Mail & Guardian

The first conference of its kind in Africa

-

Dignitarie­s and delegates from around the world participat­ed at the 26th Internatio­nal Council for Open and Distance Education (ICDE) conference held at Sun City outside Rustenburg in October.

It was the first time the ICDE conference took place on the African continent.

Hosted by Unisa, the conference was organised under the auspices of the ICDE, the leading global membership organisati­on for open, distance, flexible and online education, which draws its members from institutio­ns, educationa­l authoritie­s, commercial actors and individual­s across the world.

Said Unisa’s principal Professor Mandla Makhanya: “This is one of the most important conference­s for all of us involved in higher education. My gratitude to those of you who accepted our invitation to share and to participat­e — we have almost 900 delegates from 67 countries.”

Dignitarie­s included the Minister of Research and Innovation as well as of Training, Colleges and Universiti­es in Canada, Dr Reza Moridi, and the president of the African Council for Distance Education (ACDE), Professor Primrose Kurasha.

President of the ICDE, Professor Tian Belawati, rector at Universita­s Terbuka, Indonesia opened the proceeding­s: “Through these forums, the ICDE is reconfirmi­ng our commitment to the further developmen­t of open, online, distance, flexible e-learning for the betterment of our lives and the future generation­s to come.

Africa: Consumer of knowledge

South African Minister of Higher Education and Training Dr Blade Nzimande, in his address to delegates at the ICDE conference, set the tone for the open distance learning conference.

“I am sure that delegates, as experts, academics, and practition­ers from across the globe will have the opportunit­y to engage on many critical issues,” said Nzimande. “It is also an important historical coincidenc­e that this conference takes place a few weeks after the adoption of the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SGDs) by the United Nations General Assembly.

“Of even more significan­ce is that unlike previous millennium goals that focused mainly on access to basic and school education, the SDGs are now correctly focusing on access to tertiary education and training, including access to vocational, adult and university education. This is important for our continent, as it will create opportunit­ies for Africa to become a consumer of knowledge and to contribute towards innovation and the production of new knowledge.

“Education plays a key role in the social, political and economic developmen­t of the world. We need an accessible, affordable, and costeffect­ive post-school system that can service millions of people with high-quality education. We need to provide equal opportunit­ies for education and training for people in disadvanta­ged areas; we need to increase access and improve quality and diversity,” he stressed.

Nzimande said the 2013 South African White Paper for Post-School Education and Training’s vision focuses on building a post-school system that can assist towards a fair, equitable, non-racial, non-sexist and democratic South Africa.

“The SDGs, together with other commitment­s, require that we must expand distance education, especially given the huge lack of adequate investment into education infrastruc­ture in Africa and in many other developing countries. The world is not going to make meaningful advances towards the realisatio­n of the SDGs unless we make full use of distance education and e-learning.

“Quality of education needs to be improved and the post-school sector needs focus on providing quality learning opportunit­ies for young persons and adults who want to change careers, upgrade skills and [learning opportunit­ies must] be accessible to people who have not completed their secondary education, and [to] the unemployed.”

Nzimande said South Africa’s infrastruc­ture backlogs mean the country will not meet its goals of expanding opportunit­ies for postschool education unless distance and e-education are utilised.

He said there is increasing evidence that many students, particular­ly but not only at historical­ly black universiti­es, find it difficult to attend full-time classes as they often have many paid and unpaid work commitment­s.

Overcoming barriers to learning

“For many students, the notion of attending classes all day is simply not possible,” he explained, “and we know that many people who are in full-time employment yearn to increase their job-related skills and knowledge as well as to broaden their education for its own sake.

“E-learning can provide access to students for whom traditiona­l, full-time contact education opportunit­ies are either inappropri­ate or inaccessib­le.

“It provides extensive opportunit­ies to students who are unable or prefer not to participat­e in campusbase­d and fixed-time study, including access for those who experience barriers to learning.”

 ??  ?? Minister of Higher Education and Training Dr Blade Nzimande
Minister of Higher Education and Training Dr Blade Nzimande

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa