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ELEARNING VISION FOR Egypt: NEEDS AND CHALLENGES

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Title: ELEARNING VISION FOR Egypt: NEEDS AND CHALLENGES


1
E-LEARNING VISION FOR Egypt NEEDS AND CHALLENGES
  • By
  • Mostafa M. Kamel, Ph.D.
  • PfC-Egypt/IBM
  • January 2003

2
Introduction
  • Egypt has a vision to become a globally
    competitive country by the year 2020.
  • Egypts National ICT Plan provides the Roadmap
    for fulfilling this vision.
  • Work Force Development is a key component of this
    Roadmap.
  • E-Learning is an indispensable tool in this
    endeavor.

3
The Strategic Objectives of Egypts National ICT
Plan
  • To vastly accelerate Egypts economic and social
    development plan by turning Egypt into a
    knowledge society that produces, utilizes and
    exports ICT tools, applications and services
    through a private sector led and implemented
    program with the government acting to empower and
    facilitate private sector activities.

4
E-Learning Definition "Technology-based
learning programs that are developed and managed
to be independent of the location of the learner
or the instructor and delivered with the aid of
the Internet or other electronic media"
5
I. NEEDS
  • K-12 Education
  • Technical Education/Vocational Training
  • Undergraduate Higher Education
  • Post-graduate Education
  • Professional Training and Certification
  • Unemployment Alleviation Training
  • Languages, Entrepreneur and Soft Skills Training
  • Training for Women and Individuals with Special
    Needs
  • Pre K-80 Learning

6
  • NEEDS K-12 Education
  • Introduces children at an early age to the use of
    technology.
  • Helps schools and teachers to integrate
    curricula and bring supplementary material to
    augment the learning process.
  • Used both in school and at home by students,
    teachers and parents.
  • Tool for in-service training for practicing
    teachers and school administrators.

7
  • NEEDSTechnical Education/Vocational Training
  • High cost of purchase, operation and maintenance
    of laboratory equipment as well as the poor
    preparation of teachers and trainers yield low
    quality graduates.
  • E-Learning Training of trainers and teachers
    without interrupting their teaching schedules.
  • Laboratory experiment simulations can cut
    drastically the cost of procuring equipment.
    Thus, e-Learning increases the efficiency of
    utilization of laboratory equipment.

8
  • NEEDSUndergraduate Higher Education
  • The quality of undergraduate education in
    universities and higher institutes is
    deteriorating due to the huge number of students
    imposed upon them.
  • The situation is expected to get worse, since
    the government is changing the ratio between
    General Secondary School students and TEVT ones
    from 12 to 21.
  • This could increase the number of new students
    seeking university enrollment by 50 in the
    2004/2005 academic year.

9
  • Therefore, through E-Learning
  • Students may enroll, study, be examined and
    obtain degrees with minimum direct interaction
    with the university or institute.
  • Different scenarios should be developed that
    take into account Egyptian peculiarities.
  • Provide a fast track for curricula development
    and faculty member training through alliances
    between Egyptian and other "Brand Name"
    universities.

10
  • NEEDS Post Graduate Education
  • Egyptian universities offer three types of post
    graduate degrees
  • Diplomas, Masters of Science and Doctoral
    Degrees
  • In addition Post doctoral studies, training and
    research opportunities for faculty members.
  • e-Learning, coupled with university alliances,
    can be a powerful, cost-effective tool.

11
  • NEEDS Professional Training and Certification
  • A globally competitive workforce requires
    world-class skills supplementing university
    education.
  • Fast changing technology and knowledge
    accumulation define new sets of skills and make
    others obsolete.
  • Local, regional and global job markets requires
    continuous honing of present skills and acquiring
    new ones which can be done through e-Learning
    which may lead to globally recognized
    certifications through universities,
    multi-nationals and specialized institutions.

12
  • NEEDS Unemployment Alleviation
  • E-learning aimed at TEVT and some university
    graduates that have no employable skills.
  • E-Learning can enhance Skills or change the path
    of graduates towards job market-needed
    specialties, such as ICT entry level skills,.

13
  • NEEDS Languages, Entrepreneurial and Soft Skills
    Training
  • Proficiency in languages, especially English,
    entrepreneurial skills and other management and
    business skills are needed for all, especially
    those intending to start their own small
    businesses.
  • Egypt may want to start its own crash mass
    English language training program. An important
    lesson here can be learned from the
    Internet-based program initiated by China.

14
  • NEEDS Training for Women and Individuals with
    Special Needs
  • Through its inherently un-intrusive character,
    e-Learning can be used for teaching and training
    persons with special needs.
  • Adult literacy education and special skills,
    especially for rural women, can also benefit from
    e-Learning.

15
  • NEEDS Pre K- 80 Learning
  • Improving the quality of life through Education
    and the life-long acquisition of skills and
    knowledge is an inclusive birth-given right to
    citizens of all ages and in all walks of life.
  • E-Learning is an indispensable tool in this
    respect.

