Sustainability

Noticias

eLearning Africa 2013 programme revealed

22 Mayo 2013

Sharing the best practices of sustainable classroom computing: join experts from Zambia, Lesotho and the UK in the eLearning Africa interactive session chaired by Dell's David Angwin http://bit.ly/10kBPJj.

 

To know the whole programme, please visit the following address: http://www.elearning-africa.com/programme_table.php

 

Notes for editors

eLearning Africa, 8th International Conference on ICT for Development, Education and Training

May 29 - 31, 2013

Safari Conference Centre, Windhoek, Namibia

Organisers: ICWE GmbH (www.icwe.net), Government of the Republic of Namibia

 

Contact

ICWE GmbH, Ms Rebecca Stromeyer

 

info@elearning-africa.comwww.eLearning-africa.com, Tel.: +49 (0)30 310 18 18-0

 

The eLearning Africa Team
 

Noticias

eLearning Africa 2013 - Innovation or Sustainability: the Choice for African Education

22 Mayo 2013

Four controversial experts will take part in "a bare-knuckle fight" about priorities for African education at this year's eLearning Africa Debate. Outspoken Scottish entrepreneur and blogger Donald Clark and Namibian teacher and eLearning expert Maggy Beukes-Amiss will square up to "mobile technology crusader" Adele Botha and Angelo Gitonga of the ICT for Education Unit of Kenya's Ministry for Education at the annual war of words. They'll be arguing about whether too much attention has been paid to innovation in education and not enough to sustainability.

"It's a big issue and there'll be a bare-knuckle fight," says Harold Elletson, who will chair the debate alongside Honourable Silvia Makgone, Deputy Minister of Education, Namibia. According to Dr Elletson, "Some people think that the focus on innovation and technology has just persuaded governments and consumers to invest in equipment that soon becomes redundant. They say that the priority should be to support projects that are sustainable. Other people argue that innovation is vital to Africa's competitiveness and future economic growth. They say that it should be at the heart of the education system."

 

The eLearning Africa Debate has become the highlight of the eLearning Africa conference, an annual gathering of experts and decision-makers from all over Africa and beyond. Traditionally one of the liveliest and best attended events at the conference, this year's debate is likely to stir up real controversy.

 

"It's an issue which affects everyone and on which everyone has an opinion," says Dr Elletson. "The debate is an opportunity for conference participants to say what they think about one of the most important issues for the future of education in Africa."

 

The motion for debate, which will be put to a vote, is "This house believes that sustainability is more important than innovation for education in Africa". The debate will be held at the Safari Conference Centre in Windhoek, Namibia. All conference participants are welcome to attend and to take part in what promises to be a tense and exciting climax to a fascinating conference.

 

Information on the debate can be found at http://www.elearning-africa.com/programme_debate.php, and the full conference programme can be found at http://www.elearning-africa.com/programme_table.php%20.

 

Notes for editors

eLearning Africa, 8th International Conference on ICT for Development, Education and Training

May 29 - 31, 2013

Safari Conference Centre, Windhoek, Namibia

Organisers: ICWE GmbH (www.icwe.net), Government of the Republic of Namibia

 

Contact

ICWE GmbH, Ms Rebecca Stromeyer

 

info@elearning-africa.comwww.eLearning-africa.com, Tel.: +49 (0)30 310 18 18-0

Artículos

MOOC e innovación disruptiva: Implicaciones para la educación superior

09 Mayo 2013

La oportunidad que ofrecen los MOOC para la masificación de cursos ha suscitado un gran interés entre los gobiernos, las instituciones y las empresas, cada vez más implicados en la experimentación con este tipo de cursos a fin de ampliar su acceso, comercializarlos y desarrollar nuevas fuentes de ingresos. 

 

El presente artículo se basa en la teoría de la innovación disruptiva (Bower y Christensen, 1995) para examinar el desarrollo de los cursos abiertos masivos en línea y estudiar la manera en que se puede utilizar la perspectiva de dicha teoría para apoyar a las instituciones en la búsqueda de enfoques innovadores en la enseñanza y el aprendizaje, así como en la búsqueda de ventajas competitivas en el mercado de la educación. Los MOOC proporcionan a las instituciones un instrumento de reflexión creativo e innovador para explorar nuevos modelos de negocio e itinerarios de aprendizaje flexible en la educación superior. No obstante, hay que repensar tanto las estructuras como las políticas que obstaculizan la innovación en el ámbito universitario actual. Con este fin, es necesario abordar la estructura de financiación vigente y la posibilidad de separar la enseñanza de la evaluación y la acreditación para facilitar precios diferenciales y actividades de marketing.

Artículos

Positioning the OER Business Model for Open Education

25 Enero 2013

This article was originally published by F.H.T. de Langen and M.E. Bitter-Rijkema on the online Journal The European Journal of Open, Distance and E-Learning – EURODL, issue 1, 2012.

