Online universities blossom in Asia
MALAYSIA: Thousands of kilometres from Kuala Lumpur in Cameroon,
doctoral student Michael Nkwenti Ndongfack attends his Open University
Malaysia classes online and hopes to defend his final thesis by Skype.
Online university education is expanding quickly in Asia, where
growth in technology and Internet use is matched by a deep reverence for
education.
“I chose e-learning because it is so flexible,” Ndongfack, 42, told
AFP via Skype from his home in the Cameroonian capital Yaounde.
Web-based courses dramatically boost opportunities for students and
are often cheaper than those offered by traditional bricks-and-mortar
institutions.
“With the improvement in technology, the number of institutions
offering online education has increased, both in terms of numbers and
the kind of classes offered,” said Lee Hock Guan, senior fellow at the
Institute of Southeast Asian Studies in Singapore.
The Malaysian government said about 85,000 people took online courses
in the country last year, both at web-based institutions and traditional
universities offering Internet teaching.
In high-tech South Korea more than 112,000 students at 19
institutions are taking web-based classes, all of which have begun since
2002.
China embraced the concept of online learning in the late 1990s to
expand access to education, particularly in its vast rural regions, and
there are now scores of providers, with 1.64 million people enrolled in
2010.
AFP |