Virtual University for
Small States of the Commonwealth (VUSSC)
Course Development
Workshop on Fisheries
Seychelles
3 March 2008
The Virtual
University for Small States of the Commonwealth:
What can it
contribute?
Sir John Daniel and Paul
West,
Commonwealth of Learning
Introduction
It is a pleasure to be here in Seychelles for this
course development workshop of the Virtual University for Small States of the
Commonwealth devoted to developing an eLearning programme in Fisheries.
We begin by expressing our thanks to the Government
of Seychelles for hosting this event. Seychelles is an especially appropriate
venue for three reasons. First, amongst the small island states Seychelles has
rights over an unusually large area of ocean. Maximising the benefits of this
resource for the Seychellois in a sustainable way is an economic imperative.
The Fishery is a key element of this marine resource.
Second, being in the Seychelles is a homecoming for
the Virtual University for Small States of the Commonwealth. When ministers of
education conceived this initiative back in the year 2000 the then Minister of
Education of Seychelles, Danny Faure, was a leading protagonist of the concept.
Later, when a draft proposal had been developed, he hosted a meeting of a small
group of ministers here in March 2003. They finalised the proposal and sent it
to the 15th Conference of Commonwealth Education Ministers, which endorsed it
later that year. Here we are back again, exactly five years later, and this
seems like a good occasion to bring you up to date on how the ministers'
concept of a Virtual University for Small States of the Commonwealth has
developed in that time.
The third reason the Seychelle is such an
appropriate venue is that this workshop also coincides with the beginning of a
study of the tertiary education sector here that will prepare the ground for a
national forum next month to explore options for development and advise on the
form that the University of the Seychelles should take.
COL is proud to be working with UNESCO to assist
the small states with the development of higher education and that
collaboration will take concrete form here this week. It is a pleasure to say a
special word of welcome to Ms Stamenka Uvalić-Trumbić from UNESCO. Later this
week she and I will be talking to Minister Bernard Shamlaye about how we can
jointly support the developments in higher education here. We see the Virtual
University for Small States of the Commonwealth, the VUUSC, as an important
element in those developments.
Let me briefly give you some background on the
accelerating development of the VUSSC.
The VUSSC: preliminary activities and outputs
So far we
have held three planning meetings, two in Singapore and one in Jamaica, and
four course development meetings, that we used to call 'boot camps' because one
of their functions is to provide basic training in IT skills for online
collaboration. Last week there was a very productive meeting in Singapore that
laid the groundwork for a Transnational Qualifications Framework. This will
facilitate the offering of VUSSC courses, such as the ones you will be
developing in Fisheries, in small states around the Commonwealth.
So this is the fifth course development workshop.
The first, for developing materials in Tourism, Hospitality and
Entrepreneurship was held in Mauritius in 2006. Last year we held three more:
in Singapore for Professional Development of Educators; in Trinidad &
Tobago for Life Skills; and in Samoa for Disaster Management. In the coming
weeks you will be working on Fisheries and another workshop on Construction
will be held in the Bahamas later this year.
The Virtual University for Small States of the
Commonwealth is gathering momentum. All these subject areas were identified as
priorities by your Ministers of Education when we canvassed them in 2005 and
now eLearning materials to teach them are coming on stream.
Moreover, we are getting better at organising the
process. Each successive course development workshop has made greater progress
than its predecessor in producing learning materials in electronic formats. The
event on Disaster Management held in Samoa late last year was a model of how to
operate such a workshop, thanks to the tremendous expertise and dedication of
the team leaders in particular and the participants in general. We expect that
you will do even better.
There have also been some important spin-offs from
the workshops apart from the learning materials. One is that significant
numbers of educators from your countries have acquired good skills in the most
modern forms of collaborative online working through ICTs. COL urges all
workshop participants to share this training when they get home and many have
done so. Nearly a hundred people will have attended the five workshops and we
estimate that they have trained another 400 people when they got home. This has
thrown a well-placed bridge across of the digital divide - one of the aims of Ministers
when they conceived the VUSSC. Another spin-off is the cross-cultural
friendships and understandings that have been generated. Educators from small
states do not often get opportunities to visit small states on the other side
of the world. You seem to find it immensely enriching to meet people from a
range of cultures and backgrounds who all have in common with you the
experience of living in a small state.
So the Virtual University for Small States of the
Commonwealth is beginning to have some real impacts and is generating a sense
of cohesion amongst the participating states.
As you do your work in the next two weeks you
should ask yourselves what you want the Virtual University for Small States of
the Commonwealth to become. We say what do you want it to become,
because the VUSSC is an expression of the will of the small states to take
their development in hand. How can it best contribute?
The overriding objective for the VUSSC that emerges
from the original proposal to ministers that was finalised here in Seychelles
five years ago is that it should help institutions in the small states to serve
learners better.
So how are we doing?
How has the VUSSC worked?
In fact the VUSSC has developed rather differently
from what was envisaged in the original proposal, which called for the
expenditure of $20 million over the first five years. In the event funds on
this scale were simply not forthcoming. Total expenditure to date has been
closer to $2 million, for which we are all most grateful to the
Hewlett Foundation, the Commonwealth Fund for Technical Cooperation, the
Government of Singapore and the participating governments.
You could call the VUSSC a shoestring operation,
because there hasn't been much money. You could also call it a bootstrap
operation because we've built it from the bottom up.
We have followed two guiding principles. First, in
order to remain close to the thinking of ministers of education we created the
function of 'interlocutors', usually ministry officials who can speak for their
countries in planning meetings.
Second, since the overall aim of the VUSSC is the
development of learning materials that can be studied by real students in real
institutions leading to real qualifications; we identified the role of
'implementer'. These are people, usually in tertiary institutions, who are
involved in the teaching/learning process. You are implementers.
The identification of implementers has been very
pragmatic. Ministers identified a number of subject areas in which they wanted
the VUSCC to develop materials. When we hold a workshop to develop content in
one of those areas, such as Fisheries here in Seychelles, we ask all small
states whether they are interested in taking part.
Countries that decide to participate identify a
specialist in the subject matter from their most appropriate institution. We
have been extremely impressed by the expertise and quality of many of the
people who have come.
In order to get materials created we have focused
on subjects and individuals rather than institutions. This approach has helped
us get traction and secure involvement in the initiative. It is interesting to
look back over the VUSSC meetings held so far to see who has attended from
which countries and institutions.
This table gives the overall picture. The three
planning meetings and the TQF meeting involved 132 people, nearly 60% of them
from government ministries or agencies. 87 people have attended the course
development workshops over 70% of them are from institutions.
This balance, with more ministry officials and
interlocutors at the planning meetings and more institutional implementers at
the course development workshops is what we would have expected. We are
surprised that the proportion of people from institutions at the course
workshops is not even higher, but we realise that in small states some people
wear two hats and can represent the ministry of education and an institution at
the same time. If we put all the events together we have 48% of participation
from institutions, 46% from government and 6% from other bodies.
Which countries have shown most interest in the
VUSSC? This table lists the countries with the highest level of total
participation in terms of person-meetings. For example, across all the events
the VUSSC has held, 21 places were taken by Trinidad & Tobago, though of
course in some cases the same person attended more than one meeting. This table
shows a nice spread around the Commonwealth regions and is good to see our smallest
state, Tuvalu, right in there. Seychelles is well-placed, as befits a country
that helped to create the concept.
Who attended these events? This table ranks countries
by the number of person-events involving ministry of education officials. There
are similarities and differences with the previous table. For example, Namibia
was number 3 in overall participation but since nearly all its participants
were from institutions it doesn't figure in this table. The same goes for
Botswana. Seychelles is near to top because most of its participants have been
from the Ministry.
Next, which countries sent most people from
institutions? This table ranks the top countries by their institutional
attendance. Again there is a nice spread. A total of 46 institutions from the
small states have been represented at one or other of the VUSSC events.
Mauritius spread the experience most widely with five institutions involved,
followed by Lesotho with four.
Our final table looks at individual institutions.
Which are the institutions that have attended VUSSC events most assiduously?
Again there is a nice spread with the University of Swaziland at the top but
also key institutions in smaller countries like St. Vincent & the
Grenadines and St. Kitts and Nevis also taking advantage of these
opportunities.
The surprise, if you compare this with the original
proposal, is to find that the two regional universities have not participated
much in the VUSSC. The University of the West Indies was only involved in three
events and the University of the South Pacific has not taken part at all. Maybe
the lesson for the future is that the VUSSC has most to offer to the smaller
small states that do not have a well-developed tertiary sector.
So what do we conclude from all this?
When the Ministers conceived the VUSSC they wanted
to launch their countries into the e-world and to have them acquire the skills
necessary to look larger countries in the eye as equals in their mastery of
eLearning and online education.
The proof of that mastery is not only the ability
to put electronic learning materials in a repository, but more importantly the
know-how to get them out again and into the hands and minds of students, whether
studying in classrooms or learning at a distance.
For that to happen it is not enough for the
eLearning materials to be attractive and well-designed. They must fit
seamlessly into the curricula and programmes that your tertiary institutions
are offering so that students can receive credit and awards in the normal way.
Hence our decision to begin work on a Transnational
Qualifications Framework that we hoped would facilitate the adoption and use of
VUSSC programmes of study in all countries, thus supporting institutions in
their wish to offer online qualifications internally. This should contribute
usefully to the general development of education in the small states.