The enabling power of technology, especially information technology and social software, prompts a radical shift in economic and social interactions in societies around the globe. Existing traditional school based, formalized learning formats are unable to accommodate specific new learning needs. Hence, customized to the respective purposes of personal wellbeing, inclusion or requirements for professional performance, lifelong continuous learning is no longer a choice but a necessity. At the 2011 Davos World Economic Forum it was already stated that the lack of adequately educated people not only limits personal fulfilment but will also hinder prosperity and economic growth in the near future. Since the learning needs and learning possibilities today differ fundamentally from the 20th century the question is how to unlock the learning potential of people in a situation where mainstream education still heavily relies on traditional institutionalized closed formats.

 

Since more than a decade the Open Educational Resources (abbreviated as OER) movement provides new ideas on how to generate and share educational resources for educational use (within and outside formal institutional, open education) by large audiences for a variety of learning purposes. The vision of developing and sharing OER resources for Open Education (OpenED/OE) is interesting in this context for its great potential to substantially help solving existing educational problems. Open education based on sharing (OER) open resources for education enables people across continents and organizations to transform their talents into professional competences and grow by removing existing (economic) barriers and invent new strategies to open up education. To date though the OER/OpenED vision materializes primarily in activities organized as dedicated sponsored projects.

 

Crucial for a sustainable future of this appealing approach and the capability to bridge existing “education gaps” is our capacity to translate the OER/OpenED vision and existing commitment into appropriate, sustainable business models for OER/OpenED.

 

Sustainability is a key requirement for the OER business model. Education in the 21st century has the character of life long education, so the question is not so much whether a specific OER project can be funded adequately but whether we can create an underlying business model foundation able to serve as a flight deck from which necessary OER based learning activities can be launched, as part of completely open educational offerings or embedded in hybrid educational constellations, across organizations and countries.

 

After sketching the scene in the introduction, we move to describing how the application of the OER paradigm radically changes not only learning itself but from a business perspective also the interactions and relationships between learners, “teachers”, creators and users of educational resources as well as relations between educational institutions, designers and service providers of both formal and non-formal learning offerings. In paragraph 3 we draw conclusions from these changing relationships, which leads to a new perspective on sustainable business models for, OER based, (open) education. Next in paragraph 4 we describe our ideas on the essential components of the proposed business model to become a viable sustainable living reality. Based on heuristics from research on learning networks, open innovation and collaboration we describe methods to frame OER/OpenED activities to lay the groundwork for sustainable learning ecologies. We end with concluding remarks and suggestions for future work.

Agenda

World Congress on Sustainable Technologies (WCST-2012)

27 julio 2012

The World Congress on Sustainable Technologies (WCST-2012) is a multidisciplinary congress, bridging efforts across the natural, social and engineering sciences, the environment and development of communities. The congress covers a wide spectrum of topics that relate to sustainability, which includes technical and non-technical research areas. It also encourages sharing new knowledge in the field of sustainable technologies and the environmental impacts. The mission of WCST-2012 is to provide the opportunities for collaboration and reflection that have the potential to greatly enhance the infrastructure and capacity for conducting and applying art, science and technology for sustainability. The WCST bridges the gap between academia and industry by creating awareness of current development in sustainable technologies.

 

Noticias

“If you’ve got motivation and ambition, then you can truly change students’ lives with technology.”

11 julio 2012

Aaron Doering stopped by the International Conference on Education and New Learning Technologies - Edulearn12 in Barcelona to share his passion for using technology in innovative ways, by focusing on experiences instead of products. His most recent project, Earthducation, takes this concept to creative extremes by bringing adventure learning to the classroom.

Aaron Doering’s experience as a K-12 Geography teacher convinced him of the need to link the real world to the classroom via technology in order to motivate students. Today he is associate professor in learning technologies at the University of Minnesota, co-director of the Learning Technologies Media Lab, and runs the adventure learning project Earthducation, which focuses on bringing global narratives on education and sustainability to students the world over.

Doering (www.chasingseals.com) recently stopped through Barcelona to deliver the keynote address at the International Conference on Education and New Learning Technologies - Edulearn12, and to share his recipe for combining adventure and teaching in order to create change.

 

How is adventure learning possible…virtually?

 

What we do is write this specific curriculum, tie it to our experiences, and then bring in all the experts. So if we’re talking about whaling in the Arctic communities, we talk to a scientist, but we also bring in the students and the elders from that community, which people don’t normally do.

 

It’s applicable to every area, not rocket science at all, and the idea is that the ‘explorer’ is the expert in the field. It does take a different way of designing the learning environment, but you could have an electrical engineer providing real-time updates in coordination with the curriculum, for example.

 

Earthducation has you dog-sledding across the Arctic and cross-country driving in Australia, does the e-learning part of your project have as many miles under its belt?

 

It all depends on the year and how much exposure the project gets…But we’ve had over 3 million students a year who use our projects. That’s at least 2,000 classrooms on six continents.

 

Some of the climate hotspots you travel to are pretty remote, is e-learning a real option for isolated rural communities today?

 

It’s actually funny to talk about Internet access around the world, because it’s not what you might expect. In the Arctic, for example, maybe there were areas that weren’t connected 10 years ago, but now most are. The school is the hub of their village, and so they’ll have Internet access there, interactive whiteboards…it’s pretty amazing.

