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Interactive Radio as a Component of Distance Education in Third World Countries.
Resource type
Report
Author/contributor
- Norman, Douglas (Author)
Title
Interactive Radio as a Component of Distance Education in Third World Countries.
Abstract
Interactive radio is a technique to promote active listening to educational radio programs targeted at students and teachers in Third World countries. The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) has supported interactive radio in Africa, Asia, and Latin American to provide supplementary training to students with poorly prepared teachers. An example was a language arts program in Kenya, where evaluators concluded that radio students were consistent in their statistically significant superiority over control students in listening, speaking, reading, and writing. Despite these findings, other studies concluded that interactive radio is better for teaching math, which has a limited number of correct answers, than language. USAID also has funded interactive radio projects in science, mathematics, teacher training, and high-school equivalency. Some critics of interactive radio say it is too dependent on expensive hardware and that Third World students are not well enough motivated, cannot read well enough, and cannot work well enough on their own for distance education to significantly affect educational progress in developing nations. (Contains 9 references.) (Author)
Report Number
ED367304
Report Type
Reports - Descriptive ; Speeches/Meeting Papers
Date
1993-10-01
Language
eng
Extra
an: ED367304; docTypes: Reports - Descriptive ; Speeches/Meeting Papers; pubTypes: Conference PaperReport;
Citation
Norman, D. (1993). Interactive Radio as a Component of Distance Education in Third World Countries. (Reports - Descriptive ; Speeches/Meeting Papers No. ED367304). https://research.ebsco.com/linkprocessor/plink?id=9c9888a1-98af-375a-9fd1-9b315e3619ae
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