Papua New Guinea
Association for Distance Education (PNGADE)
Biennial Conference
9-10 April 2008 -
Port Moresby
Open and Distance
Learning for Access to Education and Development
Practical Steps for Surfing the Wave of
Technology-Mediated Learning
by
Sir
John
Daniel
Commonwealth
of Learning
Introduction
It is a great pleasure to be back in
Papua New Guinea
. I was last in
your wonderfully rich and diverse country two years ago for the launch
conference of the Papua New Guinea Association for Distance Education. I
believe that meeting marked a turning point for the development of distance
education and technology-mediated learning in PNG.
I met Dame Carol Kidu for the first time during that visit. At the
conference dinner she made a passionate speech about the role of distance
education in community development. All who were there can still recall her
inspiring words.
I am delighted to tell you that the Secretary-General of the
Commonwealth has recently appointed Dame Carol to be a member of the Board of
Governors of the
Commonwealth of Learning
representing the Pacific Region. We are delighted by her appointment, which I
am sure will lead to more intense COL activity in the Pacific Region in general
and in PNG in particular. I welcome her to the
COL
community. I am aware that she has
followed
COL
closely for some years through our newsletter Connections and knows us well.
The launch conference of PNGADE and my meeting with Dame Carol also
marked the beginning of a notable increase in the activities of the
Commonwealth
of Learning
in your country. In inviting me to speak to you today you asked me to talk
about what
COL
is doing in PNG and also about the role of ICTs in enhancing education,
training, and learning generally.
I shall speak to that brief and the title of my remarks today is Practical Steps for Surfing the Wave of
Technology-Mediated Learning.
COL
is a very practical and pragmatic organization. We believe that what counts is
what works. But at the same time when a technology-based approach works we like
to reflect on why it works and describe it as a model. This is essential if we
are to transfer an approach from one country to another. Are the essential
elements of the model present? If not can they be obtained?
I thought at first of addressing these two topics sequentially - first
COL's work in PNG and then the role of ICTs - but I'd decided to address them
together because that will help to root my comments ICTs in reality.
Development as Freedom
When I was here at your 2006 conference I talked to you about Learning for Development: The Role of
Distance Education. I discussed with you what we mean by this word
'development' defining it, with Amartya Sen, as freedom. I talked about the
various freedoms that entailed and I shall not repeat that here. I went on to
discuss how we express the grand ideal of development as freedom in concrete
terms so that we can work towards it.
COL
brings together three groups of objectives and values for this purpose.
First, there are a number of Millennium Development Goals and
COL
is focused on some
of these. They were articulated in 2000 and the target date for achieving them
is 2015, so more than half the time has run out. Next are the six goals of Education
for All, formulated at a World Forum in
Dakar
,
also in 2000. Finally there are the key Commonwealth value of peace, equality,
democracy and good governance.
COL
brings these three sets of goals together as a framework for our programme of
action. This defines our overall purpose: Learning for Development.
We divide the work that we do to achieve that purpose into three
sectors: Education, which centres on supporting and advancing the formal
education system; Learning for Livelihoods, which focuses on equipping people
with skills to earn a better living; and Human Environment, which brings
together learning activities that can improve the quality of life through
better health, a cleaner environment, and so on.
Outcomes sought
In carrying out activities within each of these sectors we aim for one
or more of four outcomes.
First, twenty years' experience at
COL
has taught us that the use of technology
to enhance learning will be more successful, more effective and more
sustainable if a framework of policy is put in place first. This may mean a
national policy for the use of ICTs in schools, for instance. Or it could mean
policies at the institutional level, such as a policy to guide a university
that wishes to operate in dual mode; that is to say to teach both on campus and
through distance learning. We did that here last year when we responded to a
request from the Higher Education Commission to advise on the institutional
structures for distance learning.
Second, much of our work is concerned with helping people become more
skilled at operating technology-based learning systems. As you know, these have
an operational dynamic that is different from classroom teaching and people
need training for that. A good example is
COL
's work in helping countries to become
more effective in running open and alternative systems for secondary schooling
based on a combination of distance learning and local centres. Here in PNG we
are helping with capacity building in FODE.
Third, as I already noted, we always try to distil our experience of
successful applications of technology in support of learning for development
into models. A good example that I shall describe more fully in a minute is our
Lifelong Learning for Farmers programme. We developed this in
India
, where it
is undoubtedly helping to make villages more prosperous. Today we are working
with colleagues in PNG to see whether it could help to increase rural
prosperity here. We need to know why it works in
India
in order to apply it
intelligently here. What are the necessary ingredients for success?
Finally, although
COL
does not develop learning materials directly, we help others to do so. A
relevant example for PNG is the Commonwealth Executive Master of Business
Administration programme, CEMBA, and its partner the Commonwealth Executive
Master of Public Administration programme, CEMPA. The CEMBA/CEMPA programmes
were developed by the four open universities of south Asia, in Bangladesh, India,
Pakistan and
Sri Lanka
. It
is now being adopted here by UPNG.
COL's Programme
So what does all this mean in concrete terms? What does
COL
actually do with its
partner countries and institutions? In each of the three sectors we have five
initiatives.
In the Education sector these are: Quality Assurance for education,
training and learning at all levels; Teacher Development, meaning scaling up
and improving teacher education both pre- and in-service; open or alternative
schooling, as I just mentioned; higher education; and eLearning for education
sector development.
In the Learning for Livelihoods sector the five initiatives are:
Learning and Skills for Livelihoods; Rural and Peri-Urban Community
Development, which is where the Lifelong Learning for Farmers programme fits;
National and International Community Development, which means working with
national and international bodies to promote technology-mediated learning; the
Virtual University for Small States of the Commonwealth, with which PNG is
strongly engaged; and Transnational Programmes, which refers to programmes like
CEMBA/CEMPA, which are offered in various countries around the world.
Finally in the sector for Human Environment, which is our least
developed sector at present, we work to promote Gender and Development; Health,
Welfare and Community Development; Environmental Education; Good Governance;
and the Educational use of Mass Media and ICTs.
That, if you like is our Commonwealth-wide menu. But not every country
wants to try every dish, and we could not cope if they did, so we discuss with
each
Member
State
which of these 15 initiatives
match its own priorities.
From these discussions we developed country action proposals, and
after the Commonwealth Ministers of Education had approved our overall plan at
their triennial conference in
Cape
Town, South Africa
in 2006, we translated these proposals into Country Action Plans. So the Country
Action Plan for
Papua New
Guinea
indicates which of the 15 dishes on
the menu PNG wants to have, and how it wants it cooked; in other words what is
the specific activity within each chosen initiative that it wants to develop
with COL.
So what I shall do now is to go through the items that appear in the
Country Action Plan for PNG, pausing longer on particular initiatives to show
how they are helping your country take practical steps to surf the wave of
technology-mediated learning, in the words of my title.
Education
So, to start with the Education Sector, PNG intends to work with
COL
in all five areas,
although since we are only half way through the three-year plan for 2006-09,
some are more developed than others.
Quality Assurance
In the area of Quality Assurance PNG can benefit from a Toolkit called
Quality Assurance for Teacher Education and Development. This was produced by a
team of specialists from across the Commonwealth and includes Quality
Indicators for Teacher Education and Best Practices in Teacher Education. I
launched this Toolkit at a conference in
Bangalore,
India
, last
December and copies are being made available around the Commonwealth.
Teacher Development
In the vital area of Teacher Development COL has helped PNG in a more
specific way by carrying out a review of the Teacher Education Programme at the
Open College of UPNG. This report was also completed and handed over last
December. I hope that it will be useful in charting a way forward.
Open/Alternative Schooling
Open and alternative schooling is one of
COL
's most important initiatives at the
moment. We feel it has great potential for PNG, and FODE is showing the way.
The Millennium Development Goal for Education focuses on the achievement of
Universal Primary Education by 2015 and a huge international effort has been
deployed for this purpose. And it is bearing fruit, although some countries may
still miss the 2015 target.
But the steady increase in the numbers completing primary education is
sending a surge - some call it a tidal wave - of youngsters in search of
secondary schooling. The countries that are struggling to achieve Universal
Primary Education simply do not have the resources to build secondary schools
on the scale required.
Open schooling, which combines distance learning materials with
support in local centres, sometimes including support through ICTs, has great
potential. Last year COL did a thorough
evaluation of open schooling in India
and
Namibia
.