 

I’ve also spent a lot of time with the Sami, and they’re talking about how they can sustain their culture and their language, through online learning. They run videoconferences so as to teach in regions that otherwise wouldn’t have classrooms or teachers.

 

If that’s the case, what kinds of roadblocks does online education still face?

 

Well, take Africa, for example. You find they’re using little chalkboards because they don’t have textbooks, and they don’t have pens, but what they do have is mobile technologies. So it’s crazy, everyone’s texting when they don’t even have access to water.

 

So if we have mobile technologies in these communities…I mean, we’re dealing with other problems like how to charge the battery, or access to solar power…but the future might just look like this, like the mobile.

 

How does Europe compare to the U.S. with regards to online learning?

I think our goals for online learning and education are pretty similar. But we really need to rethink how we’re delivering online learning. It can’t just be discussion boards, or throwing up a power point and asking students to learn from that. It’s about creating an experience for each learner individually, by having them generate projects related to who they are, even as they’re working on the content we’re teaching.

 

What’s your advice for teachers who aren’t well versed in technology?

 

The first thing is that they just can’t allow themselves to be afraid of it. And we have to remember that this process takes time. Technology not only has the power to motivate your students, but also to reenergize you as an educator. It’s not going to happen overnight, though, and you have to move forward without fear. If you’ve got motivation and ambition, then you can truly change students’ lives with technology.

 

Agenda

2012 ATEE Spring Conference - Twenty Years for Sustainable Development: Learning from Each Other

24 Enero 2012

The ATEE Spring University 2012 Conference aims at sharing the best practices in education for sustainable development (ESD) including:

• Sustainable development topics, relevant to local circumstances and cultural environment
• Successful methods in developing ESD-related competences of learners
• New emerging competences of educators to be active in ESD
• Approaches to integrate ESD into school curriculum and non-formal education
• ESD in higher education
• Transformation of management of educational institutions according to sustainable development principles.

During the Conference paper sessions and workshops are planned. If you know colleagues interested in the same topic as you are, you are welcome to suggest your theme for a workshop involving 3-4 inter-connected presentations.

Noticias

OECD-Cedefop green skills forum - Call for papers

19 Octubre 2011

Cedefop, the European Centre for the Development of Vocational Training and the OECD Local Economic and Employment Development Programme (LEED) are organising a joint Green Skills Forum to be held at OECD Headquarters in Paris on 27th February 2012.

The forum aims to draw on lessons from work conducted by the OECD, Cedefop, and other organisations on the implications of the green economy for skills development and training policies. These insights will contribute to the OECD’s Green Growth Strategy studies such as the LEED project on Measuring the Potential of Green Growth and to Cedefop’s Green Skills activities, which contribute to the European Commission’s initiative on New Skills for New Jobs.

 

Contributors are invited to submit proposals of a maximum 500 words to the conference organisers by 1 December 2011.

 

For more information, please refer to the call for papers.

PDF EN
Call for papers

 

People who would like to attend the forum without presenting a paper are highly welcome too. The website containing more information as well as registration will be available soon.

 

For more information: GreenSkills-Forum2012@cedefop.europa.eu

Noticias

eLearning Africa 2012. The Call for Papers is open!

06 Octubre 2011

eLearning Africa is the premier gathering place for all experts and stakeholders engaged or interested in ICT-based education, training and development on the African continent. Everyone concerned with eLearning in Africa is welcome to share and learn. Deadline for receipt of all proposals is Friday, December 9th, 2011.

We encourage practitioners and academics engaged in an African context to apply by submitting a proposal for eLA 2012, taking place from May 23rd to 25th in Cotonou, Benin. Please note that successful applicants will be offered a significantly reduced conference registration fee.

You are invited to submit proposals for any of the following:

Each type of submission has a specific format; please choose the one you would like to use and fill in the form accordingly.

Deadline for receipt of all proposals is Friday, December 9th, 2011.

We will be in contact by the end of March 2012 to let you know if your proposal has been accepted.

Selection Process

The content selection process is overseen by the Conference Organising Committee and guided by the feedback we receive from the Conference Advisory Committees and associated organisations. Our experience has been that we receive many more proposals and ideas than we can include, and as a general rule, approximately one third of all proposals received are accepted.

Selection is made on the basis of the proposal's relevance to the conference themes, the experience and knowledge of the applicants, the practicalities of including the proposal within the conference format and a combination of the proposal's innovativeness and practical value to conference participants.

Kindly note that we will only accept high quality papers and presentations. For us quality is
defined by papers that:

  • are clearly grounded in context
  • provide conceptual clarity
  • are supported by clear reasoning
  • are backed up with evidence
  • are relevant for an African context
  • are useful for practitioners, policymakers and prospective partners

and presentations that: 

  • are clear, concise, inspiring and interactive
  • are adequately supported by relevant slides or other visuals
  • provoke and invite discussions with the audience and other speakers.

Please note that priority is given to African-based speakers for proposals being made on behalf of initiatives undertaken on the Continent.