INTERNATIONAL RESEARCH FOUNDATION FOR OPEN LEARNING







Models for open and distance
learning

1: Teacher education and training



























Hilary Perraton 2003
































This guide was prepared by the International Research Foundation for Open
Learning (IRFOL) for the Commonwealth of Learning (COL). IRFOL is affiliated
to COL as its research arm.

The author, Hilary Perraton, is an independent consultant who has worked in
international education and in open and distance learning for many years. He was
the founding director of IRFOL.

IRFOL is an independent, specialised, research agency, concerned with research to
guide the development of policy for open and distance learning. COL is an
intergovernmental organisation created by Commonwealth Heads of Government
to encourage the development and sharing of open learning and distance education
knowledge, resources and technologies.

Any part of this document may be freely reproduced with the appropriate
acknowledgement.
Copyright © International Research Foundation for Open Learning and
The Commonwealth of Learning, May 2003

ISBN 0 9532446 1 X
International Research Foundation for Open Learning & The Commonwealth of Learning

MODELS FOR OPEN AND DISTANCE LEARNING: TEACHER EDUCATION

Models for open and distance learning

This series of guides to good practice analyses policy issues about the use of open
and distance learning and of information and communication technologies in
education. The guides are for decision makers within educational institutions, in
ministries of education, and in international agencies. Each guide is based on our
understanding of the research evidence and aims to identify alternative models and
options in a particular area of education. Each begins by examining the policy
agenda and the key questions on it and goes on to address a list of themes –
socioeconomic context, governance, purpose and curriculum, outcomes and costs,
organisation, technology, funding, accreditation, and assessment – but the weight
given to each theme varies according to the area of education being examined. In
every case our aim is to give prominence to the more difficult issues. The models
series is jointly published and promoted by IRFOL and COL.

1. Teacher education and training


This first guide looks at the way open and distance learning has been used for the
education and training of teachers. It draws heavily on research carried out by
IRFOL for the Department for International Development in Britain and for
UNESCO. We are grateful to both organisations for their agreement for us to use
material also used in their documents; much of the text below is adapted from
these (mainly from Creed 2001 and Perraton, Creed and Robinson 2002).































International Research Foundation for Open Learning & The Commonwealth of Learning

MODELS FOR OPEN AND DISTANCE LEARNING: TEACHER EDUCATION

Contents

1.
Introduction

1
2.
What
is
the
policy
agenda?

1
3. Context: what does society expect of teacher education?

1
4. Governance: who is making and influencing decisions about it?
2
5. Aims: what is its purpose and curriculum?



4
6. Outcomes and costs: does it work?




6
7. Organisation: how is it organised and managed?


9
Ad-hoc
arrangements
11
Single or dual-mode teachers' col ege



12
Single or dual-mode universities



12
Multicountry
programmes 13
Nongovernment
organisations
13
Consortia and partnerships




13
Choosing
between
organisational
options
15
Teaching
practice 15
8. Methods: what are the choices of technology?


17
9. Funding: who is paying for it?




19
10.
Accreditation
and
assessment
20
References
24

Tables

1: Purposes of teacher education programmes



4
2: Effects and costs and effects of some teacher education projects
7
3: Comparative costs of conventional and distance education for teachers 10
4: Some models for organising teacher education

12
5: Distribution of responsibilities within programmes


14
6: Models of organising teaching practice



16
7: Some technologies for teacher education



18
8:
Funding
of
some
programmes
21
9: Assessing teachers' knowledge and practice at a distance

23
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MODELS FOR OPEN AND DISTANCE LEARNING: TEACHER EDUCATION
1

1. INTRODUCTION
This guide for policy makers starts by defining the policy agenda in terms of the
potential for open and distance learning in meeting the 2015 target of quality
education for all. It goes on to look at three related issues: about society's
expectations of the teaching profession, about the stakeholders who are
influencing and control ing it, and about its curriculum. It then examines the case
for using open and distance learning for teachers, by looking at the evidence on its
outcomes and costs. The guide then moves on from asking whether, and in what
circumstances, it makes sense to use open and distance learning, to questions
about how to use it, looking in turn at organisation, with a particular emphasis on
teaching practice, at the available technologies, and at funding. The final two
sections look at accreditation and assessment, examining how they may present
different challenges to decision makers when learners are studying at a distance.

2. WHAT IS THE POLICY AGENDA?
Open and distance learning has most often been used to overcome a shortage of
teachers, usually seen as a temporary stopgap. But alongside that stopgap solution,
it has also been used as part of the regular system of initial teacher training, to
support curriculum reform, to offer continuing professional development to
teachers, and to prepare them for new roles as head teachers, administrators or
inspectors, or as teachers' college lecturers. A range of organisational structures
and a wide variety of technologies have been used. Critical questions for planners
concern the organisation of teaching practice and the integration of distance-
education and conventional approaches to teacher education. We devote particular
attention to these issues below.

Good education demands good teachers. But many countries have too few
teachers, or teachers who have themselves had only a limited, or outdated
education. At the same time, the development of open and distance learning, and
the promises held out by new information and communication technologies,
suggest that there may be new ways of expanding the teaching service and raising
its quality. We can, then, frame the overall policy question as:

How far, and how well, can open and distance learning strengthen the
teaching profession and help towards the 2015 educational targets?

There are, then, a set of subsidiary questions about the purpose, content and
approach of teacher education. The planner needs to examine the context within
which policies will be implemented and the way in which teacher education is
managed and in which it relates to other parts of the educational service. Then
there are questions about the ways in which an unconventional method of teacher
education can be designed, organised, managed, funded and assessed. In order to
answer these questions we need to look at both curriculum and organisation. The
curriculum of teacher education may be dominated be one or other element, from
general education to classroom skills, and varies in the emphasis it places on
preservice and inservice approaches. Within different jurisdictions, responsibility
for it may be shared among ministries of education, universities, curriculum
agencies, and teachers' colleges. We examine each of these issues below.

3. CONTEXT: WHAT DOES SOCIETY EXPECT OF TEACHER
EDUCATION?
At the time of the 2000 World Conference on Education for All there were some
113 million children outside school. Even when the targets agreed at the
conference are achieved, 'success in improving access and quality at the primary
education level leads to increased demand for post-primary education and for
teacher training' (Cm 5006: 111). At the same time there is more than 40 years
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2 MODELS FOR OPEN AND DISTANCE LEARNING: TEACHER EDUCATION

experience of programmes to expand teacher supply, and raise the quality of
teachers in schools, through the use of distance education. New communication
technologies have been seen as a way of strengthening the use of distance
education.

Throughout much of the south and especially in sub-Saharan Africa and south
Asia, problems of teacher supply, of three kinds, threaten the attainment of the
education targets. First, there are shortages of teachers. While school enrolments
generally grew in the 1990s, teacher numbers only just kept pace with them, while
AIDS is reducing the life expectancy of teachers and so increasing the numerical
demands. With all the other pressures on educational budgets, it seems unlikely
that teachers' colleges can be expanded at the rate necessary to meet these
demands. Morbidity as well as mortality is affecting the teaching service: where
teachers are too ill to work, their absence worsens teacher shortages. Second, in
the same two regions, female teachers are in a minority. Progress in getting more
women into the profession is slow; in Africa the proportion of women primary-
school teachers rose from 39.4 percent to 43.3 per cent between 1990 and 1997,
while in south Asia it rose only from 28.0 to 29.6 per cent. Where tradition,
religion or social pressure means that only women can teach girls, these figures
threaten the attainment of both the world targets.