For an equivalent result open school costs less then 10% of the cost of
conventional schooling in India and around 20% in Namibia. This is a very
significant difference.
We hope that more and more countries will explore the possibilities of
surfing the wave of technology-mediated learning in the area of open schooling.
It could give tens of millions of youngsters access to secondary schooling.
Given your complicated geography this is a very important opportunity for PNG,
and
COL
looks
forward to working with you on it.
Higher Education
In the area of higher education I have already mentioned the adoption
by UPNG of the CEMBA/CEMPA programme. This was developed in south Asia but is
now spreading around the Commonwealth; to UPNG here in the Pacific, to the
Caribbean, and to south-east Asia.
COL
has also responded to
a request from the Higher Education Commission for advice on the organisation
of open and distance learning at tertiary level in PNG. The work was done by
one of Canada's leading
experts, Professor Dominique Abrioux, former president of
Athabasca
University
.
He has great expertise in the two ways of organising ODL: first as a
stand-alone open university; second as one of the two modes of teaching of a
dual-mode institution that operates both on campus and at a distance.
eLearning for Education Sector
Development
Finally in the Education sector,
COL
is working with PNG to develop skills in
eLearning, which is a very important development for distance education even
when courses cannot be delivered directly to students electronically because of
lack of connectivity.
That is because familiarity with eLearning is the key to developing
Open Educational Resources. These are bits of learning material - big or small
- that you can pull down from the world-wide web and adapt to your own use.
This is very important, since no resource from elsewhere is likely to be
exactly what you want.
Once you have done the adaptation, which is very easy when the
resource is held electronically, you can, of course, turn it into other formats
such as print. Last week in the state of Maharashtra in
India
I
launched a major project for the creation of open educational resources at the
school level. Many of them were on display as printed materials since these are
more useful to the schools of Maharashtra than
material that can only be accessed through the Internet.
COL
is helping colleagues
in PNG develop skills in eLearning in several ways.
First, one way of creating Open Educational Resources, or OERs, is by
using a Wiki. A Wiki is a website on which any user can edit and update
pages. The best known is the Wikipedia,
the biggest encyclopaedia ever produced.
COL
has created WikiEducator, which creates online communities whose members
participate from remote locations to create educational content collaboratively
and to plan conferences and other events.
COL
's
WikiEducator is reaching 70% of the countries in the world. It has grown
rapidly during the past year with the number of registered users passing the
2600 mark and number of hits per day now exceeding 70,000.
Working with the New Zealand
Ministry of Education,
COL
hosted a Pacific regional OER workshop on last year. Mr. Demas Tongogo of FODE
was among representatives of nine jurisdictions who took part. This event
established a firm foundation for future collaborations in eLearning for the
region and also launched a Pacific chapter called "WikiPacifica" and began
planning for national and regional activities for developing OERs.
I am pleased to say that the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation,
which has been the great supporter of the OER movement, has given COL a grant
of $US100,000 to support workshops on OERs in every country of the
Commonwealth. The first was held in the
Solomon Islands
last year and one
will be held here later this year.
Learning for Livelihoods
I turn now to our second sector of activity: Learning for Livelihoods.
Virtual University for Small
States of the Commonwealth
Since it follows on logically from my comments about OERs and
WikiEducator let me start with the
Virtual
University
for Small
States of the Commonwealth. PNG is fully engaged with this initiative, which
emerged some years ago from the Education Ministers of the small states who
decided that they would join together to conquer and assimilate the eWorld.
The name that they
chose, the
Virtual
University
for Small
States of the Commonwealth or VUSSC, is somewhat misleading because it is not a
new institution but a product of the participating countries and their existing
tertiary institutions. It is a collective mechanism for producing, adapting and
deploying courses and learning materials, on selected subjects selected by
ministers of education. It also provides
a special opportunity for their people to develop expertise in online
collaboration, eLearning and ICTs generally.
The model that has
developed is a three-week training and course development workshop at which
subject specialists from a subset of the participating states strengthen their
IT skills and begin to develop course material collaboratively online.
The first training
workshop was hosted by
Mauritius
in August 2006 to develop programmes on entrepreneurship, tourism and
hospitality. The second was held in
Singapore
in March 2007 on the professional
development of educators and Ms. Lydia Lute Hiawalyer of UNPG took part.
