By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Students typically come to teachers for education,
but technology is enabling the education to come to
students, especially in rural areas. Distance
education is the term applied to any form of teaching in
which the student and the instructor are not in the same
place. Distance education can include broadcasts, two-way
interactive video, mailed videotapes, telephone, wireless
transmission and the Internet as the information is sent
from one location to a student in another area. It has a
great potential impact on the rural South that is already
being realized. The
Southern Rural Development Center, headquartered at
Mississippi State University, recently released a report on
this subject titled "Distance Education: Taking classes to
the students." It was written by Timothy Collins, a private
consultant, and Sarah Dewees, a researcher at the Johns
Hopkins University Center for Civil Society
Studies. "One
issue that is especially important to rural communities and
potential students in rural areas is that they will have
access to educational resources that they did not have
access to before," Dewees said. "This is a radical change
that has the potential to break down the geographical
barrier to education." Institutions
of higher education have used distance learning the most,
but there are already virtual high schools across the South
where students can earn their diplomas in remote areas from
a central institution. Distance education also has become
very important in continuing education training for primary
and secondary teachers. "There
is a high cost of providing teacher technical assistance and
training in rural areas, so the ability to offer distance
education to teachers has been very important in rural
areas," Dewees said. But
providing an education from a distance has its difficulties.
The publication listed four potential challenges that must
be overcome before distance education can live up to its
promise. - The
South must be prepared to handle short- and long-term
organizational, management and educational
changes. - The
digital divide, or groups' limited access to technology, is
an ongoing problem among certain Southern populations and
could restrict these groups' participation in distance
education. -
Teachers must learn new teaching approaches to adequately
serve their students. Mentoring and monitoring students from
a distance also can be a challenge. - New
programs offered via distance education will need to follow
a set standard for quality assurance. While
each of these issues can be a problem, the authors state
that distance education is both a reality and a vision for
the future. "If
implemented properly, rural Southerners will benefit from
distance education by attaining high-quality education from
around the region and the world," the publication
states. Success
of distance education depends on many factors. These include
a high-level governmental and educational system support
capable of handling rapid change; effective leadership so
that specific needs and priorities are met; and appropriate
funding. "Distance
education's promise is the potential for bringing education
resources to remote, rural areas, but the challenge is
making sure you have the physical and social infrastructure
to help people gain access to these resources and coordinate
learning," Dewees said. This
February 2001 Southern Rural Development Center report can
be viewed online at http://ext.msstate.edu/srdc/publications/distance_education.pdf. Released:
June 4, 2001
Community
News
Distance ed
brings classes
to students
For more information, contact:
Sarah
Dewees, (410) 516-3957
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:14
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/commnews/cn01/010601.htm
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