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E-Learning Initiatives Outside the United States
"With the rise of Online teaching the correspondence tradition is now
much the dominant mode of distance learning around the world."
(Sir John Daniel, "Mega-Universities and Knowledge Media," 1999.)
Although U. S. colleges and
universities often imagine e-learning to be an American invention, the truth is
that this nation is a relative newcomer to using a method of education
prevalent throughout the rest of the world. This issue looks at what other
countries have done in the delivery of education at a distance.
Associations, Consortia and Networks
(These are examples of larger organizations worldwide. Many individual countries have their own.)
Free, Full-Text Online E-Journals
International E-Learning Directories
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Distance
Education Organizations. Links to virtual campuses, open and distance learning
institutions, distance education departments in conventional institutions,
and distance learning networks. Maintained by Athabasca University, Alberta,
Canada.
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Galaxy of Distance Learning. Commercial Web site with links to
e-courses from 130 countries.
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World Wide Learn. Links to international
virtual universities, e-learning portals/directories, study abroad programs,
online training and international e-learning resources.
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Mega-Universities
The term
mega-university was coined several years ago by Sir John Daniel, administrator
at the Open University in the United Kingdom. He defined it as an e-learning
institution with a current enrollment of at least 100,000 students. By 1999,
thirteen of these mega-universities existed, all of them created under the
leadership of the governments in their respective countries. Some of these
universities rely largely or solely on electronic media other than computers to
transmit their courses.
Background Information
Mega-Universitiy Web Sites
Examples of Recent Developments in E-Learning Internationally
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"Global
Universities: Sowing the Seeds of the Future, or Hanging on to the Past?" Article by Chris
O'Hagan in Vision, May/June 2002. Predicts that highly selective
universities are unlikely to be successful in global ventures and tells what
it takes to prevail in the global arena.
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"National Open U. of
Nigeria Plans to Start Operations in October." Article by Kate Galbraith in The
Chronicle of Higher Education, May 22, 2002. A mega-university in the making, the
school will open with 60,000 students and little Internet use for course
delivery. Nigeria also boasts the recently completed Owerri
Digital Village, a project of the Youth for Technology Foundation
in a rural part of the country that provides youth with access to technology.
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Royal
Roads University's MA in Distributed Learning. Announcement in late June 2002 of a new
online master's program in e-learning by a Canadian university. It hopes to
attract students from around the world who will build an "international
learning community" with shared interests.
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"Syria, Eyeing
Advantages of Education, Opens a Virtual University." Article by Daniel del Castillo in The
Chronicle of Higher Education, June 19, 2002. A small - 600 students - but
entirely online effort. State-owned, it will be modeled after Western
universities, a first for Syria.
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The contents of BEEP were developed under a grant from the U. S. Department of Education (DOE). However, those contents do not necessarily represent the policy of the DOE, and you should not assume endorsement by the Federal Government.
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