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ELUE eLearning and University Education

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The typology of French universities. Data and statistical results ... Typology of Instructors. Reasons for universities to engage in 'e-learning' Time periods during ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ELUE eLearning and University Education


1
ELUEe-Learning and University Education
  • Report of the survey in French universities

Representing the French team Pr Monique LINARD
http//www.e-pathie.org
2
ELUE French report
  • Political iniative French Ministry of National
    Education, Direction of Research and Conférence
    des Présidents dUniversités (CPU).
  • Project management AMUE (Agency for the
    Mutualization of Universities).
  • Scientific investigation e-pathie program,
    Maison des Sciences de lHomme (MSH), Paris.

3
E-learning in a French university context
  • A highly centralized, state-run organization
  • A widespread implication with ICT and e-learning
    issues
  • Still massively traditional ways of teaching and
    learning
  • Modes of interaction
  • Course supply
  • Teachers activities
  • Yet a much wider scope of pedagogical
    communication
  • E-learning teachers, mostly  traditional
    teachers who adapt 

4
Specific features of the French survey
  • Approach
  • Conducting the survey
  • Corpus, fairly representative of
  • The geography
  • The typology of French universities
  • Data and statistical results
  • Reliability of responses to individual items

5
Specific features of the French survey
  • Methodology As with any type of investigation,
    context and mode of conception of data condition
    results and anwers to questions.
  • A concern for identifying and integrating
    whenever possible
  • Intercultural differences
  • National contexts
  • Methodological questions
  • A special interest for
  • Relating the diversity
  • Probing the consistency

6
Universities e-learning policy
Main findings
  • Reasons for universities to engage in e-learning
  • Development of local e-learning policy and
    initiatives
  • Participation in consortia

7
Universities e-learning policy
  • Institutional strategic plans and orientation
    texts
  • Teachers training plans and incentives
  • Support plans
  • E-learning structures and their duties

8
Universities e-learning policy
  • Investment in faculty and staff
  • Resources and funding
  • Effective research on ICT use

9
Universities e-learning policy
E-learning programmes for students
  • Students activities
  • Technical supports
  • Other services
  • Course contents

10
Opinions and effective practice
  • Degree of acceptance by teachers and students
  • General obstacles to e-learning development.
  • Lack of support from other faculty members
  • Lack of technical competence
  • Lack of adequate facilities and relevant
    institutional investment

11
Opinions and effective practice
  • Difficulties with study course programmes
  • Technical
  • Pedagogical and admininistrative
  • Predictions for the future of programmes
  • Risks of e-learning development

12
Conclusion
  • A likely picture of e-learning development in
    French universities evidencing a number of facts
    and of recurrent issues
  • Major changes in organizational and teaching
    learning culture
  • Real cost-effectiveness of e-learning development
  • Rapid evolution of student, faculty and staff new
    professional and personal skills
  • Differential impact, assets and risks of
    technology

13
Conclusion
  • For universities, the technological response is
    still a privileged way to meet the pressure of
    socioeconomic and educational change.
  • Tony Bates (2000) insists that this is not the
    best way to do so.
  • Together with the issues reiewed above, his
    discussion provides a very appropriate frame of
    reference for the activities of future a European
    Observatory.

14
  •  Thus the use of technology is not just a
    technical issue. It raises fundamental questions
    about target groups, methods of teaching,
    priorities for funding, and above all the overall
    goals and purpose of a university or college .
  •  Consequently, decisions about technology need
    to be embedded in and subordinated to educational
    goals .
  •  At the same time, the educational goals
    themselves should take into account the new
    opportunities that these technologies present .

A. W. (Tony) Bates Managing Technological
Change, Strategies for College and University
Leaders, Jossey Bass publishers. San Francisco,
2000.  Confronting The Technology Challenge in
Universities and Colleges , Chapter 1, p. 34.
15
Suggestions for a future e-learning European
Laboratory
  • Considering the findings of the ELUE survey, the
    French team suggests the creation of a
    coordinated European network of national
    observatories.
  • Such network would provide an appropriate
    support to the international debate and
    collaborative work urgently needed in the field.

16
ELUEe-Learning and University Education
  • Report of the survey in French universities

Representing the French team Pr Monique LINARD
http//www.e-pathie.org
17
Distribution of French universities by large
regions
Distribution of the survey's respondents by
large regions
18
A distribution of French universities according
to scientific domains
A distribution of the survey corpus according to
scientific domains
19
A comparison between modalities of learning as
described from actual data and as estimated by
respondents
Average number of study course by learning
types
20
Teacher's activities and "e-learning"
21
Means of distance communication in a wider scope
of pedagogical relationship
22
Typology of Instructors
23
Reasons for universities to engage in "e-learning"
24
Time periods during which policies for
"e-learning" implementation were designed in
institutions
Authorities initiatinga policy for "e-learning"
according to different modalities
25
Institutions taking part in every level of
consortium
26
Presence of strategic plans and orientation
documents
27
Existence of training plans, financial incentives
or advancement of teachers' careers
Number of teachers concerned by training
sessions
28
Existence of ICT support plans for teachers
29
Number of ICT structuresin institutions
ICT structures duties in institutions
30
Budgets dedicated to "e-learning"
Average annual financial resources in relation
to the budget of the institutions
31
Different kinds of studies on ICT use in
institutions
Research in Education by disciplinary sectors
32
Learners activities in "e-learning" programmes
33
Technical tools used in "e-learning" programmes
Other service supplies
34
e-learning degree of acceptance by teachers and
students
35
Difficultieswhen starting a scheme or programme
36
Future
Doubts
Future -
Predictions relative to the future of programmes
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