e-Learning:
Learning with the Internet
Professor A.N.
Maheshwari
Chairperson, NCTE
Recent developments in information and communication technology (ICT)
have ushered in the Information Age. The world is in the midst of an
unprecedented information explosion. