Distance education: Difference between revisions
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See also: [[e-learning]] | See also: [[e-learning]] | ||
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* An increasing variety of various [[CMC]] tools allows learners to learn together over a distance | * An increasing variety of various [[CMC]] tools allows learners to learn together over a distance | ||
* Traditional institutions entering the market (in particular Universities for master degree levels) using flexible e-learning tools or event video-conferencing don't necessarily adopt any sort of "industrialized" design methodology. | * Traditional institutions entering the market (in particular Universities for master degree levels) using flexible e-learning tools or event video-conferencing don't necessarily adopt any sort of "industrialized" design methodology. | ||
== Kinds of distance teaching == | == Kinds of distance teaching == | ||
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# Where To Learn: places wherein to study ( home, training centre, classroom, etc.). | # Where To Learn: places wherein to study ( home, training centre, classroom, etc.). | ||
# How To Learn: learning methods and techniques as well as the media to be used. | # How To Learn: learning methods and techniques as well as the media to be used. | ||
We'd add to this | |||
# Who designs and produces the course | |||
== Links == | == Links == | ||
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=== Handbooks and Textbooks === | === Handbooks and Textbooks === | ||
* Gunawardena, Charlotte Nirmalani and Marina Stock McIsaac (accessed 17: | * Gunawardena, Charlotte Nirmalani and Marina Stock McIsaac (accessed 17:21, 11 May 2006 (MEST)). Distance education. In D. Jonassen (Ed.), Handbook of research for educational communications and technology. On-line version at http://www.aect.org/. Maybe there is an older version in the book (Second edition. New York: NY: Macmillan, pp. 403-437.) | ||
Revision as of 16:21, 11 May 2006
This article or section is currently under construction
In principle, someone is working on it and there should be a better version in a not so distant future.
If you want to modify this page, please discuss it with the person working on it (see the "history")
Definition
See also: e-learning
A short history
- Late 1800s' Universty of Chicago offers a correspondence program
- 1840 Establishment of the first correspondence school in Europe, the Sir Isaac Pitman Correspondence Colleges (UK)
- 1938 Foundation of the ICCE, the International Council for Correspondence Education
- 1939 Foundation of the CNED, the Centre National d'Éducation à Distance (France)
- 1963 Foundation of the Council for Education by Correspondence, CEC, earlier predecessor of the AECS
- 1967 Foundation of DIFF, the Deutsches Institut für Fernstudien (Germany)
- 1968 Foundation of the European Home Study Council, EHSC, another predecessor of AECS
- 1969 Foundation of the Open University (UK)
- 1974 Establishment of the FernUniversität (Hagen, Germany)
- 1980's Commercial satellite courses in the US
- 1982 The ICCE changes its name to become the ICDE, the International Council for Distance Education
- 1984 Establishment of the Open Universiteit (Netherlands)
- 1985 Foundation of the Association European Correspondence Schools, AECS, successor of the EHSC
- 1987 Foundation of the EADTU, the European Association of Distance Teaching Universities
- 1991 Establishment of EDEN, the European Distance Education Network.
Keegan (1980) quoted by Gunawardena et al. (????: 358) identified six key elements of distance education:
- Separation of teacher and learner
- Influence of an educational organization
- Use of media to link teacher and learner
- Two-way exchange of communication
- Learners as individuals rather than grouped
- Education as an industrialized form
This definition still holds for most varieties. However, together with the Internet boom that brought us for exemple e-learning technology, this definition doesn't hold anymore.
- An increasing variety of various CMC tools allows learners to learn together over a distance
- Traditional institutions entering the market (in particular Universities for master degree levels) using flexible e-learning tools or event video-conferencing don't necessarily adopt any sort of "industrialized" design methodology.
Kinds of distance teaching
Trindade (1993) defined the following variables to define modus operandi of distance learning regimes:
- Who Learns: population potentially covered by distance education.
- Who Teaches: assistance and guidance of the student by the tutor/counsellor of the school, training centre or any other.
- What To Learn: selection of courses/curricula and related contents.
- When To Learn: period for course attendance, study and assessment.
- Where To Learn: places wherein to study ( home, training centre, classroom, etc.).
- How To Learn: learning methods and techniques as well as the media to be used.
We'd add to this
- Who designs and produces the course
Links
European distance and e-learning network
References
Handbooks and Textbooks
- Gunawardena, Charlotte Nirmalani and Marina Stock McIsaac (accessed 17:21, 11 May 2006 (MEST)). Distance education. In D. Jonassen (Ed.), Handbook of research for educational communications and technology. On-line version at http://www.aect.org/. Maybe there is an older version in the book (Second edition. New York: NY: Macmillan, pp. 403-437.)
- Moore, Michael G. and William G. Anderson (eds.) (2003). Handbook of Distance Education, Mahwah: Erlbaum, ISBN 0805839240
Studies
- Lou, Yiping, Robert M. Bernard and Philip C. Abrami (2006). Media and Pedagogy in Undergrade Distance Education: A Theory-based Meta-Analysis of Empirical Literature. Educational Technology Research and Development 54 (2), 141-176 ISSN 1042-1629
- Hara, Noriko and Rob Kling (2000). Students' Distress with a Web-based Distance Education Course, Preprint. Published in Information, Communication & Society 3(4): 557-579.
History
- Trindade, Armando Rocha (1993), Basics Of Distance Education, The Conceptual Panorama Of Distance Education And Training, European Distance Education Network (Eden). [1]. This older article contain is still a good primer for certain questions and history.
- James C Taylor, Distance Education Technologies : The Fourth Generation, The University of Southern Queensland, [2]. This text, dated ??? also provides historical insight. It must have been written in the mid-nineties.