
The conclusions found that scaffolds should be used throughout the courses to promote collaborative learning among school children.
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Keywords
Schools, Collaboration, Rural regions, Development, Access, China
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Distance education opportunities for mature women in
Greece and Cyprus: comparative perspectives and
implications
- Marios Vryonides & Michalinos Zembylas
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Marios Vryonides & Michalinos Zembylas |
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Abstract
The introduction of distance and e-learning education programs in the Greek and Cypriot higher education systems
in the past few years has often been accompanied by parallel rhetoric. This rhetoric evolves and focuses primarily
around the need for the state to offer flexible educational provisions to groups of mature students who would otherwise
be at the risk of social marginalization or even exclusion. Marginalization is the result of social processes that
require new and a constantly updated body of knowledge and skills to adapt in a social environment that is changing
day by day and transforms the fundamental conditions of our social existence (Grummell, 2007). Often, perhaps not
surprisingly, the rhetoric of equality of opportunity and social inclusion may inadvertently contribute to further
marginalization of some social groups. Good intentions are rarely ‘good’ enough.
Our goal in this paper is to focus on the complex ways in which the rhetoric of opportunity and social inclusion is
materialized in two innovative educational programs—one at the University of the Aegean in Greece and the other at
the Open University of Cyprus.
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Keywords
e-learning, Greece, mature women students, equality of opportunity, social inclusion
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Determined to learn: accessing education despite life-threatening disasters
- Claudine SchWeber, Ph.D.
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Claudine SchWeber, Ph.D. |
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Abstract
The ‘right to education’ proclaimed by the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights requires access
to learning as well as the support systems. Since access can be interrupted by various circumstances,
the possibility of providing continuity despite external dangers by using online distance education,
offers an intriguing and valuable option. For example, life-threatening disasters, such as war or hurricanes,
can interrupt or halt ongoing higher education coursework. Despite that reality, some students remain
determined to continue the learning. How can institutions respond to this determination fast enough to
be of use and effective enough to maintain their educational reputations? Empire State College’s (New York)
activities in its Lebanon Residence Program after the 2006 war and Xavier University in New Orleans’ actions
in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina provide valuable answers. Together with the unique Sloan Semester—created
to temporarily provide educational continuity for hurricane affected students—these programs also offer lessons
on resilience and survival in a crisis.
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Keywords
educational access, distance learning, e-learning, higher education and disaster, resilience, sloan semester, educational continuity, crisis management, academic continuity
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Distance English language teacher training program in Turkey : e-learning opportunities for the right to education - Dilek ALTUNAY & M. Emin MUTLU
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Dilek ALTUNAY & M. Emin MUTLU |
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This article presents the Distance English Language Teacher Training Program at Anadolu University in Turkey and how distance education; particularly e-learning opportunities offered in the program contribute to the right to education. The program has contributed to solve the English language teacher education problem in the country and contributes to the right to education mainly in two ways: Firstly, it gives the ones who would like to become English language teachers the right to achieve their aim. Secondly, by increasing the supply of teachers of English, it allows students who want to learn English but cannot learn because of lack of teachers to learn English. The program also includes many applications contributing to the right to education. This practice is important in that it might bring new insights to foreign language teacher education and will be of value to other countries facing with similar problems.
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Keywords
right to education, teacher education, English language teacher education, e-learning, distance education, blended learning
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Paths of participation in a knowledge-based era: disseminating e-learning opportunities in Central Asia - Carlos Machado, Elvira Lussana
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Carlos Machado, Elvira Lussana |
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Abstract
In education, as in many other aspects of modern life, the question of how to implement Information Communication Technologies (ICTs) is an important challenge for anyone with a stake in training and learning, as educational technologies are spreading rapidly in a globalised world. According to the Task Force of the International Council of Distance Education there have been more than 20 changes to teaching and learning behaviour which have caused a shift on the educational paradigm. All these changes have brought about new reformed curricula in many areas. This paper concentrates on the implications of reforming curricula, extending the Bologna Declaration and introducing learning technologies in a number of higher education institutions (HEIs) within developing countries of Central Asia. With the objective of innovating in education, while administrators (i.e. what it can be understood as rectors and vice-rectors) are busy in following national action plans and strategies for education, the pressure for change and the pace of education change have increased considerably over the last years, partly due what has been defined as a world wide education reform movement (Hargreaves, 1996). As a result, educational systems – and not only in Central Asian countries - are experiencing new directions in the areas of teaching practice, curricula, teacher education and the involvement of educationally significant stakeholders. Our experience and conclusions from years of participation in developing programs to improve the quality of education is put forward hereunder.