The VUSSC: Next Steps
To conclude these remarks we return to our theme: what do your countries want the
Virtual University for Small States of the Commonwealth to become? What are the
next steps to take?
Status and
Structure
Let me start with what the VUSSC is not and will
not become. The Virtual University for Small States of the Commonwealth is the
title chosen by ministers in 2000. However, it is not a university in any
normally accepted sense of the term. It is not a body that teaches programmes
to students and awards degrees.
Nor will the VUSSC become a university in that
sense. One reason is that the authority to grant degree-awarding powers rests
with national governments, not with intergovernmental bodies like COL or
UNESCO. A second is that ministers have made it clear that they want the VUSSC
to reinforce the impact of your existing tertiary institutions, not to compete
with them.
If that is what the VUSSC is not, what is it now?
It is essentially an informal network of ministries of education supported by
the part-time efforts of a number of people at the Commonwealth of Learning. We
believe that approach has served us rather well to date and has produced very
creditable outputs given the very small investment of money.
But we suggest that it is now time for the VUSSC to
go beyond being an informal network of ministries of education and become a
forum for real collaboration between institutions. We need to strengthen the
involvement in VUSSC of the institutions that are actually developing and using
the VUSSC eLearning materials. We hope that once you leave here you will
constitute an effective consortium of institutions in the small states that
will continue to advance teaching and learning about fisheries.
Later this year a web portal will be created for
VUSSC that will provide access to online programmes offered by accredited
institutions in VUSSC countries. Thanks to the good work in Singapore last week
students will be able to register for these programmes with the knowledge that
programmes offered through the portal will carry the national accreditation of
the country in which the providing institution is based.
In addition to this, they will be able to see from
the Transnational Qualification Framework how the qualification fits into their
own country's framework.
Curriculum
Expansion
During this first phase of the creation of the
VUSSC, we are giving strong support to those people who needed more ICT skills
in education. Once educators have the necessary skills to work online they can learn
how to offer online learning as well. Several hundred educators have already
improved their ICT skills through the VUSSC. We are now at a point where we can
take increase skills in eLearning - for both the creation of online courses and
the tutoring of online learners.
Another concern is how we expand and diversify the
eLearning materials that the VUSSC can make available to countries and
institutions. The model that we have used to date, that of the three-week
face-to-face course development workshop, has served us well and has begun to
narrow the digital divide between participating countries. People have acquired
the ICT skills required for work in the virtual world and learning materials
have been produced in the process; and an inspiring sense of community has
developed amongst educators from small states.
The three-week workshop model that you will
experience is fine, but it is too expensive to be sustainable in the longer
term. However, there is now, or soon will be, a large enough cadre of skilled
educators in the small states who can work in the online world.
The offering of online programmes in new subject areas does not mean developing
all the material from scratch, Ministers were clear when they launched the
VUSSC that, although they wanted to create an indigenous capacity to navigate
in the e-world, their goal was not e-isolationism! Once people can operate
confidently in the e-world they can draw on eLearning material from elsewhere,
especiall that available as open educational resources.
As time goes on we shall see the VUSSC website
include courses that originated in a workshop like this one; courses developed
collaboratively online by institutions working together; and courses derived
from the growing body of freely available content. Posting programmes on the
VUSSC website will signify that the programme are credible: that is to say they
have been vetted by national and regional structures and that they relate to
the TQF processes that began to be created last week.
Accredited institutions in participating countries
that already have online courses that are ready for international offering can
put these on the VUSSC website as it develops later this year.
Finally, we hope that your group will provide a
forum for pooling experience of the delivery of VUSSC course materials. So far
we are in the early stages of using these materials but clearly they will be
used in very diverse ways. Sometimes they will enrich conventional on-campus
instruction; sometimes they will be used for distance learning. Moreover
variations in connectivity between and within states mean that distance
learning itself will occur in a variety of ways. Pooling experience of what
works and what doesn't will be most valuable.
Conclusion
Let us sum up. We believe that following an
informal bottom-up approach in building the VUSSC has yielded excellent value for
the small investment that has been made in it since 2003. But the time has now
come to formalise arrangements somewhat more, especially the groupings of
institutions offering similar programmes. Please bear that in mind as you do
your work this week. You will determine what the VUSSC becomes and how it can
expand and improve learning in your countries.
Each country must now ask itself again the question
that was asked in here in the Seychelles five years ago. What goals does it
intend to achieve through the Virtual University for Small States of the
Commonwealth and how can it put in place the local institutional arrangements
necessary to see that it reaches them. Please carry that message back.
We thank you for coming to Seychelles and wish you
a most productive and enjoyable workshop.