Ghana's Educational Institutions Operating Distance Learning Programs

William Koomson-GHANAS EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS OPERATING DISTANCE LEARNING PROGRAMS
Summary: National emergencies, like the COVID-19 and others yet to come, are indicators to alert us for proper planning and implementation of a robust distance learning program across the country. We must leave no stone unturned in this venture, as we together seek out the best utilization of ubiquitous technologies for teaching and learning.

Coronavirus In; Mass Gathering Out: Acid Test Of Ghana's Educational Institutions Operating Distance Learning Programs

Coronavirus, also called COVID-19, is real and has the best brains in the world thinking about quick-fix solutions, but none seem to be apparent. As it stands right now, no one understands the disease, and any possible vaccine to cure the virus is months away, while precious souls continue to perish. The nations’ leaders have gone out of their way to reduce panic and fear as they try all possible means to lessen the grip of this killer-disease.

Across Italy, as Mark Lowen (March, 2020) put it, “the perennial problem has struck early this year: with schools and universities now closed (across the nation), in an effort to contain the spread of coronavirus, some 8.4 million children are out of class well before the Easter break. It's an unprecedented response by Europe's worst-hit country.” This sentiment cuts across all countries in the world. In the USA, UK, Canada, Australia, Germany, and many other countries, daily presidential press briefings aiming to provide possible solutions have been the norm.

Schools are closed, mass gatherings canceled, national transportation systems grounded, and workers that provide fuel to the economy have been asked to lay down their tools and go home. These drastic measures have been undertaken by our world leaders to help contain the spread of the disease. These closures and mandatory stay-at-home measures have consequences. Not unlike the 2008 financial crisis that grounded many less-developed economies, many countries, including ours, are vulnerable.

Nevertheless, there is hope. COVID-19 will eventually be conquered and finally eliminated, even though we don’t currently know how long it will last. Instead of trading panic, alarm, and doomsday prophecies, we need to be calm, prayerful, and positive as we seek special protection from our Lord.

Acid Test Of Ghana’s Educational Institutions: Are We Prepared?

Leaders from many nations that have been hit with the disease have decidedly canceled schools and mass gatherings. The President of our country “orders closure of all public and private schools and halted all forms of public gatherings in the country as part of measures to prevent a possible outbreak of the coronavirus in the country” (Myjoyonline, 2020). He further ordered the Ministry of Education in collaboration with the Ministry of Communication to roll out distance learning programs. This, in the author's view, is realistic and achievable, but in the face of our current educational structures regarding distance learning, this is a tall order.

Are our educational institutions, both pre-tertiary and tertiary, ready for distance learning programs? By distance, I believe the President to be referring to learning aided by technology where learners and instructors are separated by space, and teaching and learning are done asynchronously. Many developed nations are ready to swiftly move online because they previously were partially doing so. Schools in Ghana have not yet achieved the online parity, and though it is possible, our educational policymakers have to invest in developing online learning infrastructure that does not rely heavily on tutorial center operations as is the case in most tertiary institutions that operate distance learning programs in Ghana.

Providing Context-Specific Distance Learning Programs

Distance learning models have gone through various generations. Currently, we are in Generation 5, according to research (Heydenrych & Prinsloo, 2010). The earlier generations relied heavily on newly developed technologies such as the printing press, books, film, animation, radio and television, shorthand (i.e., Gregg Shorthand), Video Home System (VHS), computer-assisted learning, floppy diskette, telephones, telegrams and faxes, telex and teleprinters, video conferencing, audio-graphics, pen or flash drives, internet and the World Wide Web, and Web 2 to Web 4 technologies.

The technology-powered distance learning programs moved from the Correspondence School system to the direct learning systems and to the latest eLearning/mLearning systems. Therefore, the use of the word technology in distance learning does not solely denote online learning or learning powered by the latest Learning Management Systems (LMS). Many equate distance learning to online learning and that any distance learning programs without the use of the LMS are not truly online.

Technology, therefore, is a conduit through which distance learning programs are powered. The technology is not the end of itself; its primary purpose is to deliver the curriculum to the learners. Newly developed technologies have offered increased opportunities for the educational industry, however, they are not the savior or the message, they are the messenger in the context of less developed countries. Consider my earlier examples of distance learning technologies, one may infer that a floppy diskette or a teleprinter was once an enviable technology.

