Home  |  Newsletter | Feedback | Advertise - Online  | Help

Google
Web dqindia.com
Search by issue  | Sitemap

• Visit pcquest.com to know all about the business benefits of IT infrastructure outsourcing • Ad : Visit the New Living Digital 2.0

 
Home > Editorial

Wherever you go, your classroom follows
High cost of courses and bandwidth, and low penetration of PCs are some of the factors causing sluggish growth of online education in India
Shyam Malhotra
Monday, October 17, 2005
Print Comment Email DiggDigg DeliciousDel.icio.us RedittReddit TwitterTwitter

From all the things that technology can bring, I love this concept of learning anywhere, anytime. It gives people the freedom to study at their convenience. It can, over a period of time, cut the cost of education, ensure globalization and even cut the learning time by as much as 40%, as per some studies.

Welcome to the world of online education, or e-learning, as it is more commonly known as.

Online education can be classified into corporate and non-corporate initiatives. The former includes learning systems installed by companies to train their sales force, shop floor engineers, induction programs attendees, and more. Those attending online graduate and post-graduate courses, continuing education, adult education, skills-learning programs fall in the latter category. The common thread is the high initial cost of investment of both hardware and software. Primarily for this reason, this potentially multi-billion dollar industry is growing at a slower rate than the promise it had originally shown. However, things are on an upswing now.


Shyam Malhotra

High salaried professionals are going for online education, but till it finds a foothold in school and college education, its potential will not be realized

Businesses around the world are showing more enthusiasm in implementing online corporate training. Factors causing this growth include global workforces, convenience of time and access, logistical simplicity and lower delivery costs. The flip side is the high initial cost of setting an online learning system.

On the education side, electronic campuses are evolving. They try to duplicate the working of familiar offline colleges and universities. They welcome new students online with messages from the academic staff, offer financial aid, course moderators, assessment tests at regular intervals, career counseling, and also help with placements.

Teachers in electronic classrooms deliver lectures with the help of notes, videos and websites, group discussions and group projects, 24x7 live mentoring, virtual labs or study environments. Videoconferences allow students to see, hear, and interact with faculty and other students worldwide. Online libraries offer multimedia of resources such as searchable catalogs, website links and online tutoring centers.

India is also taking a few tentative steps in this direction. An IDC estimate predicts the worldwide e-learning market at $23 bn by end 2005. In India, it is estimated between $10–15 mn, with a high growth potential. There are numerous pilot projects but the spread is low.

Online education is gaining momentum among high salaried professionals for management and skill-enhancement courses-either offered by top-notch B-schools of India or from the international universities offering online courses. 

One such initiative is the DirecWay Global Education (DWGE) platform that delivers broadband satellite-based education. Developed by Hughes Escorts Communications, it works on the concept of interactive onsite learning (IOL) linking students in different parts of the country through live audio, video, and data. The initiative is being used, or explored, by premier management and technology schools of India like IIM Banglore/Calcutta/Kohizokode, IIT Delhi, XLRI Jamshedpur, Manipal Academy of Higher Education, and quite a few others. It attempts to provide all the goodness of online education-no loss of productivity, time savings, flexibility of location-while retaining the interactivity of classroom training. There are many others also who are active in this area. Indian corporates are also trying to set up knowledge banks that can be used for information sharing purposes, and experimenting with providing online training.

But online courses have yet to find a foothold in the arena of school and college education. Reasons abound. Primary being the low cost of education in government-aided schools, colleges and professional institutes. Second, high-cost of courses. Third, low number of students due to low internet penetration. Fourth, low technology penetration. Fifth, high connectivity cost. Sixth, low bandwidth, an important element for downloading multimedia content and setting up videoconferencing. And, seventh, lack of regional-language courses. This is from where volumes can come and defray the cost of development.

Yet the potential is high. How soon will it be tapped?

Shyam Malhotra

Page(s)   1  

Print Comment Email DiggDigg DeliciousDel.icio.us RedittReddit TwitterTwitter



Levovo Thinkcentre for all of your business needs







Collective Intelligence @ Work

Recession- Guest or Ghost?

'We are open' - Eyewash or Eye-catcher?

And your stocking says?

 

 

 

 

 

 

Magazine Subscription | Sitemap | Contact Us | About Us | Advertising Print | Mediakit Print | jobs@cybermedia

Other CyberMedia web sites
  [Voice&Data]  [CIOL]  [PCQuest]  [Living Digital]  [IDC India]
  [Global Services Media ]  [DQ Channels]  [DQweek]  [CyberMedia Events]
  [Cybermedia Digital]  [CyberMedia India]   [Cyber Astro
  [BioSpectrum]  [BioSpectrum Asia]  [DARE]  [Technology Review]