Third, even where there are enough teachers, too many of them are untrained or
undertrained, and the quality of training is often itself inadequate. A number of
studies have found little difference between the effectiveness of trained and
untrained teachers. 'About half of the teachers in developing countries are
unqualified in terms of their own country's formal standards for teachers'
education. Many teachers have little more than secondary education themselves.
Teaching methods are often old fashioned, with too much focus on rote learning'
(DFID 2001: 9). Problems of quality are compounded by a growing concern to
reform education and change the role of the teacher: many countries wish not just
to raise the quality of the teaching force to match the present demands on them
but also to change the nature of those demands.

4. GOVERNANCE: WHO IS MAKING AND INFLUENCING
DECISIONS ABOUT IT?
Responsibility for teacher education is often shared among different stakeholders
while influence over its content and methods may be shared even more widely.

Ministries of education most often have primary responsibility for teacher
education. In many cases this responsibility may be devolved or shared. Where a
teaching service commission exists, it may have some responsibility for teacher
education and for the recognition of qualifications. Curriculum agencies are likely
to have an interest in and possibly a responsibility for teacher education and
training. In some cases, and especially in large or federal countries, some
responsibilities and activities are devolved. In India, for example, District
Institutes for Education and Training (DIETs) have a major role in both the
preservice and the continuing education of teachers. Ministries, too, have a
financial concern for teacher education: not only are teachers' colleges generally
funded from the ministry budget but any programmes that raise the level of
qualification of teachers are likely to have a long-term impact on teachers' salaries,
the biggest item in a ministry budget.

Teachers' colleges may be controlled by a ministry of education, or have a degree
of autonomy, or be seen as belonging with universities in a tertiary sector of
education. Their organisational location may change over the years. They have
sometimes had a difficult and unrewarding link with distance-education
programmes, where these were seen as being in competition with their regular, and
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MODELS FOR OPEN AND DISTANCE LEARNING: TEACHER EDUCATION
3

more conventional work. Where a distance-education programme needs to use the
facilities of teachers' col eges then good relationships between the two are at a
premium.

Universities may have a variety of different links with and responsibilities for
teacher education. In some cases these include monitoring and accreditation;
teacher education in Belize and Jamaica, for example, is supervised and accredited
by a Joint Board for Teacher Education based at the University of the West Indies.
Some teacher education programmes are run directly by universities and open
universities in particular have often been called on by governments to use their
skills in distance education to run programmes for teachers: the ministry of
education in Pakistan, for example, has used the facilities of Allama Iqbal Open
University to meet the need for continuing education of the country's serving
primary school teachers. Thus universities may have different roles as an
accrediting agency, as the implementer of programmes that rely on the expertise of
its own faculty of education, and as the provider of specialist skills in distance
education.

Teacher education is likely to have a twofold relationship with schools, at once
influencing them and reacting to them. Short periods of teaching practice will take
the students and may take the staff of teachers' col eges into schools. Where
schools are responsible for mentoring trainee teachers, as happened with the
postgraduate certificate course of the Open University in Britain, they become
directly involved in teacher education. While this involvement may reduce the
likelihood of conflict between teachers' college and school, it has also been
criticised as weakening an opportunity of changing school culture through external
influence.

The concerns of individual teachers will be reflected by their schools but may also
be expressed by teachers' unions and professional associations, both nationally and
internationally. Good policy planning will take their interests into account; many
have been warmly supportive of measures that can be seen as raising the status and
widening the opportunities of their members.

International agencies may in turn influence teacher education and the use of
distance education within it. Both the Commonwealth of Learning and its
francophone equivalent, CIFFAD, have been involved in the development of
teacher education programmes using distance education, and have been able to
share expertise internationally in their execution. A project in Burkina Faso to
train head teachers, for example, could call on resources elsewhere in west Africa
and in France through the network RESAFAD (Réseau africain de formation à
distance or African network for distance education). The World Bank has sought
to influence policy on teacher education while several bilateral aid agencies in
Europe have funded distance-education projects for teachers in Africa. They have
brought to their funding their own policy concerns as well as their cash.

The complexity of this web of responsibility and influence – a complexity that is
inherent in the use of distance education - means that it is sometimes difficult to
see who has a sense of ownership of teacher education. In India, for example, one
programme for primary school teachers was executed by Indira Gandhi National
Open University, on behalf of the ministry of education, in association with a
national curriculum agency, the National Council for Educational Research and
Training, and with responsibility for accreditation and monitoring resting with the
National Board for Teacher Education. For the policy maker one conclusion is
clear, and easy to state while demanding in practice: identify the stakeholders and
create as simple mechanisms as possible to encourage their collaboration.

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4 MODELS FOR OPEN AND DISTANCE LEARNING: TEACHER EDUCATION

To summarise: in considering the governance of distance-education
programmes for teachers it is necessary to identify the stakeholders with
their lines of responsibility and to consider the relationships between them.

This analysis should include an examination of the relations between any
teacher-education programme and the schools and to ensure that there are
effective channels of communication between the partners involved.


5. AIMS: WHAT IS ITS PURPOSE AND CURRICULUM?
Teacher education and training has to respond to the demands of the various
stakeholders and therefore to do a number of different jobs. There are
expectations that it will enable teachers to develop the potential of their pupils;
help them serve as role models; transform education and through it society;
develop changed attitudes to their work and to education; and encourage their own
self-confidence and creativity. The curriculum of any teacher-education
programme will be shaped by local needs and by the programme's purpose; the
planner's first question is therefore about purpose.

There are two starting distinctions: between the initial education and training of
teachers and their continuing professional development, and between preservice
and inservice activities. The two sets of distinctions do not overlap: many teachers
begin work without teaching qualifications so that they may get initial training
while they are working inservice. Beyond those initial distinctions we can
differentiate between programmes designed to support curriculum development
and those to help teachers undertake a new role, often to work in administration or
in a teachers' college. In practice, some of these distinctions may be blurred:
programmes to support a changed curriculum may be directed at all teachers,
regardless of their earlier training. In Pakistan, for example, a Primary Teachers
Orientation Course was run in the interests of curriculum reform but served also
as continuing professional development for many teachers and, in practice, as
initial training for unqualified teachers already working in the service.

Table 1 Purposes of teacher education programmes
Purposes
subcategories

Initial training of unqualified teachers
programmes leading to certification
short induction courses

Upgrading of teachers who already have a
for subqualified teachers
qualification
for qualified teachers

Training related to content of the school
for planned curriculum change
curriculum refresher
courses

Preparing teachers for new roles
as head teachers
to work in teachers' colleges

Source: based on Greenland 1983

Many programmes of teacher education – and especially those that are providing
initial training – include four elements: improving the general educational
background of the trainee teachers; increasing their knowledge and understanding
of the subjects they are to teach; pedagogy and understanding of children and
learning; and the development of practical skills and competences. The balance
between these four elements varies in relation to the background education of
student teachers, to the level at which they will teach, and to the stage they have
reached in their career.

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MODELS FOR OPEN AND DISTANCE LEARNING: TEACHER EDUCATION
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Beyond this, the curriculum of teacher education is likely to be shaped by the
circumstances of trainee teachers and by changes in prevailing attitudes to
education or shifts in educational philosophy. In considering teachers' own
circumstances we need to take account of:

their educational background, which varies enormously between different
countries and different levels of education.

gender, where there are shortages of women teachers in many countries,
and of men teachers in some. Programmes need to fit with the rest of
teachers' lives and be sensitive to cultural norms and expectations that affect
their jobs. In some countries there are restrictions on women teachers'
mobility that affect their ability to attend initial or updating courses.

their experience as teachers where trainees who have just left school with
limited formal education are likely to have quite different educational needs
from those with similar formal qualifications but long experience as
untrained teachers.

