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A comparison of three Open Universities and their acceptance of Internet Technologies

Authors :
Jones, Chris
Aoki, Kumiko
Rusman, Ellen
Schlusmans, Kathleen
Jones, Chris
Aoki, Kumiko
Rusman, Ellen
Schlusmans, Kathleen

Abstract

We compare three open universities the Open Universities in the UK (OUUK), the Netherlands (OUNL) and Japan (OUJ). Originating in the modern idea of an Open University each university has developed its own pedagogical model. The OUUK developed Supported Open Learning based on: 1. Distance open learning: allowing ‘learning in your own time’ working on set activities and assignments. 2. Quality resources: printed materials, set books, audio and video and home experiments. 3. Systematic support: provided by course tutors, a regional network of centers, central library and technical support. The OUNL offers ‘supported independent open learning’. Students study at their own time, pace and place. There are no semesters, academic years or student cohorts. Courses are small and most support is built into the materials. OUJ has used television and radio broadcasting for instruction. In addition OUJ uses textbooks, guidance by correspondence, and classes at one of 50 local study centres. Tutor support is not part of the pedagogic model though individualized tutorials are given at the final stage of the student's course of study. Having describe and compare these we examine how these models have responded to the emergence of Internet technologies including Web 2.0 and national circumstances.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, Jones, Chris ; Aoki, Kumiko; Rusman, Ellen and Schlusmans, Kathleen (2009). A comparison of three Open Universities and their acceptance of Internet Technologies. In: Proceedings of the 23rd ICDE World Conference on Open Learning and Distance Education, 7-10 Jun 2009, Maastricht, Netherlands., English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1358926883
Document Type :
Electronic Resource