Similarly Ms. Elizabeth Kendrun of the National Department of Health
participated in the 3rd workshop in Trinidad & Tobago on Life
Skills in June 2007. In November 2007 there was a workshop in Samoa
on disaster management where PNG was represented by Ms. Eileen Turare of UNPG.
Finally, Mr. Saun Ignatius Biat of NARI Livestock Programme took part in the 5th
workshop in
Seychelles
,
which was on the fishing industry. I am delighted by this high level of
participation by PNG because the VUSSC is a major vehicle for engaging with the
eWorld.
Prisca Move of PNG took part in meeting of senior officials from participating
VUSSC countries held in
Singapore
in February 2008 to consider, refine and agree mechanisms of a transnational
qualifications framework, the first of its kind to be attempted. The South African Qualifications Authority
(SAQA), an organisation with wide experience of establishing frameworks in
South and Southern Africa, helped to prepare a
concept document and facilitate the proceedings. PNG submitted information on
its National Qualifications Framework for analysis at that meeting.
If you rank the various tertiary institutions of the small states of
the Commonwealth by the level of their participation in VUSSC meetings UPNG
comes out in 8th place, which is good, because these are just the
top participants. I hope that while I am in PNG I can get feedback from your
participants in these workshops. From what I hear people find it very enriching
to create these networks of experts from small states that span the world.
Let me conclude with two other examples of COL's
work in
Papua New Guinea
.
I explained these when I spoke to the conference in 2006 so I will be brief.
In
COL
's
Learning for Livelihoods sector we have an initiative called Rural and
Peri-Urban Community Development. That addresses the first of the Millennium
Development Goals: to halve, between 2000 and 2015, the proportion of people
living on less than a dollar a day and those who are hungry. That means that
the first step in development is to increase the income of the poorest people,
in other words to improve their livelihoods.
COL
is always seeking the most direct link
possible between learning and livelihoods.
Lifelong Learning for Farmers
We believe that the
place to start is with the farmers in the rural areas.
COL
's approach is called Lifelong Learning
for Farmers. It is based on the premise we must find a way to give farmers easier
access to information and knowledge that could help them increase their
livelihoods.
In recent years many villages in
India
have been
equipped with ICT kiosks as a result of government interventions or commercial
initiatives.
COL
wondered whether these kiosks might help to carry useful information to the
individual farmer.
The first principle we adopted was to mobilise the
farmers, to get them to form an association and create a vision of development
for their village. Our role is then to help them achieve that vision, which is
their view of how their farming might yield better livelihoods. It might be
acquiring better livestock, growing new crops, or simply improving the process
of marketing their produce. That produces questions. They are often apparently
simple questions.
The next step is to get the information providers
to work together to answer these questions. In the Indian state of Tamil Nadu,
for example, we helped to create a consortium of the local universities.
The ICT kiosks are used to link the farmers to the
consortium. We prefer commercial ICT kiosks because it makes the operation
sustainable and creates another stakeholder, the kiosk operator, who has an
interest in providing information of value that the farmers are prepared to pay
for, such as very local weather forecasts.
The fourth key element is to involve the commercial
banks. The banks felt that the L3 Farmers system gave them a better assurance
of repayment and so they became thoroughly involved, not just in making loans,
but in getting other businesses involved to improve the marketing of the
produce.
So, to give a concrete example, the farmers in a
village near the town of
Theni
in Tamil Nadu formed an association and decided that improving dairy production
was their best route to greater prosperity. Their key question to the
information providers was 'how do I tell a good milk cow from a poor milk cow?'
The specialists worked together and came up with a check list with diagrams
which the women of the village, who have learned some web programming, made
into an instructional sequence on the computer in the ICT kiosk.
The bank loaned money to the farmers to improve
their dairy cows, some $US 200,000 so far, and also brought in a diary company
from the nearby town which agreed to buy a guaranteed quantity of milk and take
it to market provided that the farmers agreed to meet certain quality standards.
The net result is a more prosperous and happy
village; banks that are so pleased with the results that they are replicating
the system in other villages without COL's involvement, and ICT kiosk operators
who are making a living too. This is not conventional open and distance
learning, but it is a successful way of improving the rural economy. It is
technology assisted learning for development.
