Title: E-LEARNING STRATEGIES
1E-LEARNING STRATEGIES
World Bank Group
- Samia Melhem, Learntec 2002,
- Karlsruhe Germany, Feb 8, 2002
1
2Our Vision
- to become a Knowledge Bank that spurs the
knowledge revolution in developing countries and
acts as a catalyst for creating, sharing, and
applying cutting edge knowledge necessary for
poverty reduction and economic development
3Why focus on Knowledge?
- The knowledge revolution offers an opportunity
to redraw the global economy by - enhancing competitiveness
- offering new opportunities for economic growth
and jobs - better access to basic services
- increasing returns on investments in education
and health Focus on eLearning and eHealth - empowerment of local communities and poor people
4The Four Pillars
- I. Supporting an enabling environment
- II. Expanding access
- III. Building human capacity
- IV. Supporting research, networking and
communities of practice
5How These Programs Fit Together
- Supporting an
- enabling
- environment
- Expanding
- Access
- Global ICT Department
- InfoDev
- World Bank and IFC lending for ICT infrastructure
6How These Programs Fit Together (cont.)
- Education portfolio
- African Virtual University
- Global Development Learning Network
- World Links for Development
- Development Gateway
- Global Development Network
- Knowledge Sharing
- Building Capacity
- Tool eLearning
- World Bank Institute
- (our institutional university)
- Supporting research, networking and communities
of practice -
7ICT and Development
- Is ICT relevant to poverty alleviation?
- Access offers major economic opportunities and
potential for empowerment - ICT enhances the quality, efficiency,
transparency of public service provision - Exclusion an economic and social burden
- Growth of ICT impressive in LDCs but digital
divide has emerged, building on existing
societal disparities
8ICT and Development
- Is there a role for the Public Sector?
- Privatization, strong regulation, competitive
markets could double No. lines in poorer markets
in Africa - Reforms require passing (and enforcing) enabling
legislation, and innovating in business landscape - Regulatory agencies need competence and
credibility - The market, unassisted, will not provide a
sufficient level of access today.
9Past Performance and New Challenges
- IT lending in over 80 of projects (average 1.5B
a year) but need best practices, awareness of
opportunities. - About 10 Global Special initiatives infoDev,
World Links for Development, Global Knowledge
Partnership, etc. - Bridging Digital Divide DOT Force (G8 Digital
Opportunity Task Force)
WB Sectors withICT Components
16
42
12
11
11
8
Public Sector Mgmt.
Transportation
Agriculture
Education
Popultn, Hlth Nutn
Others
10Defining the Digital Divide
Share of low and lower- middle income countries
(LMICs)
Jan. 2000
Jan. 1995
18
28
Telephone main lines
5
14
Mobile subscribers
1.1
7.6
Estimated Internet Users
Source ITU World Telecommunication Indicators
Database
11Internet Divergence
Number of Internet users, millions
Developed
Developing
Source ITU.
12International Internet Bandwidth
0.4
Gbps
USA /
Canada
56
Gbps
Gbps
18
0.5
Asia /
Europe
Gbps
Pacific
3
Gbps
Gbps
0.2
Latin
Africa
America
0.1
Gbps
Note
Gbps
Gigabits (1000 Mb) per second.
Source ITU adapted from
TeleGeography
.
13Shedding different lights at a complex set of
issues
Missing Link (Maitland Report)
Global Information Infrastructure
Digital Divide
Empowerment
Knowledge
Content
Applications
Regulatory aspects
Infrastructure
1985
1988
1991
1994
1997
2000
2003
14Bridging Divides
15Strategic Directions
- Broadening and Deepening Sector and Institutional
Reforms - Developing Information Infrastructure
- Supporting ICT Applications
- Building ICT skills and Capacity
16Broadening Sector Reform
- Broadening focus across all ICT Components
including new areas (Internet applications such
as E-government, Ecommerce, ELearning),
convergence and previously overlooked sectors
(postal, creative industries) - Creating and enabling environment for e-commerce
and e-government - Strengthening Regulatory institutions to ensure
capacity and credibility to implement sector
reform - Completing sector reform in countries that have
not undergone basic market restructuring with new
approached based on technological convergence
17Developing Information Infrastructure
- Extending Access beyond the market with WB
support for innovative solutions such as
public/private co-financing, universal access
Funds community centered development
(Telecenters) innovative solutions - Exploiting synergies with other rural
infrastructure projects across sectors. - Investment branch (IFC) will focus on new
entrants rather than incumbent operators and will
increase investments in content and applications,
including Internet - infoDev e-readiness assessments of 40 countries
18Supporting ICT Applications
- Sectoral applications of ICT in areas such as
eLearning, health, education, public sector
management and social services - Strategic info. systems for finance, tax,
education, health with a move towards use of the
Internet - WB lending projects have, on average an ICT
component of 8 Millions. - Focus on Change management, training and
retooling clients counterparts.