16
  • CHALLENGES
  • An on-going study on Egypt's e-Learning Readiness
    divides the challenges Egypt faces into
  • Technology and Infrastructure Aspects
  • Skills Sets for Maximum Impact Aspects
  • Content Design and Content Delivery Management
    Aspects
  • Social, Cultural and Psychological Aspects
  • Legal Aspects
  • Implementation Aspects
  • Economic Aspects

17
  • CHALLENGES Technology and Infrastructure Aspects
  • Egypt is still a low-penetration country for
    both PC density and Internet connectivity.
  • A study should be conducted to determine
    technical and infrastructure needs for a large
    scale e-Learning program.
  • That should include computer accessibility and
    bandwidth availability to different potential
    e-Learning users in schools, universities,
    government agencies, private enterprises,
    training centers and homes.

18
  • The mix of technology used should take advantage
    of the wide penetration of TVs and of the
    interactive capabilities of Nile Sat that can
    serve as a supplementary technology to the
    Internet.
  • Locally produced CDs and video tapes can serve a
    supporting role with certified Internet testing
    centers a possibility.
  • The human infrastructure components such as
    courseware scenario writers, multi-media
    developers, distance learning instructors and
    facilitators, etc.

19
  • Challenges Skill Sets for Maximum Impact Aspects
  • To become a global contender in the ICT field,
    Egypt's present and potential skill gaps have to
    be analyzed.
  • The analysis is to include the national,
    regional and international supply and demand for
    such skills.
  • Egypt's success factors in fulfilling this
    demand are to be assessed, taking into account
    possibilities for immediate job creation as well
    as potential ones at home and overseas.

20
  • CHALLENGES Content Design and Content
    Delivery Management Aspects
  • While e-Learning content for most topics is
    available in English on the Internet or with
    training providers, good quality Arabic content
    is hard to come by.
  • Especially for K-12 supplementary material,
    localized university and culturally related
    courses, great effort is needed to develop Arabic
    Internet-enabled content.
  • Content industry should be basically a private
    sector one, with minimum competition and
    interference from universities, ministries or
    other government agencies, except to provide
    needed regulatory and quality control frameworks.

21
  • Depending on the source of content, content and
    learning management systems may either by
    imported and, if needed, localized by
    universities or training service providers, or
    developed locally.
  • Such delivery management system must include
    solutions to a wide variety of issues, such as
    training of Distance Learning Instructors (DLIs)
    and facilitators, in-service training of
    teachers, testing and certification as well as
    other technical and pedagogical issues that
    pertain to the quality control of the learning
    process.

22
CHALLENGES Social, Cultural and Psychological
Aspects Egyptian students have acquired bad
study habits from their own school system. These
include memorizing expecting spoon feeding of
information, direct boiler plate testing, lack of
research and critical thinking capabilities and
over-dependence on private tutoring. Thus, the
majority of students are incapable of independent
learning and the creative acquiring of
information that is essential for e-Learning.
23
  • Students on all levels will first have to be
    taught how to learn independently and creatively.
    Also, society puts inordinately strong emphasis
    on degrees as status symbols, rather than as
    means of job creation and advancement.
  • E-Learning in Egypthould culminate in accredited
    degrees.
  • Assuring quality control over different
    e-Learning processes of certification will
    contribute to its high positioning in the job
    market which, in turn, will leverage parents and
    society at large to accept e-Learning degrees as
    well as the concept of paying tuition for
    e-Learning courses, even in governmental
    universities.

24
  • CHALLENGES Legal Aspects
  • Legal protection of intellectual property rights
    of authors and content providers Without such
    legal protection and rigorous enforcement, local
    e-Learning content industry will never flourish.
  • Degree accreditation and equivalency While the
    first may be decreed by the Ministry of Higher
    Education, the latter requires a cumbersome
    process through the Supreme Council of
    Universities.

25
  • CHALLENGES Implementation Aspects
  • Suitable scenarios must be developed to reap the
    most benefits from e-Learning.
  • A scenario that is solely dependent on the
    Internet may be less successful than a blended
    learning one that is more dependent on live
    instructors with the Internet used as a teaching
    tool.
  • Instead of a live instructor, a different
    scenario may have a mix of technologies combining
    CDs with video tapes and live TV broadcast on
    educational channels.

26
  • Heavy use of after-hours school and university
    computer labs, NGO's technology clubs and private
    sector Internet cafés and training provider's
    facilities are options to offer e-Learning
    services to socially and economically
    disadvantaged strata of the society.
  • In tackling such unconventional problems,
    similarly unconventional solution scenarios
    should be sought.

27
  • CHALLENGES Economic Aspects
  • The financial aspects of large scale application
    of e-Learning should be considered in details.
  • A business model should be developed that
    includes different cost alternatives and possible
    funding sources.
  • Although the financial model heavily depends on
    the proposed technology mix and implementation
    scenario, it is clear that content development
    and intellectual property rights compensations
    will be the major running cost items.

28
  • Student tuitions and, possibly, government
    subsidy should offset these costs. A study
    conducted by the e-Learning committee at MCIT
    indicates that the annual cost per student would
    be quite affordable, as compared with the current
    Open University tuition.

29
  • Conclusions
  • It is clear that Egypt needs e-Learning as a
    powerful tool in building a globally competitive
    workforce in ICT as well as other disciplines.
  • The challenges outlined above are not
    insurmountable.
  • Likely champions of e-Learning in Egypt appear so
    far to be the SCU, MoE and MCIT.
  • The private sector should be given a leading role
    in developing and implementing e-Learning through
    alliances with international universities,
    multi-nationals and education service providers.
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