Title: ICTs
1ICTs Open Distance Learning in Sub-Saharan
Africa
- International Symposium on the ICT Policy
Implementation Strategy - Polana Hotel, Maputo, Mozambique
- 14h00 16h00, Thursday, 4th October, 2001
- Dr Bob Day, Executive Director of ICT,
- University of South Africa (Unisa)
2Structure of Presentation
- The Knowledge Society, the Developing World,
the HEI Sector - Unisas Response Distance Education (ODL) ICT
Strategies
3Emerging Knowledge Society
- Developed World
- Sustained through networks, not single
organisations. - Distributed rather than centralised intelligence.
- Requires multiple skills and continuous learning.
- Enabled by Interactive ICTs whilst simultaneously
driving the development of new ICTs. - Developing World
- Global phenomenon one KS, many (fractal)
components. - Avoid perpetuating the past - linear strategies
vs Scenarios - Emphasis on mutual benefit, not adversarial
competition. - Emphasis on sustainability NOT subsidy.
- Valuable concept of Knowledge Citizen
- Emphasising the value of EVERY human mind, rather
than automating their muscle Equity
4Transforming HEIs - Globally
- Michael Gibbons
- University structures are too inflexible to
accommodate emerging modes of knowledge
production - Peter Drucker
- 30 years from now the big university campuses
will be relics. Universities wont survive - Can HEIs change or must they die?
- What should they transform into, and how?
5Aligning and Mobilising the HEI Sector
- In general, African HEIs are not responding to
the challenges of the Knowledge Society - Wasted major resource - need to transform to
become learning organisations adopt KM - Could play leading role in accelerating Africas
socio-economic development - Need to collaborate with each other, with
public and private sectors, globally - Could apply much of their research ( learning)
to National and Regional needs - Could drive new learning material development
(TEL) for ALL levels of education, not just
tertiary. What is the alternative?
6- Unisa, its Strategic Response
7- About 170,000 students, and growing
- University of the Cape of Good Hope founded in
1873 became University of South Africa in 1916 - University of South Africa as DE university
started in 1946 - more than 55 years
experience with ODL - Mainly correspondence courses (2000), but
experimenting with various technologies for 10
years
8Trasforming Unisa
- Leapfrogging and HEIs - Creating Dinosaurs with
Frogs Legs? - Cannot change radically by throwing new ICTs at
organisation FIRST change organisational
culture - Need service oriented culture focused on the
students - Administrative processes must be
de-bureaucratised much resistance - Academics must embrace and create ongoing
development of new pedagogy - CIKO role in Executive essential
9Unisa to become a leader in
- Reaching underserved communities, FIRST in SA,
and then in Africa
- RD plus implementation of innovative multi-mode
ODL teaching
- Providing students with a skills base for future
needs of all sectors of society
- Providing World class ODL locally FIRST,
nationally, continentally and globally
10Holistic Learning and ICT Strategy
ICT Admin. Processes
ICT Access
ICT Learning Processes
11(No Transcript)
12Holistic Learning and ICT Strategy
ICT Learning Processes
Non Value Addition
- Digitisation of existing
- correspondence material
- Same pedagogy
- Minor ICT enhancements
- Essential first step
- Introduces electronic
- media
- NOT virtual University
Parallel Process 2
Parallel Process 3
13Holistic Learning and ICT Strategy
ICT Learning Processes
Non Value Addition
ICT-enhanced New Pedagogy
- Tried tested pedagogies
- Tried tested ICT
- BUT team approach
- Subject Specialist(s)
- ICT Specialist(s)
- Instructional Designer(s)
- Drives Culture Change
Parallel Process 3
14Holistic Learning and ICT Strategy
ICT Learning Processes
Non Value Addition
ICT-enhanced New Pedagogy
Multi-modal Pedagogy Innovation
- Untried pedagogy ICT
- Multi-disciplinary,
- semi-autonomous centre
- Multiple funding/partners
- Multi-media presentation
- HCI-driven delivery
- Multiple interactivity
- (synchronous/asynchronous)
15Indigenous Technology Cluster Model
- Indigenous Cluster Model from Foresight
SAITIS compare with satellite 1st world
clusters (serve only developed minority in
developing countries) - Indigenous ICT for MPCCs Cluster
- Indigenous HCI Cluster includes adaptation of
HLTs to African Languages - Indigenous ICT for Pedagogy Cluster
- similar to Finish VU Karlsruhe OUNL (other?)
- Collaborate with UEM, Khartoum, Dakar (RINAF)?