Heydenrych & Prinsloo (2010) have proposed the following 7 standards to address future generation of distance learning to be context-specific:

  1. Students form part of peer collaborative groups and communities of practice, which they share with alumni, employers, community members, and tutors.
  2. Institutions will have to design appropriate blended learning options in a menu of service from which students can tailor-make their learning experiences to allow for maximum self-organization of learning with support.
  3. Higher education institutions have, for too long, distanced themselves from the communities in which they themselves are located, and from which their students originate. Higher education will have to find creative ways to speak "from place" and "to place," from their specific location within the broader network (consisting of communities, employers, families and other stakeholders).
  4. Giving students access to wireless and remote technologies through negotiation with providers.
  5. Learning is no longer content-driven but shaped and paced by activities- and inquiry-based learning, which is embedded in the current and future student, and in employment and societal contexts.
  6. Regional production facilitates the speedy distribution of learning materials.
  7. Making use of (and contributing to) generic and open content, which can be accessed from multiple platforms (all forms of smart devices).

Mobile Phone Diffusion In Teaching And Learning

Mobile technologies with cellular connectivity continue to dominate the information communication technology market in sub-Saharan Africa. According to the Pew Research Center (2015), cell phone usage in Africa pales in comparison to that of developed countries like the United States of America. However, there has been a dramatic surge in the growth of smartphone usage in sub-Saharan Africa. As of 2014, the following countries recorded high percentages of cell phone usage: Uganda 65%, Tanzania 73%, Kenya 82%, Ghana 83%, and South Africa, 89%. In the same year, the United States’ cell phone usage was 89%, the same as in South Africa and only in single-digits, higher than Ghana and Kenya. Among the many uses of cell phones in Africa for a twelve-month period, texting was at the forefront (Pew Research Center, 2015).

Joy Online (2013) reported that Ghana was ranked by the International Telecoms Union Report as number one in Africa with more people using or connected to mobile broadband. Laary (2016) stated that for the period ending December 2015, Ghana’s mobile phone voice penetration rate surged to 128%, far above earlier projections by telecommunication experts. The adoption of mobile technology with its diverse apps can serve as a conduit for mobile learning.

In Ghana, the most common format adopted in distance learning is the tutorial format, where very few online interactions occur; in most instances, there are no online interactions. The universities that enroll their students through the distance learning mode rely heavily on print materials in the form of course modules and students meet regularly during weekends in tutorial centers throughout the nation where they receive face-to-face instructions. Very few programs include videos and voice presentations in their distance learning pedagogy (Larkai, et al, 2016; Yeboah & Ewur, 2014).

However, with mobile learning technologies like “WhatsApp Messenger,” developing countries have no excuses as to why they are not able to adopt online learning in the remotest parts of the country where connectivity is a major setback. Everywhere a mobile phone is used, whether for WhatsApp, email, SMS, video, or photo sharing, online learning may be possible. In the academic environments, just as in the community, households and business places, WhatsApp Messenger has been used to create group chats for work teams, social networking, and learning.

WhatsApp Messenger For mLearning

Research on the application of WhatsApp Messenger in the classroom is new and developing, however, its usage as a social media tool on smartphones is widespread (Cetinkaya, 2017; Bouhnik & Deshen, 2014; Yeboah & Ewur, 2014; Church & de-Oliviera, 2013). WhatsApp is the most popular mobile messaging application widely used worldwide and it is ranked as the number one in terms of monthly active users, based on a study of over 22,500 sources worldwide (Statista, 2018). WhatsApp, however, announced that the messaging app is now being actively used by more than 2 billion people worldwide (Bucher, 2020)

WhatsApp features include:

  • Text: simple and reliable
  • Group chat: keeping in touch with love ones, people in your network, business partners, and parishioners
  • On the web and desktop: keeping the conversation going anytime, anyplace, anywhere
  • Voice and video calls: free face-to-face conversation, when voice and text are not enough
  • End-to-end encryption: provides security by default
  • Photos and videos: the opportunity to share moments that matter
  • Voice messaging: using the voice messaging system to convey emotional moments
  • Documents: attaching and sharing documents including PDFs, spreadsheets, slideshows, photos, and Word documents

WhatsApp Messenger features make it easy for teaching and learning. The app uses phone internet connections (4G/3G/2G/EDGE of WiFi) of users to send and receive messages. That is, as long as there is data on users’ phones, sending and receiving messages are free. WhatsApp announced in May 2018 at its F8 developer conference in San Jose, California, that over 65 billion messages have been sent by users with more than 2 billion minutes of voice and video calls made every day on the app platform, and about 1 billion people use this messaging app each day (Al-Heeti, 2018).

Promoting Learner Interaction In Distance Learning

Jurado, et al, (2014), classified learning management systems features into 4 different tool groups, namely: distribution, communication, interaction, and administration.