In many countries teacher education gives an impression of rethinking, and
restructuring of the curriculum, although it is often unclear how far this process
has changed actual practice. One change has been a shift of emphasis from
preservice to inservice education. At either stage a recurrent picture is the
coexistence of traditional and newer curriculum models within one programme.
This takes the form of two competing strands of thinking that, for convenience,
can be labelled as traditional and progressive tendencies. The traditional is teacher-
centred, based on behaviourist assumptions, has a transmission view of knowledge
and regards the teacher as a technician; the progressive strand includes more active
and participatory learning methods, is less authoritarian, places more demands on
teachers and contains elements of constructivist thinking. The progressive agenda
encourages the development of reflective practice among teachers. This in turn
raises questions about the practicality of rapid change and the danger, identified by
Beeby (1966) in a classic analysis of seeking over-rapid transformation and of
holding unrealistic expectations of teachers who were themselves teaching at the
limit of their knowledge.

Thus the planner needs to ask how far it is realistic to ask trainee teachers to adopt
new roles and carry them out effectively on the basis of a limited educational
background. Where programmes are available in parallel, at conventional colleges
and at a distance, distance-education teacher trainees tend to have a lower
educational background than those at regular residential teacher colleges. They are
often older, have more practical teaching experience and include higher
proportions of women who are trying to balance family commitments with part-
time study. Distance education may have a particular role here in widening
educational opportunities to people and to areas with an entrenched history of
educational deprivation.

To summarise, the planner needs to take account of:

the balance between the four elements of the curriculum for the
particular audience, taking account of teachers' own background
education;

the balance between preservice and inservice education;

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6 MODELS FOR OPEN AND DISTANCE LEARNING: TEACHER EDUCATION

the debates between traditional and progressive approaches and
views about the appropriateness of defining teacher education in
terms of a set of stated competencies;


realistic expectations that will help the progress of curriculum
reform but can be achieved with the support, interest and goodwill
of teachers.


6. OUTCOMES AND COSTS: DOES IT WORK?
Once the aims of a particular programme of teacher education have been
articulated it is possible to ask how far distance education may be useful in meeting
them and how it should be planned and organised. The planner's questions here
are about the trade-offs between conventional and distance-education approaches.

Distance education may have advantages in terms of access, scale, speed and cost.
In principle it can reach students at any distance and, by reaching large audiences,
provide inservice education to teachers more rapidly than would be possible
through conventional means. In some circumstances, the cost per student is likely
to be lower than the cost for conventional, face-to-face, programmes, especially
where these require student residence with all its associated costs. On the other
hand, at least some aspects of teacher education are about human interactions and
mediated education, done through print or broadcast or computer, may be an
inappropriate methodology. In our assessment of its strengths and weaknesses we
argued in the fol owing terms in our UNESCO report:

But there is a threefold case to be made for its legitimacy. First, the
evidence of public-sector open universities, and dual-mode universities
that teach both conventionally and at a distance, is that students can
achieve examination results that match those of conventional universities.
A significant proportion of students give up along the way and do not
complete their courses. But this is true of all students working part-time
and not a distinguishing mark of students learning at a distance.

Second, distance education has been powerfully effective in reaching
audiences who could not meet their educational needs from conventional
institutions. In Colombia, a radio-based school was, in the 1970s, reaching
over 100,000 rural peasant students every year. The National
Technological University in the United States is using satel ite and
broadcasting technology to meet the needs of engineers for postgraduate
study without their having to leave their jobs and attend a campus. In
China, the combined use of television, classroom sessions, and printed
materials is providing university education to about a third of all the
students in higher education. A church-based nongovernment
organisation, the American private sector, and the government authorities
in China have all perceived distance education as legitimate because of its
power to widen access to education.

Third, where open and distance learning provides opportunities for
student interaction with tutors, it allows open-ended dialogue, often
regarded as the touchstone of legitimate education. Thus, while open and
distance learning may lend itself to rote learning – as does learning in large
classrooms – this is not an essential or defining characteristic.

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MODELS FOR OPEN AND DISTANCE LEARNING: TEACHER EDUCATION
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The arguments are linked: open and distance learning is legitimate because
it has a record of success in terms of the measures applied to conventional
education, but would be of little interest if it simply replicated for the same
audience what could be done conventionally, and of little value if it got
people through their examinations at the expense of more serious
educational purposes.

(Perraton et al. 2002: 12)

The policy maker's judgment will be influenced by evidence on outcomes and on
costs. The evidence on outcomes is not as solid as we would like, reflecting the
shortage of good research on the outcomes of teacher education generally. Several
developing-country studies have found little difference in terms of classroom
effectiveness between qualified and unqualified teachers (cf. Avalos 1991,
Perraton 2000: 59-60, Torres 1996). Few distance-education projects have
followed trainee teachers into the classroom in order to see if their training made
them better teachers. Where they have, notably in Tanzania and Zimbabwe the
evidence shows that, while direct comparisons between teachers taught in different
ways are difficult, the classroom practice of teachers' taught at a distance stood up
comparatively well (Chale 1993, Chivore 1993, Mählck and Temu 1989, Perraton
1993: 394-5).

There is fuller evidence on three other indicators – of the number of students
reached by programmes, on completion rates, and on examination results or
learning gains. Many programmes have reached large numbers of students;
Tanzania trained 38,000 teachers at a distance in the 1970s; China uses television-
based distance education for teachers numbered in the millions; Pakistan and
Nigeria have used distance education for teacher audiences of 80,000 and 180,000
respectively. Where trainee teachers have been enrol ed en bloc in a training
programme, with a guarantee of improved qualifications and status on successfully
completing the course, completion rates have tended to be high. Lower
completion rates are reported where training amounts to secondary equivalence (in
Nigeria) and in a number of cases where students have enrol ed individually on
courses without any guarantee of direct financial benefit. In terms of examination
passes, a review of nine earlier case studies found that pass rates were between 50
and 90 per cent and argued that 'while examination success cannot be equated with
teaching capacity, we can legitimately assume that a reasonable examination pass
rate demonstrates that a programme was effective in teaching academic subjects'
(Perraton 1993: 393). Rather than look at examination results, we might want to
ask how well trainee teachers learned. Teacher education projects in Indonesia and
Sri Lanka set out to measure this and found reasonable evidence of effectiveness
that is in line with the evidence on examination results (Nielsen and Tatto 1993).
Evidence on the outcomes of a number of projects is set out in table 2, together
with information about costs.
Table 2: Effects and costs of some teacher education projects

