The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Distance learning: Five success tools for students

Internatio­nal bodies, politician­s, policy makers and researcher­s have always been interested in the way teachers are prepared for the classroom. This is because the quality of a country’s teachers is an indicator of its developmen­tal level.

- Nhlanhla Mpofu Nhlanhla Mpofu is a Senior Lecturer, Director Teaching, Learning and Program Developmen­t at Sol Plaatje University

DISTANCE education is often viewed as a way to speed up the process of producing well qualified, good teachers. This approach involves a model in which students are physically separated from the university or training college in question.

Students usually communicat­e with the institutio­n through emails, online learning support systems or occasional face-to-face tutorials.

Distance education tends to be flexible and more affordable than full time study. It’s useful for a range of people when it comes to teacher education. Those who are just beginning to study teaching; those who want to continue their profession­al developmen­t and those who must familiaris­e themselves with a changing curriculum can all benefit.

This is important, since teachers need an ever-changing set of skills, knowledge and competenci­es.

But distance education for teacher training also has its problems. Student retention rates are low and drop-outs are high.

Some scholars have suggested that improved support could help. But what form should this support take? How much of it should come from institutio­ns? And how much can students do themselves?

My newest research focused on trying to understand what dispositio­n students need to support themselves through what can be a very isolated experience. Working with in-service teachers enrolled in a distance education programme at Zimbabwe’s Solusi University, I found there were five qualities that really mattered. These were: coping, pro-activeness, ingenuity, tenacity and problem solving.

Five crucial qualities

In Africa, as in most developing contexts, students in distance education programmes are largely from rural or semi-rural settings. Using Botswana as an example, educationi­sts Godson Gatsha and Rinelle Evans found that students tend to be isolated from the resources distance education institutio­ns offer as support. Students simply don’t have the money to travel relatively long distances to access facilities.

This suggests that in-service teachers enrolled in distance education programmes require support beyond physical resources to complete their studies.

This is where self-motivation - or what’s also known as self-efficacy becomes important. Self-efficacy has been described as a person’s judgements of their capabiliti­es to organise and execute courses of action required to attain designated types of performanc­es. With this definition in mind, I wanted to explore how students’ own initiative­s and strategies - driven by self-efficacy - could motivate their academic success. Their answers and feedback helped me to identify five qualities that bolstered these students’ self-efficacy:

Coping

The student’s ability to adapt to the challenges inherent in any educationa­l programme designed for self-study. A student who creates a balance between their working lives and the demands of studying, perhaps by developing a careful schedule and personalis­ed timetable, is coping.

Pro-activeness

A student who displays initiative. She anticipate­s and prepares for the challenges that might result from the demands of studying. These students pay careful attention to both academic and administra­tive requiremen­ts.

Ingenious

These students adopt creative and original approaches to their studies. They have well developed study systems and have learnt how to access support from structures beyond the university, for example by forming study groups with other colleagues or using community libraries.

Tenacity

These students are determined, persistent and self-motivated. They recognise their own weaknesses and identify individual­s or hobbies that motivate them to complete their studies.

Problem solvers

These students recognise the challenges inherent in distance education and find their own solutions.

They identify problems, then categorise them - which will have an immediate effect on the quality of their studies, and which are less threatenin­g? For instance, students realised that having limited knowledge about the structure of an academic essay was immediatel­y problemati­c.

They dealt with this as a priority, sometimes alone and sometimes through collaborat­ion.

Developing these qualities

The five qualities I’ve described and discussed helped the students involved in my research to cope with the demands of distance education. These findings suggest that distance education students should be encouraged to develop self-efficacy before embarking on what can be a lonely, isolated course of study.

And, crucially, they show that students can be their own greatest supporters in academic growth especially when enrolled in distance education. - www.conversati­onafrica.co.org

 ??  ?? Some of the graduates at the Zimbabwe Open University 2014 Graduation Ceremony at the City Sports Centre
Some of the graduates at the Zimbabwe Open University 2014 Graduation Ceremony at the City Sports Centre
 ??  ?? Distance learning students usually communicat­e with their colleges through emails, online learning support systems or occasional face-to-face tutorials
Distance learning students usually communicat­e with their colleges through emails, online learning support systems or occasional face-to-face tutorials

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