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About the distance learning program at the Iceland University of Education Þuríður Jóhannsdóttir March 16. 2004 Völvunetið . Flexibility and Responsibility in Teacher Education: Experiences and Possibilities in Iceland and North-Norway. Paper presented at the NERA congress:
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About the distance learning program at the Iceland University of EducationÞuríður Jóhannsdóttir March 16. 2004Völvunetið
Flexibility and Responsibility in Teacher Education: Experiences and Possibilities in Iceland and North-Norway Paper presented at the NERA congress: Randi Skelmo og Þuríður Jóhannsdóttir • Iceland University of Education in Reykjavík • Department of Teacher Education in Tromsø University College • serving the need for having educated teachers in sparsely populated rural areas
Methods and theoretical background • How different needs of communities and individuals have been met with flexible programs, • the important role that the Internet has played in opening up new possibilities for distance education • How the use of diverse ICT tools has influenced the structure of the programs as well as both learning tasks and teaching methods • Situated learning - learning is a function of the activity, context, and culture in which it is situated • Activity theory used to enhance understanding where both learning and teaching are looked upon as activities, performed in a certain context that is historically situated
The Case of the Iceland University of Education • over 2000 students, of which more than 50% are enrolled in distance education programs. • IUE has played a leading role in the development of distance education on the Internet in Iceland
First steps in flexible teacher education in Iceland • 1979 one-time opportunity for people that had served in rural schools • teacher shortages in rural communities • 1988 – still need • Self-studies played a crucial role • Seen in the light of situated learning theories, all learning can be understood as some kind of enculturation • with that in mind, the advantages of being a part of the school culture while simultaneously learning to become a teacher are obvious.
New Possibilities Open Up with the Internet • In January 1993: a full Bachelor of Education (B. Ed.) degree through distance education using the new possibilities that were opening up with ICT • organized as a part-time course • E-mail was supposed to be the main media of communication • correspondence school using e-mail • Students and staff alike recognized the importance of meeting face-to-face
Technological and Pedagogical Support in the Community • Early build-up of Internet connections in Icelandic primary schools through the Icelandic Educational Network – Ísmennt • Ísmennt: a grassroots movement of several rural schools in North Iceland • The distance program could rely on their support • District educational offices supporting the student’s access to necessary technology. • These offices were also important promoters of this educational opportunity for rural schools • Student teachers had job in local schools
The Use of ICT as a tool in Distance Education • E-mail mailing lists make it possible to communicate in a collective way • A community of learners on the Internet • Web-based solutions have made discussion and collaboration even easier • Now a web site is set up for each course in the distance program, either in systems like WebCT, or an open web site that teachers make
Learning tasks • Discussions about the learning material • Publishing completed assignments on the course-web • Some teachers have asked the students to keep a digital portfolio • Evaluations of distance students • and for the students to monitor their progress
E-Learning award year 2002 • The teacher, Salvör Gissurardóttir, used digital portfolios with multimodal representations of learning assignments in a creative and successful way. • The novelty was also a new way of using blogg (web-log) both • to motivate and • to map students’ learning • as well as enhancing the learning community, as the students were able to follow their fellow students’ learning logs
More interesting examples • History courses where students (and teachers) have used an open web site to publish historical information on the Icelandic turf-house tradition http://saga.khi.is/torf • A database with information collected from old people in their families or communities, in text, drawing, and photo formats • Teacher: Þorsteinn Helgason
Interesting examples - 3 • BarnUng a Web on children´s litterature • Aimed at teachers and student teachers, with the Internet playing a key role as a medium and environment for learning • Building on the learning theories of social constructivism, the web is a common arena for the teacher and the students to construct knowledge • A resource for primary school teachers, supporting them and their pupils to use children’s literature in the classroom • Teacher: Þuríður Jóhannsdóttir
The Development in Iceland • Policy to be an open and flexible institution that offers all its educational programs at a distance through the Internet • This form of education is becoming a known and popular form for learning • Life-long learning centres in rural communities support distance learners • Positive effects of distance teacher education in rural communities • Continuing – graduate studies
The driving motivation • No longer shortage of educated teachers in rural communities • But demand for open and flexible education in an educational market • Emerging needs in society for new form and content in education • The universities’ role to be alert participants in dialogue with their social environment
Challenges Ahead • Be prepared to respond to demands from non-traditional student groups • The strength of the flexible teacher education programs has been that the teacher students had jobs as teachers in the schools • Now the teacher students, recruited to distance learning programs, do not have to have teacher experience nor do they have to live in the countryside. • the teacher educators cannot assume that teacher students are working at local schools.
Distance learning in social context • The first distance-learning programs involving the use of the Internet in Iceland in 1993 is a good example of how studies were planned in a social and techno-cultural context where distance teaching and learning activity was scaffolded by both ICT technology and the school communities in the district.
More challenges • Heterogeneous student groups • Distance students are in different places and different social positions with inherent differences in possibilities and interests • The teachers’ challenge to learn to use ICT-tools to support students • Extend their professionalism to include distance teaching and learning • Both technical and social contexts are important