Education for sustainability: opportunities and challenges for online and distance education...

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Education for Education for sustainability: sustainability: opportunities and opportunities and challenges for online challenges for online and distance education and distance education Presenters: Rick Fisher & Allan Smee Open Polytechnic of New Zealand

Transcript of Education for sustainability: opportunities and challenges for online and distance education...

Education for sustainability: Education for sustainability: opportunities and challenges for opportunities and challenges for online and distance educationonline and distance education

Presenters:

Rick Fisher & Allan Smee

Open Polytechnic of New Zealand

About the presentersAbout the presenters

Rick- environmental sciences (teaching, research, practice)

- environmental lawyer

- recent graduate: Open Polytechnic Certificate in Designing & Facilitating E-Learning

Allan

- E-learning advisor

ObjectivesObjectives

To provide a context for online education in a “cleaner, greener” teaching environment

To point out the special nexus that exists between EfS and traditional distance education

To provide an opportunity to explore new e-learning technologies which may be helpful to EfS at various teaching levels

About The Open Polytechnic of New ZealandAbout The Open Polytechnic of New Zealand

30,000 full/part-time students130 programmes/1500 courses

offered by three schools – certificate to degree

Delivery primarily via distance education

Some blended deliveryGrowing role for e-learning

Key definitions:Key definitions:

Education for sustainability:“A multidisciplinary approach to learning that develops the

knowledge, awareness, attitudes, values and skills that will enable individuals and the community towards maintaining and improving the quality of the environment” (MfEnvt 1996)

Traditional distance education:“Geographical separation of teacher and learner, where the gap is

bridged by posted course materials, and some form of communication, whether by letter or telephone” (Peters, 2009)

E-learning:Learning that is facilitated by the use of digital tools and content,

typically involving some kind of interactivity between learners and their teacher or peers (MoEd 2004)

Out with the old….Out with the old….

In with the new…In with the new…

Is distance education greener?Is distance education greener?

Open University (UK) carbon calculation study: Travel and classrooms are the biggest sources of carbon

consumption Distance learning courses led to a whopping 87% less

energy and 85% lower CO2 emissions than full-time, face-to-face, campus-based courses

Within that overall saving, on-line courses showed a fairly minor 20% reduction in energy and 12% reduction in CO2 emissions when compared to print-based courses

FOR MORE INFO...

Roy, R. & Potter, S. (2008). Int J Sust Higher Ed 9:116-130

clean, green

New Zealand’s most sustainable education provider

I s this the face of the future?

Key steps before claiming green legitimacy in Key steps before claiming green legitimacy in education deliveryeducation delivery

An environmental policy Support for the policy by senior management An environmental audit Consultation with stakeholders Action Modelling sustainability in operations and

curriculum Result: a framework for legitimacy

Anywhere, anytimeAnywhere, anytime

…….and anyone.and anyone

The goals of EfSThe goals of EfS

To inform across age/culture/geography

To reach out/gain critical massTo empowerTo facilitate transformative learning

Isn’t this what DE already does?

Shared characteristics: EfS and DEShared characteristics: EfS and DE

Neither require a computer Both attempt to reach geographically isolated students &

disadvantaged/marginalised students Underlying learning pedagogies are similar: -both emphasise vocational education outcomes -both cater to the needs of adult learners -both promote transformative learning -both promote learning that is internally motivated -both promote learning that is self-directed, with enhanced

personal meaning

FOR MORE INFO...

Fisher, R.M. (2008). New Zealand Ann. Rev. Ed. 18:31-46.

Where does e-learning fit?Where does e-learning fit?

Key e-learning teaching pedagogies: Acknowledge different learning styles Develop online programs to enable any-time and

any-place learning Encourage active learning Develop online content within a relevant context Allow for repeated (formative) self-assessment

Good things about e-learning and EfSGood things about e-learning and EfS

Delivery: anything that cuts down transportation costs is good

Delivery: communities of (local) learners are possible, with local wisdom

Niche education is possible Pedagogy: e-learning promotes many of

the same attributes as DE

A few problems…A few problems…

E-learning isn’t primarily for distance education

E-learning requires a computer or similar device(and usually online access)

There is no national e-learning strategy E-learning (in the context of EfS) gets little

attention in tertiary education strategy E-technologies may not be overly green

Nonetheless….Nonetheless….

E-learning has an important role to play in education.

E-learning Advantages over E-learning Advantages over Traditional Distance EducationTraditional Distance Education Collaboration

“Digital communications technologies have fractured the tyranny of distance beyond repair”Wheeler S.(2009)

– Increases the ability of the learning to communicate with their peers, lecturer/s and wider community

Students are able to contributed ideas, concepts and examples from their on experiences via

– Blogs – online journals– Wikis – online collaborative knowledge bases– Podcasting- online audio presentations

and receive timely feedback from peers and lecturer/s

Use of real-time /online data – Data sharing

• Google Maps and Google Earth - http://earth.google.com/outreach/showcase.html which allow organisation map environmental impacts etc

– Simulations• View the cause and effective of different choices

– Problem Based Learning• Developed potentials solutions to problem and review the impact of there choices.

FOR MORE INFO...

Wheeler , S. (2009) Digital Tribes and Virtual Clans in Wheeler (Ed) Connected Minds and Emerging Cultures pp65-79 Charlotte :USA Information Age Publishing

Flexibility of Delivery Flexibility of Delivery

Delivery of content isn’t restricted to one media – Web based

– CD ROM or USB Drive

– Mobile Phones, Smart Phones, PDA

– Gaming Platforms i.e. Play station, X Box and Wii’s

– and even printed based Content can developed to be delivery format free.

– Delivery method is up to the end user.

Reducing the impactReducing the impact

Reuse content– Content developed as Reusable

Learning Objects (RLOs ) can be share across the Learning community

• Why reinvent the wheel

FOR MORE INFO...

See Merlot (www.merlot.org) a collection of online learning materials that can incorporated in courses

Developed and use Green IT practices in your E-Learning.– Promote “Green IT” practices to

learners• Turn off computers when not in use

– Use Green Data Centres• Google -

http://www.google.com/corporate/green/

Reducing the impactReducing the impact