Options

The Digital Palace
This item is part of the public WebDB named The Digital Palace - Add Feedback
EU e-learning papers   28/05/2007 - 09:42:49
Summary

The article is a preview of the HELIOS Yearly Report 2007, the final publication of the
HELIOS project, which will present the main e-Learning developments of the past two years
in Europe and review the debate on ICT-related innovation in education and training systems.  
 
In particular, the article reflects on the present European debate on e-Learning, lifelong
learning and ICT-driven innovation in EU education and training systems
. Starting from
analysing the terminological and conceptual crisis that the very concept of e-Learning seems
to be undergoing at the moment, the article states that, paradoxically, the practice of using
ICT to support learning processes seems to be more diffused and better articulated than ever
before. Furthermore, while in the year 2000, e-Learning was perceived as a single mega-
trend for education and corporate systems, experience has shown that this is not true. In fact,
the purpose, the pedagogical models – or rather the learning patrimony – the organisation and
the economic assumption of e-Learning are extremely differentiated, not only according to
the learning sub-system (school, higher education, vocational training, etc.) but also
according to the visions of the world of those in charge of promoting and designing e-
Learning systems.
 
To better grasp these different kinds and visions of e-Learning far beyond the classical sector
distinction, HELIOS is proposing the concept of e-Learning Territories, additional layers of
differentiation and articulation of the “ICT for learning” phenomenon, able to better
understand the present and future dynamics of e-Learning.
 
The relation between e-Learning and innovation in learning is then explored; the HELIOS
results demonstrate that, apart from the terminological trends and hypes, the “ideal place” for
new e-Learning is not where consolidated knowledge has to be spread but rather where new
knowledge is developed, where innovation objectives are to be shared and achieved in a
participative way.  
 
There is then reflection on how HELIOS envisages e-Learning in the year 2010, and
specifically on the different paces of change in different e-Learning territories. Typically, the
speed observed is higher in informal learning environments, still relatively high in the
corporate environment and rather low in institutional education and training.  
 
As a general conclusion, the findings of the HELIOS observatory are that the new place for e-
Learning as a catalyst of innovation and an enhancer of informal learning processes requires
a completely new policy approach
, in which education policy-makers are not the only, and
maybe not even the main, actors. Learning has to be encouraged when and where it occurs:
local and regional development policy-makers are very well placed to implement meaningful
policies in this respect.

Original Location: http://www.elearningpapers.eu/index.php?pagedoc

Drill Down Search: e-learning learn Keywords: e-learning learn

Related public Items that share at least one of the item’s keywords.
3 related items were found. (1 to 3 shown) SlideShow 
23770 A genius explains genius learn memory savant math 31/03/2007 - 16:36:34

Telecommunity wide Keyword Search
You can also search for the following keywords in all public Telecommunity WebDB Items: e-learning · learn ·