Project, date, purpose
Numbers Outcomes
Costs

Inservice upgrading of
Each in range
Successful completion rate 88-93%.
n/a
unqualified primary school
600 to 1000
Anecdotal evidence of impact on
teachers, Botswana,
classroom performance.
Swaziland, Uganda
1967-78
Kenya programme for
8433 over 7
91% passed examination and gained
Cost per enrolment
unqualified primary school
years; annual
promotion.
relatively high in
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8 MODELS FOR OPEN AND DISTANCE LEARNING: TEACHER EDUCATION

teachers, to improve general
enrolment 850
No firm evidence on classroom
comparison with
educational background and
to 2000
performance.
alternatives
achieve secondary
examination passes 1967-73
Brazil Logos II inservice
24,400
80% pass rate
Costs lower than
programme for primary-
Availability of Logos II may have led alternative
school teachers using print
to increased migration from rural
and attendance at teachers'
schools by teachers acquiring
centres
qualification
Tanzania programme to
45 534 in three 83% qualified.
Cost per successful
recruit and train on the job
annual cohorts Positive evidence on classroom
trainee about half cost of
primary school teachers for
performance. Weaknesses in science
residential course
introduction of Universal
teaching and self-confidence among
Primary Education 1976-84
female teachers
Nepal RETT Basic teacher
3000
Completion rate 85%, pass rate 57%
Cost slightly lower than
education courses, using
alternative
radio to upgrade rural
primary school teachers
Zimbabwe Integrated
7353 over four 80 % pass rate.
n/a
Teacher Education
years
Positive evidence of classroom
(ZINTEC) for secondary
performance but difficult to draw
school leavers, trained on the
comparative conclusions
job for expansion of primary
schooling 1981-8
Nigeria National Teachers'

Success rate thought to be in range
Cost probably lower than
Institute training primary
186 713 over
25 to 30% of those entering;
conventional college
school teachers
period
compares favourably with
TCII course after 2 years

alternative; no evidence on
secondary education 1984-90
Enrolment of
classroom practice
NCE course after 5 years
14 909 on 1st

1990-
cycle and
21 000 students graduated 1994
26 657 on 2nd
cycle
Pakistan Primary Teachers'
83 658 total
56% completed course; 38% of
AIOU graduate costs 45-
Orientation Course (Allama
original enrolment passed
70% of conventional
Iqbal Open University)
examination Positive self-report on
university costs
introducing new curriculum
usefulness. No direct evidence of
to primary school teachers
classroom effects
1976-86
Indonesia Universitas
c 5000
Positive effects on subject mastery
Cost about 60% of
Terbuka upgrading course for
and in theory and practice in skills;
equivalent
lower secondary teachers
relatively poor results in

mathematics; apparent decline in

attitudes towards teaching
Sri Lanka National Institute
c5000
Positive effects on subject matter
Cost one-sixth to one
of Education training
and in theory and practice in skills;
third of alternative
primary-school teachers with
less successful than conventional
secondary level qualifications
college in mathematics


Uganda Northern Integrated
3 128 enrolled
88% completed and passed
Cost per student about
Teacher Education Project
examination; some evidence of
$2000 compared with
for primary school teachers
improved skills in teaching
$2500 in conventional
1993-95
competencies
college
Source: Perraton 2000: 80 – 1; Perraton and Creed 2000


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MODELS FOR OPEN AND DISTANCE LEARNING: TEACHER EDUCATION
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The evidence on outcomes needs to be set alongside the evidence on costs. A
number of studies have made broad comparisons between the costs of training
teachers conventionally and face-to-face. While these comparisons are necessarily
crude, they consistently show that,

with the relatively high completion rates often achieved in teacher
education, costs per successful student tend to compare favourably with
those of conventional education. This differential holds true both for
projects with quite modest costs per student, reflecting limited student
support, as in Pakistan [at the Allama Iqbal Open University Primary
Teachers Orientation Course], and those with relatively high costs incurred
for extensive student support and supervision of classroom practice, as in
Tanzania [in its large teacher education programme of 1976-84].

(Perraton 2000: 128)

The actual cost per distance-education student, or cost per successful student, is a
function of a number of factors of which the most significant are the scale of the
number of enrolments, the amount of face-to-face support provided, and the
sophistication of the technologies used. In looking at the comparative cost
effectiveness of conventional and distance-education approaches, some of the
most important differences flow from the fact that distance education is non-
residential, often part-time, and allows learners to work and study at the same time.
This in turn has led to differences in policy about funding (see page 19 below) and
in the opportunity costs of studying.

In considering options, the planner is likely to seek information and base
decisions on:

the scale of the programmes;
the media or technologies used (see below page 18);
the costs of face-to-face or residential study;
the cost of other student support;

the costs of teaching practice and of supervising or examining it; (see
below pages 15 - 16)
policy on charging fees (see below page 19);
the opportunity costs of taking teachers out of school for their own
education.


Some of the differences between conventional and distance education are
set out in table 3.


7. ORGANISATION: HOW IS IT ORGANISED AND MANAGED?
The planner considering the use of open and distance learning for teachers is faced
with a series of organisational questions:
how far should a programme be structured or unstructured?
what kind of tasks need to be undertaken to make distance education
work?
what are the options in terms of organisational structure?
within each of these options, where should responsibility rest for each of
the tasks?
how can teaching practice be organised, monitored and assessed?

Programmes and projects vary widely in the extent to which they are structured.
At one extreme, the BBC, along with other public-service broadcasters, puts out
broadcasts for teachers both nationally and internationally. They are intended to
International Research Foundation for Open Learning & The Commonwealth of Learning

10 MODELS FOR OPEN AND DISTANCE LEARNING: TEACHER EDUCATION

Table 3: Comparative costs of conventional and distance education for teachers


Conventional Distance
education
EXPENDITURE


Residence
Likely to be a significant proportion of Cost likely to be reduced where students
total costs
are in residence for smaller part of total
study time

Grants, allowances Often paid to full-time students
May be paid only for short periods of
residence

Staffing
Staff time dominated by face-to-face
Proportion of staff time required for
teaching
materials development and for tutoring
at a distance

Materials, media,
Likely to be modest
Costs likely to be higher and influenced
communication
by sophistication of media chosen;
economies of scale are possible

Student support
Level of expenditure determined by
Significant expenditure often needed for
amount of field supervision provided
isolated students and to supervise
classroom work

Annualised capital
Cost of teachers' colleges and facilities
Some capital required for distance-
likely to be a major capital item
education activities but these are
counterbalanced by reductions in costs
of college accommodation
OPPORTUNITY


COSTS
For students
Students may forgo notional income
Teachers may forgo income from private
by attending college
tuition while studying

For ministry of

If students teach while they study
education
ministries avoid costs of funding their
replacements

INCOME


Student fees
Rarely charged
Are sometimes charged, especially where
students are voluntarily upgrading their
qualifications


provide continuing education for teachers but without any requirement on teachers
to enrol, or take part in any formal activity in relation to them. With a slightly
more formal structure, the A-Plus programme in Brazil consists of a television
series for teachers combined with optional sessions in teachers' centres that
teachers can attend if they want to fol ow up ideas in the broadcasts. In other,
more formally structured programmes, teachers enrol on a course which is taught,
by print or broadcast or computer, and are required to submit assignments and
study regularly, much as if they were enrolled on a conventional face-to-face
course. The National Teachers' Institute in Nigeria, for example, enrols students
this way so that they have a route to becoming qualified teachers without attending
a conventional college. While the main focus of this policy guide is on structured
and semi-structured approaches, this is not meant to undervalue unstructured and
nonformal approaches; the need for the guide follows from the complexity of the
management issues involved in structured approaches. The convenience of
broadcasting, and the increasing availability of making materials available on the
internet, suggest that these approaches may be of major value to many teachers.
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Unfortunately the shortage of research studies means we have all too little data on
the impact of unstructured programmes.

An analysis of the functions needed to make open and distance learning work is
necessary in order to inform the choice between administrative options. To make
distance education work you need structures and facilities for seven main
functions.