Right now we are exploring the use of the L3 Farmer approach in PNG.
An initial meeting among potential partners was organised here at
Port Moresby
last
September during which the partners agreed to review the potential communities
for the L3 Farmers initiative in PNG.
John Bartram, a COL Consultant, conducted a needs analysis and
feasibility study for introducing components of the L3 framework in PNG last
month and has prepared a proposal and budget which we shall discuss with the
authorities.
Let's hope that Lifelong Learning for Farmers can have the same good
effect in PNG as it has in
India
.
The Human Environment Sector
Media Empowerment
From our human environment sector my first example addresses the issue
of health. This is our Media Empowerment programme. The idea is simply that
messages about avoiding disease and keeping well will be most effective if they
are developed and put out by local people. The most powerful medium for this is
a mass medium: TV or video. So the challenge is simply to equip a suitable
local group with video equipment: camera, editing suite, projector and so on,
and train them to use it in an effective and sustained way.
This principle is being
used to help PNG tackle the challenge of HIV/AIDS because unless the spread of
this disease can be arrested the viability of parts of your nation is
threatened.
We consulted the World
Health Organisation, which knows the health situation in each country, and
asked about the Non-Governmental Organisations that are already active in
issues of health. They identified Anglicare STOP AIDS as the people to work
with. They are now fully equipped and trained and are producing videos of
health messages with their drama troupe.
What about scalability?
For that we have developed a model that we call Village Cinema. It is very simple. You go into a village, hang up a
sheet between two trees, wait until it is dark and then project the videos
using a small diesel generator if there is no other power.
We have most experience
of using this model in The Gambia, a small country in West
Africa. There over 50% of the entire population of the country has
seen village cinema presentations. The Government of the
Gambia
believes
that the effect of this initiative has been to arrest the increase of HIV
infections and increase dramatically the number of families avoiding malaria by
using insecticide treated bed nets.
I hope that we can
achieve similar success here in PNG. This model seems particularly appropriate
here with your need to operate in many languages. Only the people of
Papua New Guinea
can solve your AIDS problem. Media empowerment, as its name implies, empowers
you to address the challenge.
COL
increased the capacity of Anglicare STOPAIDS last year with large screens and
projection systems to deliver health information in larger audiences throughout
the country.
Another good technology
is community radio. Back in 2001 we put a solar powered community radio station
in a remote community here in PNG called Mountain Brown in the Owen Stanley Range. We think that community radio has
great potential and governments seem to be coming to that view too.
Governance
Also in the Human
Environment Sector I should note
COL
's
developing work with PNG in Governance. Here we are working with the Public
Sector Reform Management Unit through workshops to develop a distance learning
programme for the improvement of local government. I think this has great
potential.
The Pan-Commonwealth
Forums on Open Learning
Finally, although this
is the Papua New Guinea Association for Distance Education and distance
education is our theme, we must not forget the value of face-to-face gatherings
like this one.
Every two years
COL
convenes a
Pan-Commonwealth Forum on Open Learning. At least nine people from the distance
education community in PNG attended the last one, PCF4 which was held in
Jamaica
in
2006.
Now we are preparing
for PCF5 in
London
in July and we hope to see a good delegation from PNG there too.
COL
will be sponsoring
over one hundred delegates, focusing its support on those who have not been
sponsored to attend such an event before. Maybe some of them are in this hall.
PCF5 is being hosted in collaboration with the
University of London
,
as part of the University's celebration to mark the 150th anniversary of the
establishment of its External Degrees programme - a major milestone in the
development of distance education.
The theme is "Access to Learning for Development". PCF5 is an
opportunity to explore the contribution of open and distance learning to
international development goals, by opening up access to learning at every
level. The Forum is for practitioners, researchers, planners and policy makers
in the fields of open and distance learning and development. It provides
opportunities to share experience and expertise, and to contribute to future
policy and provision.
Conclusion
I shall stop there. My title was Practical
steps for Surfing the Wave of Technology-Mediated Learning. I hope I have
shown that
COL
is working with you in just that spirit of pragmatism and practicality. Good
distance learning does not have to be hi-tech. But the work that we are doing
together is putting down foundations for even faster progress when broadband
internet access comes to
Papua
New Guinea
.