16Innovative Pedagogy Facility Evolving Model
- Real entity, but extended (virtual/decentralised)
- Semi-autonomous entity, co-owned by all
stakeholder Faculties/Departments - Multiple funding streams, separate from current
academic research budgets (sustainable in
long-term) - Applied, prototyping projects with hard
deliverables (transparent prioritisation)
feedback to level 2 - Unisa staff (Champions) seconded (3, 6, 12
months?) - Other staff (RSA international) HEIs, private
sector, NGOs, etc..
17ODL Innovation Focus
18Major Innovative Learning Initiative via HCI
- African Languages Content
- Learning of Complex, Challenging Concepts
- 2nd language leads to rote rather than
comprehension - Reconfigure in African language (NOT literal
translation) - Monitor learning experience feedback
- HLT now mature enough can build ICT enhanced
material in parallel
19 - Thank You
- bday_at_unisa.ac.za
20Examples of crucial issues around Africas KS
- In which of these issues could/should the HEI
Sector become involved? - National ongoing Information Society Policy
Processes, based on understanding of Africas
Knowledge Society (AISI NICI processes) - Can this be effective in the absence of National
Foresight exercises? - Mechanisms for universal access (eg MPCCs and
SchoolNet initiatives) - Need BALANCE between market forces and
development needs eg National PTT regulatory
and liberalisation problems. - Aligning and mobilising the wasted resources of
the Tertiary Sector
21Technology and Learning
- Most Policy makers confuse Distance Education
with Technology Enhanced Learning. - What is Technology Enhanced Learning?
- FIRST understand wide range of new pedagogies
(brain research), and their appropriateness for
different learning situations (sage on the
stage no longer acceptable) - Use newly available Multimedia technologies to
create learning environments previously not
possible - May be used in either contact or asynchronous
modes, with broad range of interactivity
(one-on-one, group, etc) - What is Open Distance Learning?
- Explores all of the above new TEL options
interprets them in Distance paradigm - Major new developments in mass delivery, digital
material production, individualisation, student
support, tutoring, interactive monitoring,
assessment,..
22Modes of Learning
- Tendency to wish to amplify impact of technology
via training the trainers - Good, but assumes ALL learning requires a
teacher. - Need to understand and identify content and
pedagogy which is best (naturally?) self learned. - Where appropriate, free up learners to learn
without teacher bottleneck - Free up teachers to focus on areas where they can
add most value to most learners (true
amplification)
23Examples of Innovative Learning Collaborative
Initiatives
- OUNL EML, EduBox, ?
- Finnish VU ( Jyvaskyla) pedagogical
innovations, eg intercultural understanding
developing IPF - SAP ( Karlsruhe) innovative learning material
universal access mode via MPCCs SchoolNet SA
HLT expertise developing IPF - SchoolNet SA ( Africa) Access Access Courses
growth into Africa (Nigeria, Mozambique,
Burundi).
24 25How to Improve and Broaden Student Support and
Access?
- Once, Unisas weakness now great opportunity
- NB Student Support should NOT be used to prop
up bad learning material - Focus on improving and reconstituting our Access
Programmes including HCI concepts - Pilots - First on Maths, English for Science
- Urban students (via Learning Centres)
- Rural students (via MPCCs SchoolNet)
- Use non-textual improvements, eg multi-media
(voice-over-visuals) via CDs NOW - Use African Language components in better work
sheets (NOW), via HLT (SOON) - Potential for much wider Access Courses (NFBE)
26Copy the Developed Worlds Knowledge Society?
- The KS is more advanced in the developed world
- BUT, remains widely misunderstood there
- KS has NOT been perfected there, nor is it their
sole property - Africa should learn as much as possible from
their extensive experience - Will blindly following and copying lead to
Africas equitable component of the global
knowledge society?
27Who leads the Development of Africas Knowledge
Society?
- Africa needs leadership from organisations that
it can TRUST and COMMUNICATE with. These
organisations must - Understand in depth the emerging KS
- Be African, understand Africas needs, be an
honest broker, and be open and accessible - Lead by example. Be a model Learning
Organisation optimally employing KM processes - How best can Africas HEI Sector contribute?
- Policy level issues
- Controversial Educational Issues
28Learning Organisations
- Half the levels of management, and one-third the
managers cwf todays organisations - Peter
Drucker - An organisation that facilitates the learning of
all its members and continuously transforms
itself in response to changes in its business - It recognises knowledge as an organisational
resource and focuses not only on individual
learning but also on collective or systemic
learning - BUT - It is hard to leave behind the Industrial
Paradigm embedded in the structure, practices,
processes of the organisation. AND in the minds
of management - Globally, most HEIs are FAR from being learning
organisations. - Need to transform but what future to aim at?