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Contents: Part 1 Introduction 1. Using Learning Technologies: An Introduction Part 2 Policy Issues 2. Naming the Learning Technology Issues in Developing Countries 3. Public and Institutional Policy Interplay: Canadian Examples 4. Getting the Systems Right: Experience at the University of the West Indies 5. Developing Course Materials: A Context of Technology Constraints Part 3 Practice Issues 6. Lessons from Our Cyberclassroom 7. Teacher or Avatar? Identity Issues in Computer-mediated Contexts 8. Web-based Research Assistance 9. 'No One Will Listen to Us': Rural Fulbe Women Learning by Radio in Nigeria 10. Confronting Barriers to Distance Study in Tanzania Part 4 Quality Issues 11. Reflections on Evaluating Online Learning and Teaching 12. Evaluating the Use of Learning Technologies 13. Gender-sensitive Evaluation Research 14. Using Learning Technologies: A Synthesis of Challenges and Guidelines
This collection of first-hand accounts from experienced and accomplished learning technology practitioners highlights issues in using learning technologies for flexible, distance and open learning. Drawing on their own experience, the authors identify and explore the most practical and complex issues faced and reflect upon the lessons learned. The definition of learning technologies is broad, encompassing not only the tools (print, audio, video, online applications) but their creative and informed application and social effects. Experiences from eight different countries are presented while the themes addressed include policy development, teaching skills, learner guidance, evaluation and reflective practice. Often, busy practitioners argue that they do not have time for reflection but that they do have time to swap stories with colleagues. Using Learning Technologies promotes such engagement through a broad range of first-hand accounts of facing the challenges entailed in using learning technologies. The stories recounted here speak directly to practitioners, researchers and administrators, provide a model for reflection and offer practical guidelines for comparison with the reader's own experience. eBook available with sample pages: HB:0415216877
Distance education is arguably one of the major developments in
education during the 20th Century. From schooling through to
university education, distance education blossomed to facilitate
frontier expansion in the New World, capacity-building in
developing nations, access and equity provision in post-War
societies and flexible professional development and workplace
training for late-modernity. "The International Handbook of
Distance Education" explores the array of distance education
theories and practices as they have been shaped by the late-20th
Century and then positions these in terms of the contemporary
circumstances of the 21st Century. The "Handbook' is intended to be
a comprehensive reference work for practitioners, researchers and
administrators engaged in forms of distance education in private
and public education, from schooling through undergraduate and
postgraduate coursework to doctoral research programs. A critical
thread runs throughout the "Handbook" to provide the reader with
stimulation to critique policy and practice with a view to being
creative and responsive in their own policy development and
educational work. It discusses lifelong and flexible learning
environments.
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