Governance, planning, management and funding
Some of these functions will rest within a distance-teaching
institution and some outside.
Materials development and production
The development or acquisition of materials is fundamental to
distance education. Materials may be developed in-house, or
externally, in a variety of media. An institution will need not only
writers but people who can edit them, so that they work
effectively at a distance, and people to brief and train writers and
editors.
Materials reproduction and distribution
This may be done physical y, often through the mail, or
electronically in the case of broadcasts or computer-based
teaching.
Student recruitment, advice and support including the supervision of
classroom practice
Mechanisms will be needed to recruit students and then to
support them and provide feedback on their work. Where teacher
education programmes include a practical element, concerned
with their competence or skills in the classroom, arrangements are
also needed to supervise this.
Assessment and evaluation of learners
In many, though not all, programmes students need to be assessed
and their work examined or evaluated. The formal award of
qualifications may be outside the responsibility of the teaching
institution or may require accreditation by another agency.
Feedback system to allow for formative evaluation
While, in a sense, this is necessary for any organisation it needs
particular attention in a nonconventional form of education and
one in which students may be too far away for their dissatisfaction
to be heard when things go wrong.
Record systems
A formal system of records, of students and organisational
processes is indispensable.

A range of different organisational structures have been used for teacher education
at a distance which can be classified under six headings as in table 4.

Ad-hoc arrangements
In some cases a ministry of education has set up a project directly, making ad-hoc
arrangements for all the necessary functions. While this approach may harness
resources rapidly, it has not usually proved sustainable beyond a short-term
emergency.



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12 MODELS FOR OPEN AND DISTANCE LEARNING: TEACHER EDUCATION


Table 4: Some models for organising teacher education
Model Example Comments
Ad-hoc arrangements made by
Mubende Integrated Teacher
While this makes it possible to deploy
ministry of education
Education Project Uganda
resources quickly it may not be a sustainable
(emergency basic training
model
programmes for primary school

teachers)

Single or dual mode teachers'
National Teachers' Institute
The Nigerian case is the only example of a
college
Nigeria
specialised distance-teaching teachers' college
(initial teaching training and
continuing professional
development)

Single or dual-mode university
Indira Gandhi National Open
Many universities with distance-teaching
University; University of the West
capacity have been asked by ministries of
Indies
education to run programmes for teachers
(both offer inservice programmes

for teachers)

Multi-country programme
RESAFAD (Réseau Africain de
Can share international resources and be of
Formation à Distance) (running a
particular value for small states
programme of head teacher
training in west Africa)

NGO single-purpose project
Open Learning Systems
Speed and vibrancy of ngo activity has to be
Educational Trust (using radio to
balanced against problems of sustainability
support English teaching and help
and of coherence with government activity
train teachers inservice)


Consortia and partnerships
TV Futura Brazil (making training
If problems of integration can be overcome, a
opportunities available using
partnership of this kind may, as in Brazil,
broadcasting, print and sessions in
bring together an ngo, a broadcasting station,
study centres)
schools and a private-sector publisher



Single or dual-mode teachers’ college
More often, prime responsibility rests with a teachers' college, often teaching
conventionally as well as at a distance. Within the small country of Belize, the one
teacher-training col ege developed a part-time distance version of its conventional
initial teacher education programme, drawing on existing faculty members to
develop materials and train those who were to be responsible for classroom
supervision and marking assignments. Nigeria has a National Teachers Institute
which is a single-purpose institution, teaching entirely through open and distance
learning.

Single or dual-mode universities
Universities may have two relevant areas of expertise – in the content of teacher
education, where this is a university responsibility, and in the practice of open and
distance learning. While it may be possible to benefit from either of these areas of
expertise, there are sometimes problems of fit and adjustment if a university has no
experience, in, say, the education of primary-school teachers which has generally
been the responsibility of non-university teachers' colleges. Dual-mode
universities have also often faced practical difficulties in developing teaching
materials, mainly because of competing pressures on staff time.

Universities have run supply-led and demand-led programmes. In some instances
ministries of education have turned to a university to supply a national programme
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13

because it has the infrastructure for materials development and distribution. In
other cases, a university has responded to demand from teachers by developing
courses relevant to their continuing professional development. Indira Gandhi
National Open University in India, for example, runs programmes on which
students enrol individually, paying their own fees, in order to raise the level of their
qualifications.

Multicountry programmes
There is limited, but growing, experience of programmes that go across frontiers.
In francophone Africa, RESAFAD has been working on projects to develop
resources that can be shared across frontiers. The regional universities in the West
Indies and the South Pacific have responsibilities in teacher education. The
European Commission has supported a European-wide agreement on the content
and certification of information and communication technologies in schools while
the Commonwealth of Learning has designed a co-operative programme for
teachers and administrators in eight southern African countries.

Nongovernment organisations
Some nongovernment organisations have played a part in teacher education at a
distance, either in parallel with or linked with the public education service. With
external, donor, funding the Open Learning Systems Education Trust (OLSET) in
South Africa, for example, is offering training for teachers in the context of its
radio programme for schools. Nongovernment organisations have played a
particularly strong role where, as in Latin America, a pluralist tradition assumes
they have a major role in public education.

Consortia and partnerships
In many cases, it will not be possible for any one institution to carry out all the
functions needed for open and distance learning; instead they have to be shared
between several partners. An open university, for example, may be contracted by a
ministry of education for the development and central management of a
programme but this is likely also to involve coordination or cooperation with any
national accrediting agency, with curriculum bodies and possibly with public or
private-sector broadcasting organisations. Cooperation with local colleges of
education may be necessary for the supervision and management of the practical
side of teacher education. Table 5 illustrates some of the patterns for cooperation
that have been developed. It shows that, in every one of these cases, responsibility
for some aspect of teacher training was shared between different partners.

Partnerships tend to be fragile especially where different partners could, if they
chose, replace each other. They are stronger if their functions are quite different,
as, for example, where one partner has a mechanism for developing material and
another for accreditation, but with no overlap between them. The idea of
partnerships has been driven by three forces: the shift towards decentralisation, an
increase in school-based teacher education, and decisions to integrate distance-
education and conventional approaches. While the benefits of partnerships are
obvious, they present management difficulties and

as might be expected, have functioned with varying degrees of
success. The complexity, time and cost of managing these
crucial relationships with partners tend to be underestimated
at the outset, especially when several col eges and regional or
district authorities are involved. Furthermore, consistency of
quality is not easy to achieve in large geographically dispersed
programmes with decentralised field operations, which also
need to be responsive to local conditions. Problems in
managing the system revolve around issues of responsibility,
role definition, accountability, location of decision-making,
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14 MODELS FOR OPEN AND DISTANCE LEARNING: TEACHER EDUCATION


Table 5: Distribution of responsibilities within programmes

Location of
Certificate with School
MIITEP Programme,
PGCE, Open
DEP-DPEPII, IGNOU,
English in Action,
A-Plus, Brazil
National Teachers'
responsibility
Experience, Belize
Malawi
University, UK
India
OLSET, South Africa

Institute, Nigeria






Governance, planning, Ministry of Education and
MoE
OU guided by Teacher
Collaboration of national,
OLSET
Consortium of private-
NTI
management
Belize Teacher Training
Training Agency (TTA)
state and district agencies
sector and ngo agencies
College (BTTC)
with management
decentralised to districts

Funding
Government Government
Government
Government
Donor
Private sponsors
Government, student fees

