ISSN 1479-4403

First published
in 2003

   


Electronic Journal of eLearning

     

Papers in Current Issue
     

Home Papers in Current Issue Previous Issues Site Map

      .

Home
About the Journal
Scope
Editorial Board
Submission Guidelines
Call for Papers

ECEL: The European Conference on e-Learning

Click for information of ECEL 2003

ICEL: The International Conference on e-Learning

Click for information ICEL

 

Volume 4 Issue 1 March 2006

Delivering What Students say they Want On-line: Towards Academic Participation in the Enfranchisement of e-Learners?
Richard Hall
Department of Academic Quality, De Montfort University UK

   

Sustainable e-learning holds the promise of enabling higher education to meet the needs of a large and diverse market. Central to this is the response of academic staff teams in meeting the needs of individual learners, in order to enfranchise them within their learning context.

Enfranchisement is underpinned by the management of learner-expectations in the value-added nature of the on-line learning experience. Crucial here is the connection between the learner and the teaching team, and their collective ability to create a shared, enabling learning environment. Learner-enfranchisement demands that on-line interaction is both accepted by academic teams and educationally liberating. Liberation requires meaningful existence, and hence active participation, within a 'supercomplex' world, in which both individual identities and the ability to manage information are tested.

This paper assesses ways in which enabling learning contexts and learner-enfranchisement can be encouraged by academic teams. It pivots around the outcomes from student evaluations of a strategic e-learning implementation in one UK higher education institution. The conclusions that it draws focus upon strategies for adding pedagogic value, increasing academic participation and developing e-learning sustainability in order to enfranchise e-learners.

The argument highlights ways in which academic teams can move from a battery-intensive approach to e-learning towards one that is more free-ranging. It highlights how academic staff can increase the sustainable, inclusive value of the learning experience at a minimised cost. From this basis, it is argued that any extant disenfranchisement in the delivery of e-learning can begin to be addressed by increased team-work. A by-product for those teams is that in the very process of engaging their students, there is more hope that they will in-turn become empowered within their own use of e-learning.

Keywords: academic participation; learner-enfranchisement; teamwork; sustainability

Download FULL PAPER

Back to Contents

Home Papers in Current Issue Previous Issues Site Map

EJEL is published by Academic Conferences Limited
Curtis Farm, Kidmore End, Nr Reading RG4 9AY, England
Tel: +44 (0)1189 724148, Fax: +44 (0)1189 724691, Email: anna@ejel.org

 

Send mail to info@academic-conferences.org with questions or comments about this web site.
Copyright © 2002-2004 Electronic Journal of e-Learning
Last modified: October 04, 2005
ISSN
1479-4403