Content area

Abstract

In today's world where tuition fees continue to rise rapidly and the demand for higher education increases in both the developing and developed world, it is important to find additional and alternative learning pathways that learners can afford. Traditional education as we have known it has begun to change, allowing for new parallel learning opportunities to take shape and new avenues to open up. This paper describes the world's largest online training initiative on open education that teaches wiki technology to educators in the formal education sector worldwide. WikiEducator, founded in 2006, initially operated with funding support from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation (WFHF) under the auspices of the Commonwealth of Learning (COL), an intergovernmental organization created by Commonwealth Heads of Government to encourage the development and sharing of open learning and distance education knowledge, resources, and technology. In May 2009, it became its own entity residing under Otago Polytechnic's International Centre for Open Education Resources under the auspices of the Open Education Resource Foundation (OERF) in Dunedin, New Zealand, where it continues today. WikiEducator's flagship, the Learning4Content (L4C) project, builds capacity among global educators by teaching wiki technology to newcomers and experts in the field of open education. In exchange for the free training opportunity they receive, participants are asked to create open content on WikiEducator and contribute toward WikiEducator's strategic objectives. The success of the L4C project helped WikiEducator reach its target number of equipping 2,500 educators with wiki skills to create open educational resources online two years ahead of the initially planned three years and was the reason for a large additional number of novices and experts alike joining the project. Even though many learners make use of the free learning opportunities offered through the L4C project, for those who do not have access to online content--or even computers--WikiEducator has developed a feature called "wiki-to-print," which allows users to select free and open WikiEducator content and combine it into a book that can be printed and used offline. Distribution of these print-based, compiled books provides an opportunity to those who do not or will never have access to the Internet and technology to gain access to knowledge and information. This paper will describe WikiEducator's stages of development and the outcomes it has achieved as the world's largest attempt to build wiki skills among global educators.

Details

1007399
Title
Turning the Digital Divide into Digital Dividends through Free Content and Open Networks: WikiEducator Learning4Content (L4C) Initiative
Volume
17
Issue
2
Pages
87-100
Number of pages
14
Publication date
July 2013
Printer/Publisher
Sloan Consortium
P.O. Box 1238, Newburyport, MA 01950
http://sloanconsortium.org/publications/jaln_main
Publisher e-mail
ISSN
1939-5256
Source type
Report
Peer reviewed
Yes
Summary language
English
Language of publication
English
Document type
Report, Article
Number of references
17
Subfile
ERIC, Current Index to Journals in Education (CIJE)
Accession number
EJ1018280
ProQuest document ID
1651848200
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/reports/turning-digital-divide-into-dividends-through/docview/1651848200/se-2?accountid=208611
Last updated
2024-03-08
Database
2 databases
  • Education Research Index
  • ProQuest One Academic