  1. Tools for distribution allow lecturers to upload documents, available to students. Earlier it was mainly text documents and today it may also be different kinds of media files. Nevertheless, the process is still one-way, that is, teacher-to-learner distribution of information.
  2. Tools for communication allow information to go either way as well as from student-to-student. The most common example is E-mail.
  3. Tools for interaction call for reaction and feedback. Discussion boards are the most typical example. These tools are of great interest since they may promote student activity and cooperation, hence enhancing the learning experience.
  4. Tools for course administration are used to monitor and document the educational process, rather than to facilitate teaching or learning (p.4).

Jurado’s classification focus on course administration; teacher-to-student and student-to-student interactions. Any form of a distance learning program that lacks the interactivity piece is not complete and is missing the core pedagogical attributes of teaching and learning. That is clarity and focus of learning objectives, selection of media, and integration of the media selected to address learning goals. Fourth- and fifth-generation distance learning programs promote synchronous and asynchronous interactions through discussion forums: teacher-student, student-teacher, student-student (peer) interactions. Any form of distance program that does not meet the above criteria cannot be properly characterized as distance learning. These types of programs must be properly labeled as adult extension programs or adult weekend programs.

Media Selection

WhatsApp Messenger, as a social media tool, is inherently interactive for social media purposes. This important feature has been explored by many researchers to augment teaching and learning in developing countries (Bouhnik & Deshen, 2014; Cetinkaya, 2017; Church & de Oliveira, 2013; Gronlund & Islam, 2010; Koomson, 2019; Motlik, 2008). According to Tony Bates (2015), timely and appropriate feedback from the instructor to the learner is an important aspect of interaction. Thus, when it comes to media selection, the following questions are worth considering:

  • To what extent is interaction enabled or controlled by the media selected?
  • To what extent is feedback possible within a particular medium?
  • What kind of interaction will best lead to a particular type of learning outcome, and what technology or medium best provides this kind of interaction?

Tony Bates’ (2015) SECTIONS model has been used by many researchers in the Distance Education industry. Bates’ framework provides a set of criteria to help inform educational institutions or educational providers when making decisions regarding the choice of appropriate media for teaching and learning. SECTIONS model stands for Students, Ease of Use, Cost, Teaching functions, Interaction, Organizational issues, Networking, and Security and privacy issues. Regarding media selection, Walter McKenzie (2002) posited that:

People are not always conscious of each medium they encounter; mode of delivery seems to get lost in the mix as we are inundated by volumes of information in endless cycles. While it is easy to become desensitized as consumers of information, as educators we are in a unique position to maximize media selection and get a handle on this explosion of information for our students. As McLuhan suggested prophetically, the medium may not only be the messenger, it may be the message.

When I am discussing the current state of technology with teachers around the country, it becomes clear that they feel bound by their access to technology, regardless of their situation. If a teacher has a television-computer setup, then that is what he or she will use in the classroom. On the other hand, if there is an LCD projector hooked up to a teacher demonstration station in a fully equipped lab, he or she will be more apt to use that set up. Teachers have always made the best of whatever they’ve got at hand, but it’s what we have to work with. Teachers make due (p. 6).

Conclusion

In the above analysis, the author is of the opinion, based on best practices, that for WhatsApp to work properly in any classroom in Ghana, there must be intentional designs and a step-by-step approach to teach both the teachers and the students how to use the application to achieve the best outcomes. When it comes to choosing media for distance learning programs in Ghana, there is no one-size-fits-all approach. In many instances, “a medium will require the intervention of a teacher or instructor both to set activities around the learning materials and to provide appropriate feedback, thus adding to rather than reducing the workload of instructors.” Also “where instructors have to intervene either to design activities or to provide feedback, the cost or time demands on the instructor are likely to be greater” (Bates, 2015, p. 303).

The author also believes that teaching both teachers and students how to use WhatsApp for educational purposes in a distance learning environment is possible because “seemingly intractable problems have been solved by advances in processing power and capabilities. Not long ago, autonomous vehicles were considered technologically infeasible due to the volume of data that needed to be processed in real time. Speech recognition was unreliable and required extensive speaker-dependent training sessions. Mobile phones were once "auto-mobile" phones, requiring a car trunk full of equipment” (Earley, 2017, pp. 58-64).

Properly integrated, mobile learning powered by WhatsApp Messenger may be the solution for our country and many other developing nations. National emergencies, like the COVID-19 and others yet to come, are indicators to alert us for proper planning and implementation of a robust distance learning program across the country. We must leave no stone unturned in this venture, as we together seek out the best utilization of ubiquitous technologies for teaching and learning.

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