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The future of distance education : reformed, scrapped or recycled

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posted on 2010-01-01, 00:00 authored by Terry EvansTerry Evans, B Pauling
A mass of under-educated people, an expanding population, major global crises and an expanding knowledge economy all combine to sustain a massive demand for basic, further, higher, continuing and lifelong education.This demand cannot be met solely in the world’s classrooms; even if there were enough classrooms, many people will be unwilling or unable to attend them to learn. In this sense, distance education is essential for the future, but the fluidity around educational terms and practices means that it is also quite possible that ‘distance education’—the term and its history—will be towed to the scrap yard for many of its useful parts to be recycled. This chapter considers three key elements of distance education—technology, students and educational institutions—and the educational possibilities that surround them by reflection on past and present changes. The future of distance education is intimately connected to broader social, economic and cultural changes. These changes are strongly influenced by the ‘disruptive’ technologies, demographic transformations in the nature of distance learners and the pressures of global techno-capitalism on educational institutions.

History

Title of book

An introduction to distance education : understanding teaching and learning in a new era

Chapter number

10

Pagination

198 - 223

Publisher

Routledge

Place of publication

New York, N.Y.

ISBN-13

9780415995986

ISBN-10

0415995981

Language

eng

Publication classification

B1 Book chapter

Copyright notice

2010, Taylor & Francis

Extent

12

Editor/Contributor(s)

M Cleveland-Innes, D Garrison

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