Report: E-Learning breaking down barriers in Africa
Public-private arrangements are bringing e-learning to thousands of Africans whose access to traditional education is hampered by poverty, a new report says.
Public-private arrangements are bringing e-learning to thousands of Africans whose access to traditional education is hampered by poverty, political conflict and a lack of teachers and infrastructure, according to a new grant report from the IBM Endowment for the Business of Government, a unit of IBM Corp. of Armonk, N.Y.
The report, The Promise of E-Learning in Africa: The Potential for Public-Private Partnerships, concludes that e-learning offers a flexible and cost-effective way to span Africa's rural distances and make alternatives to regular classroom settings available through such technologies as satellite downlinks, interactive television, videoconferencing and virtual educational networks.
Norman LaRocque, a policy adviser with the New Zealand Business Roundtable in Wellington, New Zealand, and Michael Latham, president of CfBT Education Services Inc., a Reading, United Kingdom, nonprofit organization that focuses on educational development, authored the report.
Africa is the only region in the world whose school-age population will increase rapidly over the next 20 years, LaRocque and Latham said. And while introducing e-learning technologies in Africa presents many challenges, public-private partnerships are creating an increasing number of success stories there. The report defines these collaborations broadly as "risk-sharing relationships based upon an agreed aspiration between the public and private sectors to bring about a desired public policy outcome."
Current e-learning collaborations in Africa include:
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