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Keywords
e-learning, open sources, developing countries, e-readiness
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Radio, Television and the Internet providing the Right to Education in India - Sriram Arulchelvan and D. Viswanathan
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Sriram Arulchelvan and D. Viswanathan |
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This Paper reports the various projects in India that use radio, television and / or the Internet in the past 20 years. These projects have been internationally recognized as educationally effective. Interesting and useful findings include that urban students use radio and use television more than rural students (due to language perhaps), and that campus-based local radio, television, and Internet should be more widely adopted. Accessibility, distance mode versus face-to-face mode, gender, urban versus rural, and age were all variables covered in this major study.
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Keywords
radio, television, internet, projects, demographics, india
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Open Educational Resources: Enabling universal education - Tom Caswell, Shelley Henson, Marion Jensen, David Wiley
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Tom Caswell, Shelley Henson, Marion Jensen, David Wiley |
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The role of distance education is shifting. Traditionally distance education was limited in the number of people served because of production, reproduction, and distribution costs. Today, while it still costs the university time and money to produce a course, technology has made it such that reproduction costs are almost non-existent. This shift has significant implications, and allows distance educators to play an important role in the fulfillment of the promise of the right to universal education. At little or no cost, universities can make their content available to millions. This content has the potential to substantially improve the quality of life of learners around the world. New distance education technologies, such as OpenCourseWares, act as enablers to achieving the universal right to education. These technologies, and the associated changes in the cost of providing access to education, change distance education's role from one of classroom alternative to one of social transformer.
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Keywords
OpenCourseWare, distance education, access, new technologies
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OpenCourseWare, Global Access and the Right to Education: Real access or marketing ploy? - Henk Huijser, Tas Bedford, David Bull
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Henk Huijser, Tas Bedford, David Bull |
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This paper explores the potential opportunities that OpenCourseWare (OCW) offers in providing wider access to tertiary education, based on the ideal of ‘the right to education’. It first discusses the wider implications of OCW, and its underlying philosophy, before using a case study of a tertiary preparation program (TPP) at the University of Southern Queensland (USQ) to draw out the issues involved in offering a program that is created in a particular national and social context on a global scale. This paper draws specific attention to the digital divide, its effects in national and global contexts, and the particular obstacles this presents with regards to OCW. This paper argues that OCW provides many opportunities, both in terms of access to education and in terms of student recruitment and marketing for universities. To take full advantage of those opportunities, however, requires a concerted effort on the part of tertiary education institutions, and it requires a vision that is fundamentally informed by, and committed to, the principle of ‘the right to education’.
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Keywords
OpenCourseWare, right to education, digital divide, tertiary preparation programs
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The Role of Open and Distance Learning in the Implementation of the Right to Education in Zambia - Richard Siaciwena, Foster Lubinda
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Richard Siaciwena, Foster Lubinda |
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Abstract
As a member of the United Nations, Zambia is committed to the observance of human rights enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights of 1948. This is evidenced, among others, by the fact that Zambia is a signatory to the Convention on the Rights of the Child and the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child. Zambia has a permanent Human Rights Commission that includes a subcommittee on child rights whose focus is on child abuse and education. Zambia also has a National Child Policy and National Youth Policy whose main objectives are to holistically address problems affecting children and youth. This paper focuses on the progress and challenges currently facing Zambia and the role of open and distance learning in addressing those challenges.
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Keywords
open and distance learning, policy, human rights, teacher training, basic education
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Exploring the Role of Distance Education in Fostering Equitable University Access for First Generation Students: A phenomenological survey - Lisa C. Priebe, Tamra L. Ross, Karl W. Low
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Lisa C. Priebe, Tamra L. Ross, Karl W. Low |
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Abstract
Using a qualitative study of distance education (DE) learners
whose parents have not accessed post-secondary education (PSE),
this paper proposes themes for further research in the study of first-generation students (FGS).