Materials development BTTC
University of Malawi
OU with BBC for
Indira Gandhi National
OLSET
TV-Futura with
NTI
and production
broadcasts
Open University (IGNOU)
Community Mobilisation
in collaboration
Network (CMN)
Distribution
BTTC
6 Teacher Training
OU - BBC
IGNOU in collaboration.
South African
National educational
NTI regional offices in 36
material reproduction
Colleges.
Broadcasting
channel and local re-
states.
and distribution
Corporation,,
broadcasting
community radio

stations, OLSET

Teacher trainee
BTTC District
Education
OU
Shared between IGNOU
OLSET district
TV advertising and CMN
NTI regional offices.
recruitment
Officers and TTCs
Delhi, IGNOU regional
coordinators

centres, District Institute of

Education and Training
(DIETs)
Tutoring and
District Education Centres,
District tutors
School-based mentors and
OLSET district
CMN and school
NTI
counselling
BTTC, field supervisors.
OU tutors.
coordinators .
coordinators
student support

Teaching practice
District classroom teacher-
College-based phase:
School-based mentors
School-based
Occasional by district
None
Limited, by staff of
supervision
supervisors
college tutors.
programme supervisors
teachers' colleges
Distance-mode phase:
head teachers, regional
supervisors and college
tutors

Assessment or
Level 1: MoE
Malawi National
Certificate awarded by
IGNOU.
None
None
Accreditation: National
accreditation
Level 2: Joint Board of
Examination Board
OU. Recognition as
Commission for Colleges
assessment and
Teacher Education

teaching qualification by
of Education.
evaluation of learners
TTA
Teaching practice externally

moderated by mainstream
teacher education colleges.

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MODELS FOR OPEN AND DISTANCE LEARNING: TEACHER EDUCATION
15


communication and the control and co-ordination of part-
time support staff.
(Robinson, 1997: 126)

Choosing between organisational options
The choice between options – or the development of a new combination of them
– is likely to be a function of five issues: governance, funding, timing, capacity and
scale.

Questions of governance are about responsibility for and control of the
various parts of the distance-teaching system. Who decides about which of
the functions identified above? How are conflicts between any of the
parties resolved?

The level and source of funding may be critical: donor funds, for example,
may be available only to a government agency or, the reverse, only to a
nongovernment organisation.

If a project is for a limited purpose and for a short period then ad-hoc
arrangements may have a positive advantage. Tanzania, for example, was
able to set up a teacher-education programme to expand its teaching force
in a short time, calling on a wide range of national resources, in order to
train an urgently needed 40,000 teachers. But it is often difficult to turn
short-term arrangements into a permanent system and a one-off emergency
solution to a problem may jeopardise the development of a sustainable
structure.

Where an institution – whether an open university or an international
agency like the Commonwealth of Learning – has existing capacity to
undertake some distance-education functions, this may be a powerful
argument for using them and setting up a programme in cooperation with
them. In contrast, if a college is launching a new programme of distance
education it will be necessary to set up the necessary infrastructure to
develop materials and teach students.

The scale of a programme, or of a country, may determine the model to be
chosen. Small states in particular may need to rely on a regional or
international institution because of the limited facilities within country.
Teacher education at a distance has, as already noted, been a major interest
of the University of the South Pacific since its establishment.

In considering the balance of advantages for any one model, and developing
proposals that take account of those issues, the most useful touchstone may be to
consider the links between the programme and the rest of teacher education.
Unless these links are in place then an unorthodox programme has little chance of
effectiveness or even of survival. In developing the links it is necessary, too, to
keep in mind relationships between the centre and the periphery: from the student-
teachers' point of view the centre may be the school in which they are working and
the distance-teaching institution the periphery; from the ministry of education,
both may look remote. From the planner's point of view the links between them
are of paramount importance.

Teaching practice
No matter which organisational option is chosen, decisions will be needed about
the management, supervision and often assessment of teaching practice. This
presents logistical difficulties in any programme of teacher education and these are
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16 MODELS FOR OPEN AND DISTANCE LEARNING: TEACHER EDUCATION

likely to be magnified for large-scale programmes and scattered student audiences.
Some projects and programmes have avoided the issue. Where, for example, the
aim is to raise the general education of teachers then it may be legitimate not to
worry about their classroom practice. But where programmes aim to have a direct
influence on teachers' classroom practice then the issue needs to be addressed.
Five approaches are distinguished in table 6. The simplest is avoidance: Indira
Gandhi National Open University's certificate programme was for experienced
teachers and was about counsel ing rather than classroom activity. In Belize
microteaching was used as a substitute for classroom visits. Where these are
arranged they may be combined in a separate block – perhaps simpler
administratively or integrated with the rest of the course – encouraging links
between theory and practice. There are examples of the use of school-based
mentors to supervise classroom work.

Table 6: Models of organising teaching practice
Model Examples
1. No practicum offered at all
Certificate in Guidance, IGNOU (India)

2. College-based micro-teaching
Belize Teacher Training College

3. Classroom-based practicum as a
Diploma in Education, IGNOU (India),
separate block in a course, usually placed
after academic blocks.

4. Classroom-based practicum supervised Zimbabwe ZINTEC project
by visiting staff from college or ministry

5. Classroom-based practicum under the
Open University (Britain) Postgraduate Certificate
guidance of a mentor within the school
of Education

For the manager, the simplest arrangement is to avoid any element of teaching
practice, or to centralise arrangements as in the Belize example. But, where
programmes are intended to have a direct influence on teachers' classroom
practice, there is an imperative to supervise and monitor this. In many countries
the third or fourth model has been adopted so that staff from the distance-
teaching institution or one of its partners visit teachers in their individual
classrooms. Costs and logistics make this a difficult option but it is often the only
realistic one.

The fifth model, of employing school-based mentors has attracted widespread
interest. It needs teachers within the system who have themselves sufficient
experience and understanding of education to act as mentors, as well as a structure
to brief and train them and to monitor their work. In many developing countries,
ministries of education conclude that these conditions cannot be met. It has also
been criticised as a system which serves to replicate the existing culture and values
of the schools where the mentors and their trainee teachers are working. On the
other hand, in discussing their experience, the Open University argued that their
school-based approach meant that it was possible to ensure:

that all the open and distance course text and resources should be directly
related to school practice. No activity, reading or observation could be set
that did not directly relate to experience in schools: the link had to be
explicit. The course therefore also prescribes a curriculum of school activities
This school activities framework is directly related to the course structure
and assessment model and allows for increasingly demanding activities,
covering all aspects of the teaching role, as the programme progresses.

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17

(Moon and Leach 1997: 5)
To sum up, the planner's first option it between structured and
unstructured approaches. Then, for any structured approach, it is necessary

to arrange for and locate responsibility for seven functions: governance,
materials development and production, their distribution, student support
and supervision, assessment, feedback, and record keeping. A choice
between organisational options then needs to be made, taking account of
the available institutional infrastructure. In choosing between them, issues
of communication and links between partners will be important as will the
arrangements for trainee teachers' classroom practice. The choice will also
be influenced by questions of governance and funding, by the short- or
long-term nature of the programme, the availability of resources and the
size of the country concerned.


8. METHODS: WHAT ARE THE CHOICES OF TECHNOLOGY?
In principle, distance educators may be able to choose from a wide range of
technologies, from print to broadcasting to a variety of applications of computer-
based information and communication technologies. In practice the choice is
likely to be constrained by practicalities and costs, as wel as by educational
purpose. As a starting point the planner needs to consider how far the institution
and the learner both have access to a particular technology: broadcasting, for
example, may look attractive to the planner but is no use if most students are
outside the range of a transmitter or broadcasting time is available only at
inappropriate hours. Information about costs may be next in importance, as
technologies vary in their costs and their cost behaviour. The most significant
difference in behaviour is between costs where economies of scale are possible,
such as radio, and those where they are negligible, such as face-to-face tutoring or
marking individual assignments.