19Building ICT skills and Capacity
- New trend triggered by global shortage of
technicians and IT specialists - Identifying needs for building ICT human capacity
- Advising governments and entrepreneurs on
developing new information industries such as
software exports, Application development and
hosting, remote network management, call centers. - Lending to Education in ICT in higher education
projects DL, eLearning, Infrastructure Content - Investing in private ICT training institutes from
developing nations Content and Tools - Supporting public-private partnerships for
technical skills education and skills transfer
20How much time left to ...
- build infrastructure ?
- train people ?
- establish trust ?
- provide a proper legal regulatory environment?
Partnerships as shortcuts
21Framework
- Building Capacity through the Education
Portfolio - Building the Knowledge Economy
- Higher Education in the New Economy
- Continuous and Lifelong Learning
22Potential Benefits of Incorporating ICTs in
Education
- Increased access to learning opportunities
- Improved quality of education
- Strengthened education management systems
- Shared knowledge
23Skilled Labor Force that can Create and Use
Knowledge
- Knowledge creates increasing returns, economic
growth - Technological revolution puts a premium on
skilled workers - Continuous learning becoming a necessity
24Objectives and Applications
- Access to technology
- Access to education
- Improve system
- Quality
- Computers in classrooms, curriculum, networking
skills (Turkey) - Distance learning, virtual schools (Brazil,
Romania, Ghana) - MIS (Lebanon)
- Classroom processes, teachers, curriculum
revisions (India)
25Remaining Challenge
- Technology to transform education
26World Bank Education Work
- Education portfolio (lending and analytical)
supports building of human capital - 76 of new education projects include technology
component (40 of new dollar lending) - Distance education greatest proportion 57
27Technology in Education Lending
millions
900
800
700
600
500
400
300
200
100
28Technology in Education Projects(selected
examples)
- Turkey Computers and connectivity
- Brazil Virtual teacher certification
- Romania Distance learning for continuing
education - Ghana Radio broadcasting
- Jordan IT infrastructure for higher education
29IFC Invests in On-line Education
- egurucool.com
- Escola_at_24horas.com
30Messages
- Knowledge Economy
- Distance Education
- Partnership
- Next
- Enabling the Environment with Special Initiatives
31African Virtual University
To bridge the digital divide and knowledge
gap between Africa and the rest of the world by
dramatically increasing access to global
educational resources in Africa.
32AVU Academic Model
Lectures via satellite (live or taped)
AVU Site
Content Providers Worldwide
Local Learner Support
Students
Student interaction via phone and/or email
33 AVU Capacity Building Activities
- Encourage research and use of ICT in African
institutions - Strengthen university libraries through AVUs
digital library - Foster shared use by students of AVU
web-based resources - Facilitate communication and linkages among
academics and students in various parts of Africa
and globally
34Results of the Pilot Phase 1997-1999
- Over 14,000 students have taken full semester
courses in the sciences - 3,500 seminar participants
- Web site now receives over 80,000 hits a day
- 10,000 AVU e-mail accounts are active
- Digital library with 1,100 journals
35AVU Transition
- AVU legally established in Nairobi with elected
Board - Financial backing from Dfid (U.K.), CIDA
(Canada), Carnegie Foundation, World Bank
36Global Development Learning Network
To improve the development process by using
Distance Learning to connect development decision
makers to a global knowledge exchange.
