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Do new communications technologies increase access, equity and quality and promote self-centred learning? Can developing countries afford to introduce them to deliver basic education? Are education planners doing enough to develop national education communications policies for the use of radio, television, computers and the Internet?
A study, prepared for UNESCO, presented at the April 2000 World Education Forum in Dakar, summarises international experience in using communication technologies for basic education in schools and distance education. It finds that in recent years technological development in education has been piecemeal, haphazard and unplanned. The study argues that education needs to build on the general local state of development of technology rather than lead it and that educational projects at the cutting edge of technology generally prove unsustainable.
The study also warns against the myth that the use of technologies will, of itself, increase equity. On the contrary, evidence continues to mount that new technologies are widening the gap between the information-rich and the information-poor. They may additionally widen gender inequalities if, for example, schools allow boys to elbow girls away from keyboards.
Among the key points made in the paper are:
The North-South, rich-poor, urban-rural information gaps need urgent attention and the report recommends that educational planners and donors realise that:
Source(s):
‘Applying new technologies and cost-effective delivery systems in basic
education’ by H. Perraton and C. Creed, World Education Forum, Education for
All 2000 Assessment, UNESCO 2000 Full document.
Related sources: ‘Open and distance learning in the developing world’ by
H. Perraton, London: Routledge, 2000 Full document.
‘Teacher education guidelines: using open and distance learning’ by H.
Perraton, C. Creed and B. Robinson, Paris: UNESCO, 2002 Full document.
Funded by: Department for International Development, UK
id21 Research Highlight: 23 October 2002
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IRFOL (International Research Foundation for Open Learning)
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