In choosing technologies it is also necessary to distinguish between their two main
functions of distributing teaching material and allowing interaction between tutor
and student. Again, economies are more likely to be available in distribution,
where it costs no more to broadcast to a thousand students than a hundred, than
in interaction. The division between the two functions is usually clearcut. Radio,
for example, is a one-way medium which can only distribute teaching to learners
while telephone tutoring, or face-to-face meetings, allow interaction. The new
information and communication technologies provide the single main exception to
this rule; if students have internet access then it can be used both to distribute
teaching material to them and as a means of two-way communication. One
consequence of this is likely to be a reduction in the institution's costs and an
increase in the student's, where responsibility for reproducing printed matter is
shifted from the institution to the learner. But this is very much the exception:
more often the planner needs to balance the advantages of, say, broadcasting
against print as media for distribution and face-to-face against written
opportunities for feedback from students.

There is no simple match between educational purpose and technology. Generally,
there is a case for using more than one technology in open and distance learning,
partly because this is likely to be more interesting for the learner, partly as an
insurance policy (if the mail does not get through the broadcast may), partly
because there may be educational advantages in using one medium rather than
another (audio tapes have an advantage over print in teaching the pronunciation of
a language). This in turn may drive a teaching institution into seeking some kind
of partnership (see page 13) if it needs expertise or facilities that are outside its
own capacity. Beyond that, it is possible to draw some general conclusions about
the strengths and weaknesses of a range of technologies and the preconditions
needed for their use. Some of these preconditions are about facilities needed by
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18 MODELS FOR OPEN AND DISTANCE LEARNING: TEACHER EDUCATION

the teaching institution, such as access to broadcasting capacity for example, and
others about what is needed by the learner. In looking at these options the planner
will also need to consider where the costs are likely to fall and how they are shared
between the teaching institution and the learner. These are set out in table 7.

Technology choice is likely to be a function of access, cost and educational
function. A technology is useful only if both the institution and the learner
have appropriate access to it. The cost structure, and the possibility of
economies of scale, differ from one technology to another. Plans also need
to consider how far costs, in relation to any particular technology, fall on the
tutor or the student. In making an educational choice the key distinction is
between the use of technology to distribute teaching material and to allow
two-way communication for tutor-student, and possibly student-student,

interaction.

Table 7: Some technologies for teacher education

Technology and
Strengths and
Prerequisites Cost
behaviour
application
weaknesses
Print
Permanent,
Modest for
Fixed costs for
Can provide
convenient, medium production and
development of
information in a
Can play variety of
reproduction
master copy,
structured way
roles
Lengthy
variable costs for
Often used as major
May not motivate
preparation time
reproduction and
teaching medium
students if used
Arrangements
distribution
alone
needed for physical

distribution
Radio
Can be topical and
Basic studio and
Production cost
Used to provide
lively
production facilities higher than for
topical information,
Can reach all or
Access to
print
motivate teachers, and most teachers at the
broadcasting
Most costs fall on
provide variety of
same time
agency
producer not
authentic voices
Ephemeral
Availability of
receiver
Constrained by
radios and mains
Economies of
available time slots
electricity or
scale possible
and sometimes
batteries
regulation

Audiocassettes
Can provide useful,
Modest, subject to
Costs for
Many functions
permanent resource
technical quality
production,
comparable to radio
without time
required
reproduction and
Can provide aural
constraints inherent
Needs physical
distribution
examples (e.g.
in radio
distribution and
No economies of
languages)
Demands physical
availability of
scale

distribution
cassette recorders
Television
Visual interest and
Access to broadcast High central costs
To reach large
appeal
production and
for production and
audiences, raise
Not always
transmission
transmission; may
awareness, show
accessible to
facilities
be 10 times cost of
variety of processes
teachers
radio
and school contexts
Economies of
scale make
appropriate only
for large audiences


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19


Audio and
Can support
Detailed
High cost
videconferencing
development of
preparation needed (especially for
Allows live interaction scattered groups of
for multi-site group video) for
with learners
teachers
discussions
conference

Needs access to
Technical facilities
equipment
sophisticated
both for
Costs may be
equipment at both
institutions and
acceptable if there
ends
teachers or groups
are significant
of teachers
reductions in
travelling costs for
learners

Computers
Potential availability
Needs availability
Costs incurred for
To provide access to
of huge amount of
of software,
hardware,
material on cd-roms
material
technical support
software,
and local databases
services, and
maintenance and
Necessary for some
training
training
teaching about icts
opportunities for
Significant costs
themselves
teachers
borne at reception

end especially for
peripherals (e.g.
printer, toner,
paper)
Computer
Ease of
As for computers
As for computers
communication
communication
but also demands
but local costs
Enables teacher to
balanced against
working access to
increased.
participate in larger
costs and
internet service
Savings for
professional
convenience of
provider
institution if used
communities
access to computer
to distribute
Allows learner rapid
facilities
materials but costs
tutor interaction;
then falling on
access to internet
recipient
resources
Allows easy
distribution of
resources to teachers



9. FUNDING: WHO IS PAYING FOR IT?
Much, probably most, teacher education is paid for by governments. In particular,
conventional full-time preservice teacher education has generally been funded in
this way with little if any cost falling on the student or on other sources of revenue.
But this is not universally the case. Where teachers are enrolling individually, with
institutions in the public or private sector, in order to get an extra qualification,
they are often expected to meet some of the cost. And where teachers are
studying part-time while they are employed, some governments argue that they can
therefore meet some or all of the costs of their study themselves.

The result is that distance-education programmes for teachers are funded from
four different kinds of source: from government, from student fees, from the
private, local and nongovernment sector, and from donors and funding agencies.
Often a programme is funded from more than one source. A review of ten case
studies of teacher education found the pattern of funding in table 8, with the
British example being the only one where all costs were met by government and
China, India and Nigeria relying on a mixture of government expenditure and
student fees. Funding agencies have long been responsible for some expenditure
on teacher education, through government programmes as in Mongolia or
nongovernment as with OLSET in South Africa. Generally, students are more
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20 MODELS FOR OPEN AND DISTANCE LEARNING: TEACHER EDUCATION

likely to be asked to pay their own costs when they are enrol ed as individuals, on a
course leading to an advanced qualification.

There are trade-offs between each of the options. If teacher education is seen as
fundamental to the quality of education, then there is a public-policy argument for
its being funded directly by a ministry of education, alongside primary and
secondary education. In practice, the shortage of central government funds have
led some institutions to seek funds outside the ministry or to pass on some of the
costs to the learners. While this may bring flexibility for the manager, the
imposition of student fees may hold down enrolment and is likely to discourage
students and to be socially regressive.

There is little reported experience of the use of community resources in teacher
education of this kind. Nongovernment organisations have played a part in some
countries. In Brazil, for example, funding was generated by an established
consortium while in South Africa OLSET has drawn funds from international
funding agencies. While nongovernment organisations may have a freedom to
innovate, and a freedom from government regulation, these have to be balanced
against difficulties they may face in integrating their work with regular state activity
and in achieving long-term sustainability. External finance from funding agencies
in particular may be unsustainable. Many funding agencies have been willing to
meet capital costs, and to fund pilot projects, but expect governments to meet
recurrent and continuing costs. The trade-off here is often between initial freedom
of action, bought with external funds, and long-term integration and sustainability.
If a teacher-education programme is more than a one-off solution to a crisis, then
those questions of sustainability need attention from the outset.