Linking the World Through Learning
37Global Development Learning Network
via Distance Learning Centers (DLCs)
Courses Videoconference sessions complemented by
electronic learning and online collaboration
Videoconference Seminars
Computer-based Courses
Global Dialogues
38The Technologies
Global Development Learning Network
- Satellite Communications
- Videoconferencing
- Broadcast TV
- Broadband Internet
- E-Mail
- Video
- CD-ROM
- Face-to-Face
- Print
- Telephone/Fax
39Distance Learning Centers
- Global Network of Distance Learning Centers
(DLCs) - 8 Latin America
- 9 Africa
- 5 Asia
- 6 Europe
- 1 North America
40Target Audiences
Global Development Learning Network
- Decision makers in
- Government local, regional, national
- Para-government Agencies
- NGOs
- Academia
- Civil Society civic associations, teachers,
journalists, others - Private Sector
41GDLN Strategic Approach
- Reach wider audiences
- Offer content from a wide range of sources
- Reach a critical mass of participants to effect
change - Extend the reach of existing knowledge and
learning institutions - Network of networks
42GDLN Today
- Distance Learning Centers
- 32 today
- 50 by mid 2003
- Program Partners -- 60
- Project Partners expanding the network
- Learners -- from 40,000 to 150,000 by mid 2002
(330,000 participant days) - All connected via telecommunications networks
43GDLN Impacts So Far
Global Development Learning Network
- Increased knowledge sharing and improved
decision-making through interactive learning
(HIV/AIDS, education, ICT training) - Enhanced country-to-country exchanges among
experts, peers, and practitioners - More cost-effective course delivery
- But we have a lot to learn about distance
- learning for development professionals.
44Global Development Learning Network
Opportunities for Partnership
- Provide programs that draw on development
- knowledge and experience
- Support DLCs in their own program
- development
- Set up distance learning centers
- Support GDLN Central Operations
- Network of networks tremendous outreach
potential
45GDLN at Work
- World Links for Development
- plus
- Development Education Program
- ?
- Integrating Sustainable Development and
Technology into Your Classroom - An 8-week multimedia
- distance learning course
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48Knowledge Sharing Networks
49Main Dimensions
- knowledge communities, essentially networks of
people with - similar interests
- culture shift from individualistic to team
orientated and - based on knowledge sharing
- knowledge management system, to capture,
organize, and - disseminate knowledge relevant to the Banks
business, using new technologies
50Business Case
- Business survival requires sharing knowledge
- - speed faster cycle times
- - quality better quality service
- - innovation new approaches to poverty
reduction - Lending cannot achieve the mission of poverty
reduction - - knowledge sharing brings new actors
- - access to development know-how could change
the equation
51Communities of practices
- collections of good practice, know-how,
statistics - dissemination to staff, partners, clients
- seminar, workshops, clinic, advice to Task Teams
- (Technology enables sharing E-Mail, Activity
Rooms, - Intranet, Web, Video Conferences, Distance
Learning)
52- Open to new ideas and continuous learning -
Shares own knowledge, learns from others, and
applies knowledge in daily work - Builds
partnerships for learning and knowledge sharing.
Changing the culture
Annual personnel evaluation
- Awards for team work - Expos/Fairs, Innovation
Marketplace - Stories underlying desired behavior
- Informal
- reward recognition
53Knowledge Networks in the Bank
K
Engagement Information
Dialogue Space
Development Statistics
External Access
Directory of Expertise
Help Desk
KS On-line
Six Regions- country information- macro data
Six Networks- 16 sectors- 100 thematic groups
Enabling Technology
54Knowledge Networks in the Bank
KS Practice
University of Toronto
Retired
ECA Region
MNA Region
DEC
Indonesiafield office
Tax policy and administration thematic group
Public expenditure review Mission Madagascar
55- - Solve development problems by sharing
high-quality information from local, national and
global sources, tailored to users needs by topic
and community, quickly and easily. - - A platform to facilitate the establishment of
common standards for the exchange of information
among the development community - - Expanded opportunities for building and sharing
knowledge and experience in and among developing
countries
56Partnerships
- - core of the Gateway business model
- - public and private sector organizations, and
civil society collaborators - - partner organizations are a key element in
content development and quality assurance - - partners provide technology support (SAP)
- Financial support
57