Title: Professor Asha Kanwar
1Digital Divide or Digital Dividend? POSTCARDS
FROM THE SOUTH
- Professor Asha Kanwar
- Commonwealth of Learning
2This Presentation
- The Digital Divide
- ICTs in Education policy
- Open Education Resources
- Thenew learner new teacher?
- Towards a dividend for all?
3The Digital Divide
4divides
4
5Access to Internet
6Internet Use
From www.internetworldstats.com
7Access to phones
8Divides
9The development divide
Asia leads the decline in global
poverty Proportion of people living on less than
1 a day, 1990 and 2002 (Percentage) So
urceThe Millennium Development Goals Report 2006
10ICTs in Education Policy
11The need for policy
- Without policy, the ICT landscape is the modern
equivalent of the Wild West and gunslingers
abound fighting each other for power. - N.
George
12Survey of ICT for Education in Africa Infodev
COL
13The study indicates that
- National ICT policies act as a catalyst for ICT
policy development in education. - Most policies have been developed in the last
five years. - Most ICT/education policies are comprehensive
14The study indicates that.
- All policies stress enhancing access to ICT tools
and connectivity - Policies show differential implementation
progress - Public-private partnerships are seen as critical
- Digital divide is also a gender divide
15ICT in Education Policy
April 2007
16Lessons
- Situate ICT/education policies within the
development framework of each country - National policies on ICT have to provide
necessary frameworks for cross-subsidisation,
multiple sources of funding and long-term
recovery of costs. - Realistic and sustainable implementation plans
17Lessons
- A more proactive approach to gender inclusion
- A coherent policy for the integration of
technologies in education
18Open Education Resources (OERs)
19- If you have an apple and I have an apple and
we exchange these apples then you and I will
still each have one apple. But if you have an
idea and I have an idea and we exchange these
ideas, then each of us will have two ideas. - GB Shaw
20Open Education Resources (OERs)
- Open source software
- Course development delivery tools
- Open course content
21Principles Open Source
- From elitism to mass ownership
- No centre, no hierarchy
- Inherent capability to self-organise
- Amateurs too can be producers of content
- Collaboration for the common good
22The dynamic context of ODL
- 1969-99four generationsprint, audio, video,
teleconferencing, broadcasts, online courses,
learning objects(tech for education) - 2000 fifth generationfully integrates pedagogy,
educational and institutional management and
technology (tech in and for education)
23 this courseware is mine to this courseware is for
(open) mining
- MIT Open Courseware sharing knowledge
- 2. UKOU Open Content Initiative sharing
learning - 3. VUSSC Collaborative content sharing
teaching and learning
24Commonwealth of Learning helps
- governments and institutions to
- expand the scope, scale and quality of learning
- promote policies, build models, develop
materials, enhance ICT capacity and - nurture networks in support of development goals.
80
For my generation the great innovation was the
course team. For the next I suspect that it will
be Open Educational Resources.
Sir John Daniel, 2007
Slide 2
25VUSSC
Virtual University for Small States of the
Commonwealth
- OER Network
- 28 Commonwealth countries
- Collaborating online using WikiEducator?
- Building capacity through regional boot camps
(Mauritius, Singapore and Trinidad and Tobago,
Samoa)?
26Goal 8 Digital Divide
27Lessons
- Ownership critical
- Interface b/w the decision-makers and doers
- Clear roles and responsibilities
- participation with gentle expert guidance
28Critical success factors
- Commitment
- Capacity
- Connectivity physical and social
- Content
29Content
30Development costs of DE resources
Cost categories
Instructional design, multimedia design, editing
etc.
20
80
Academic authoring time
31Development costs of OERs
Authoring and design costs shared among
participating institutions
Mackintosh
32The New Learner a New Teacher?
33Generation Next
- Half the worlds population (6.5 billion) is
under 20 - 2 billion teenagers in developing world
34The new learner
- Digital natives
- Digital migrants
- From constructivism to connectivism?
- Mark Prensky
35The New Learner
- seeks immediate gratification rather than delayed
responses - prefers fun rather than suffering
- wants education that is relevant to real life
- would rather have social relations and
interactivity than isolation. -
- Wood and Zurcher
36One Laptop Per Child (OLPC)
37(No Transcript)
38(No Transcript)
39One computer per teacher
- USD 300, Intel
- Loans from Banks
- Less than USD 10 per month
40The New Teacher?
- unlearn
- collaboration in the time of competition
- find ways to cater to individual learning habits
and strategies as never before.
41The New Teacher
- helps learners construct knowledge for themselves
- encourages multiple perspectives
- uses multiple ICT tools rather than only the
printed text - promotes creative and innovative thinking over
memorisation
42Implications for institutions
- Research on the new learner
- Equipping the learner to be an agent of change
- Pedagogic transformations
43Access to ICTs
Access to ICTs grows fastest in the mobile
sector. Number of telephone subscriptions and
internet connections per 100 population,
1990-2005 (Percentage) SourceThe Millennium
Development Goals Report 2007
44DE Unit, Univ of Pretoria
- 14,000 teachers
- 1 internet 99 phones
- Administrative
- Academic
- By 2010, 2.5 billion users of mobile phones
45Towards a dividend for all
46Initiatives in the last 10 years
AVU African Virtual University OLPC One
Laptop Per Child VUSSC Virtual University for
Small States of the Commonwealth (COL) TTISSA
Teachers Training Initiative for Sub-Saharian
Africa (UNESCO) TESSA Teachers Education for
Sub-Saharian Africa (AVU\UKOU)
governance (top-down)
India PanAfrican Network
AVU (1st phase)
AVU (2nd phase)
TTISSA
TESSA
empowerment (bottom-up)
VUSSC
1st gen.
2nd gen.
3rd gen.
OLPC
less sustainable
more sustainable
47From divide to dividend
- the emphasis on people, rather than on
technologies - consider knowledge as a social product emerging
as an effect of a network of human, text,
machines - see learning as a process of knowledge creation
48In other worlds
- Bridging
- Generations of technology?
- Generations of people?
- Generations of practice?
- Or do we need a new vocabulary and new
strategies?
49We have the technology
- Do we have the politics and the political will to
convert the divide into a dividend?
50Whose responsibility?
- The governmentss?
- Development partners?
- Civil society?
- Providers?
- Or all of the above?
51What kinds of leadership?
- Transactional?
- Transformational?
- Both?
- How will this change take place? Who will lead
the process?
52TIME person of the Year 2006
- YOUhave
- the freedom and the responsibility
- We have nothing to lose but the divide!
53Consider
- human resources are the essential infrastructure
without which technology means nothing - Manuel
Castells (2001)
54thank-you