Online learning Wave Of The Future
30 Sept 2004
Online learning Wave Of The Future
From primary school children accessing information on the internet through to university students attending lectures - it's increasingly happening online.
So it's crucial for New Zealand's e-learning leaders in the tertiary sector to share information and tap into best practice both nationally and internationally so that kiwi students around the country are kept up to speed with the latest developments.
Waikato University is managing a $775,000 e-Learning Collaborative Development Fund contract with the Tertiary Education Commission designed to do just that.
Based on a similar programme operating since 2000 in Australia, the Flexible Learning Leaders in New Zealand (FLLinNZ) scheme aims to help e-learning leaders collaborate and to experience what is happening at other institutions, both here and overseas.
The national project, under the
direction of Nola Campbell at Waikato University's School of
Education, facilitates individual goal setting and
professional development for a group of 15 general and
academic staff who work in institutions throughout New
Zealand. The FLLinNZ project aims to: „h enhance the
capability of a significant group of people who have the
potential to make a difference in the tertiary e-learning
landscape in New Zealand;
- establish a
national mentoring network that can be extended as the
project matures;
- provide access for staff to
opportunities for research and development that would not
otherwise be available to them to enhance their own practice
and their institution's e-learning capability; -
provide opportunities for leaders to visit other
institutions and experience a range of different models of
e-learning innovation, policies and practice; and
-
improve excellence in e-learning through the creation of a
pool of leaders in the field who are committed to sharing
their expertise nationally through workshops, seminars and
conferences.
"Flexible Learning Leaders are innovators and change agents who work in tertiary education and are keen to lead New Zealand into the emerging e-learning environment," says Nola Campbell. The current contract finishes in June 2005 but it's hoped the programme will continue with a new group of Leaders.
"Leading change in e-learning is about creating different tertiary learning environments that meet the demands of a digitally aware tertiary environment," says Nola.
ENDS