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New Technology and Its Impact on Conventional and Distance Education. Papers on Information Technology No. 237.

Authors :
Open Univ., Walton, Bletchley, Bucks (England). Inst. of Educational Technology.
Bates, A. W.
Publication Year :
1984

Abstract

This position paper explores the potential of new technology to radically alter both distance education and conventional higher education. It hypothesizes that technological developments could even lead to the demise of the conventional campus-based higher education institution by the year 2000. Instead, people of all ages would be able to study at any period of their life through a mixture of home learning, study at work, and occasional visits to "old" campuses, whose primary function by then would be research and curriculum development. It is predicted that the determining factors for the materialization of this scenario will be political and institutional, not technological or even financial. The following sections are discussed in the context of this hypothesis: Print, Television and Culture; New Communications Technologies (Cable Television and Video-Cassettes, Computer Conferencing, and Computer-Based Audio-Graphic Systems); New Institutional Models; and Political and Institutional Barriers. (THC)

Details

Language :
English
Database :
ERIC
Publication Type :
Editorial & Opinion
Accession number :
ED268966
Document Type :
Opinion Papers<br />Reports - Descriptive