This is a (quick) answer to a question Howard Rosenberg made in a comment last Friday.
His questions were:
- If one would like to offer on-line training to developing
countries, how would one go about getting involved in such an endeavor? - Thru NGOs?
- Which ones?
My immediate answer is: errr, umm… oooops.
The approach of the Cooperation for Development programme at the Open University of Catalonia is quite different or, if you prefer, similar to what it is pointed in question #2.
Put it simple:
- As a University we think our expertise is not cooperation for development, but education and training (and research and knowledge spreading, but this is another part of the story)
- As a virtual (and only virtual) University, we believe our main added value is how to deal with online learning
- We thus empower NGOs for free on how to deal with online learning: instructional design for e-learning projects, online teaching, etc.
- What NGOs? Don’t know. Mainly, they get to as and ask for cooperation.
- Of course big NGOs have more resources (human over all) and a wider vision concerning investement, training, capacity building, etc. so they are our main target, explicitly or implicitly
Don’t know if I answered the question… but I guess it was a difficult one ;)
If you need to cite this article in a formal way (i.e. for bibliographical purposes) I dare suggest:
Peña-López, I. (2005) “On-line training to developing countries: how to” In ICTlogy,
#20, May 2005. Barcelona: ICTlogy.
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