The planner needs to consider trade-offs between alternative sources of
funding which may include government funds, student fees, the private,
local and nongovernment sector, and funding agencies. In considering
these trade-offs, questions of equity and access and of sustainability, are
likely to be all-important
.

10. ACCREDITATION AND ASSESSMENT
Accreditation and assessment are linked and sometimes present particular
difficulties for distance education. Accreditation refers to formal recognition of
learning while assessment may relate to any process of testing students.
In principle, giving credit for teacher education at a distance is no different from
its award for conventional programmes. In practice, difficulties of two kinds have
been faced. The first set of difficulties is about parity of esteem. If a distance-
teaching programme leads to a different qualification from that awarded for
conventional course, the latter will generally be regarded as of higher status. If the
same qualification, with the same examining structure, is used for two courses that
are taught differently, then the methods of assessment may not be appropriate for
one audience or the other. The second set of difficulties are about the practicality
of examining, and in particular of examining any practical work, where students are
scattered. (We come back to this below in considering assessment.) The link
between the two sets bears on public perception of a qualification gained through
distance education. Where distance-education programmes are tightly integrated
with teacher education generally, both kinds of difficulty are minimised. Where,
for example, distance education is part of the normal pattern of teacher education,
with all students doing some of this in college and some at a distance, then
problems of examining and of acceptability are likely to be reduced.


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MODELS FOR OPEN AND DISTANCE LEARNING: TEACHER EDUCATION
21

Table 8: Funding of some programmes
Programme Source
of
funding

Government Student Private, local,
Donors and
fees
nongovernment funding agencies
sector
Brazil (television-led continuing




education on many topics, non-


formal: ‘journalism in the


service of teacher education’).

Burkina Faso (structured




programme of headteacher

training)

Chile (structured programme




for ICT training)


China (structured programmes,




mostly academic subjects,


leading to qualification for


teaching)
India (structured programme




for teachers and others on child


guidance)


Mongolia (resource-based, non-




formal provision of materials


on child-centred teaching


methods)
Nigeria (structured programme




of studies leading to teaching


qualification)


South Africa: OLSET (radio-




based programme for



improving English learning and



teaching methods)
South Africa: UNISA




(structured programme leading

to teaching qualifications)

United Kingdom (structured




school-based programme of initial

teacher training, leading to

qualification)
Source: Perraton et al. 2001: 37; Robinson and Latchem 2001: 42
In considering assessment, we need to take account of the different aims or
purposes of teacher education. As noted previously, it may be concerned, at one
level, with increasing teachers' knowledge and understanding of academic subjects
or of pedagogy. At the next level, teachers may be able to apply their knowledge
to their practice and then, beyond that, actually to do so in the classroom. In
designing an assessment system we need to consider all three levels in this
hierarchy. In an analysis of this in relation to open and distance learning,
Robinson points out that the difficulties of assessing students working through
distance education parallel the difficulties in using it for teaching (Robinson 1997:
130-3). Distinguishing between the levels of assessment, as in table 9 she points
out that
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22 MODELS FOR OPEN AND DISTANCE LEARNING: TEACHER EDUCATION

Knowledge and understanding are easier for a distance education provider
to assess than practice and performance. Assessment of a student's
pedagogical skills, the outcomes, is difficult for distance educators to do
alone since it needs first-hand observation and authentication. As the
model in table [9] shows it becomes more complex organisationally for a
distance education provider and the costs rise, as assessment moves from
Level 1 (knowledge and understanding) to Level 3 (practice and
performance), that is from standard patterns of assessment of knowledge
for large groups to assessment of individual performance and difference.
One strength of distance education is its capacity to deal with large
numbers, one limitation is its inability to deal easily with the individual.

(Robinson 1997:131)

There are, therefore, no particular difficulties in assessing teachers' knowledge and
understanding, which may be the main aim of a programme that concentrates on
improving teachers' general education or their knowledge in one particular area;
assessment can be built into teachers' written work It becomes more difficult if we
move up one level and ask how far teachers are applying their knowledge to
practice, although it is possible to design learning materials, in a variety of media,
that ask teachers to undertake activities in the classroom and report on them. The
tutor can then guide the student and at the same time assess how far knowledge
has in fact been applied to practice. More difficulties arise at the third level, when
we ask how far teachers are applying what they have learned in the classroom. Just
as managing and supervising classroom practice present particular difficulties for
open and distance learning so does its assessment. But without some measures of
assessment at this level we will not know whether teacher education has worked in
the basic sense of changing teachers' activities in the classroom. If this centrally
important kind of assessment is to be undertaken, a distance-teaching institution
needs to work with partners on the ground as it will in supervising teaching
practice. There is some international experience to guide us here. The National
Teachers' Institute in Nigeria produced a standard grid for assessment of
classroom practice by external supervisors. At the British Open University,
students were required to keep a 'professional development portfolio' throughout
their postgraduate certificate; this included assessment by the school mentor and
was submitted to the university at the end of the course for marking.



Accreditation may raise issues about the recognition of qualifications
obtained at a distance and about the practicality of examining remote
students and of their classroom work. Assessment needs to take account of
the purpose of a teacher-education programme and the levels of
assessment, from knowledge and understanding, through knowledge
applied to practice to practice and performance. Assessment becomes more
difficult as one moves up this hierarchy but is necessary if one is to know
about the impact of a programme on schools and the children within them.










International Research Foundation for Open Learning & The Commonwealth of Learning


MODELS FOR OPEN AND DISTANCE LEARNING: TEACHER EDUCATION
23

Table 9: Assessing teachers' knowledge and practice at a distance
Teachers' knowledge and practice
Nature of assessment
Implications for distance education
Level 1: Knowledge and understanding




Of academic subjects to be
Written work (assignments), Can assess learning and give
taught.
essays, course tests of final
feedback to students on a large scale
Of pedagogical concepts, ideas
examinations.
(hundreds or thousands).
and theory.
Can achieve economies of scale
(standard assignments).
Can provide well-designed
assignments because of the resource
put into course design; may also
retreat into over-use of multiple-
choice questions for administrative
convenience.
Assignments may remain too
theoretical or unrelated to the
realities of classroom life, or lack
regional relevance.

Level 2: Knowledge applied to practice




Application of knowledge to
Written reports and
Good learning materials can
teacher's own context; testing out accounts of things done
structure this process for the teacher
and interpreting ideas about
(description and analysis of
(distance not a barrier).
pedagogy; evaluating practical
activities such as teaching a
Can support linkage between theory
activities and experiments, and
mathematical topic a new
and practice.
reflecting on them.
way; collecting evidence in a Not possible for a distance education
child observation study;
provider to tell from the student's
organizing a classroom
reports how authentic an account is
differently; or developing
given, for example, that classroom
new language and reading
practice matches what is described.
activities).
Can be more time-consuming and

expensive for a distance education
provider to assess (non-standard
assignments, greater individual
differences).

Level 3: Practice and performance





Enactment of knowledge and
Direct observation and
Much more complex to organise and
ideas. Demonstration of
authentication of individual
manage than Level 1.
competences and skills.
teacher performance.
More labour-intensive and expensive
than Level 1; approximates more
closely to costs of conventional
training.
Requires more support staff in a
variety of roles than Level 1; needs
more staff training provision; more
support materials; more monitoring
and management.
Needs local partners. Cannot be
done at a distance (without
sophisticated interactive
technologies).
Source: Work undertaken by Bernadette Robinson and reported in Perraton et al. 2002

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24 MODELS FOR OPEN AND DISTANCE LEARNING: TEACHER EDUCATION

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