This survey asked a number of open-ended questions about parental influences on university enrollment,
and respondents’ reasons for choosing university in general and DE in particular.
Findings were consistent with current research in many areas focusing on debt aversion,
lower parental guidance, older starting age, and difficulty separating from familial roles.
Differences were noted, including lower parental valuation of PSE and an increased emphasis
on non-educational priorities, such as family and work. The limitations of the current study
are discussed, as well as suggestions for future FGS research in DE.
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Keywords
distance education, first generation students, education equity, post-secondary education
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The impact of technology on accessibility and pedagogy : the right to education in Sub-Saharan Africa - Dele BRAIMOH, & Jonathan Ohiorenuan OSIKI
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Dele BRAIMOH, & Jonathan Ohiorenuan OSIKI |
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This Paper reports the background of open and distance learning in Africa from its initial early stages to the present. The authors then highlight the achievements and the problems faced in Africa, and most importantly set out a road map for governments and other agencies in order to develop open and distance learning to achieve the Right to Education and the millennium goals for Sub-Saharan Africa. The authors include an interest discussion on labour mobility as it affects education.
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Keywords
open and distance learning, developing countries, barriers, labour mobility, road map, Sub-Saharan Africa
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Training young people in the use of digital media: the highs and lows of establishing the Information Technology and Internet Proficiency Certificate (B2i) in France - Jean-François Cerisier, Caroline Rizza, Bruno Devauchelle, Aurélien Nguyen
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Jean-François Cerisier, Caroline Rizza, Bruno Devauchelle, Aurélien Nguyen |
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Abstract
ICT contributions to individual life long learning courses need a fair digital acculturation. Precisely, only School is able to support this kind of fair digital education. We propose to discuss this point of view through the analysis of the French training device X2I (B2i and C2i).
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Keywords
digital culture, acculturation, internet generation, uses, competences, training device, certification, B2i, C2i
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Perspectives and Strategies towards Collaboration in Higher Education in the GCC Arab States of the Gulf - Siran MUKERJI and Nader K. JAMMEL
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Siran MUKERJI and Nader K. JAMMEL |
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This Paper reviews the higher education systems in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Arab countries, and reports the very high literacy rates in the populations, while indicating they are increasing the number of universities significantly in recent years. As a result they assert the proportion of women studying and graduating now from GCC universities are matching and surpassing the numbers for men.
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Keywords
Arabian countries, Literacy, Building new universities, Collaboration, Women
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Development of equal opportunities to education using ICT in China : Overview of the nationwide project 'Modern Distance Education for Schools in the Rural Areas of China' - Li CHEN and Meiling CHEN
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Li CHEN and Meiling CHEN |
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This Paper reports on the largest project in the world, which aims to reduce the gap in education quality between the urban areas and the rural areas in China - by sharing digital resources through ICT. This Paper gives an overview together with discussion of the challenges and some suggestions. The Paper shares some valuable information on how distance education can be used to enhance educational access and equity at low cost in developing countries.
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Keywords
Large-scale, Access, Equity, Challenges, Suggestions
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The Right to Education : A model for making higher education equally accessible to all on the basis of merit - Sir John DANIEL, Asha KANWAR and Stamenka UVALIĆ-TRUMBIĆ
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Sir John DANIEL, Asha KANWAR and Stamenka UVALIĆ-TRUMBIĆ |
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This Paper reviews past models used for higher education, and with the current technology recommends a new model based on individualization of courses and utilizing global open educational resources - to provide access to all, as well as providing accredited quality, and at low cost. The proposed model centres on examinations and allows students to choose different ways of preparing for them.
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Keywords
Model, Quality, Access, Low cost, Global open resources, Individualization
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Extending Open Distance Learning into Rural North-Eastern India - Sunil KUMAR, Neelam CHAUDHARY and Girija SHANKAR
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Sunil KUMAR, Neelam CHAUDHARY and Girija SHANKAR |
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This paper describes the experiences of Indira Gandhi National Open University in extending its services into the North East Region of India. This region is considerably isolated with great challenges including continuous insurgencies. Solutions include using local languages, at least one full-time national employee at each study centre, and provide education to the national army there with shared access for the local people.
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Keywords
Least-developed region, Solutions, Local languages, Trust, Access
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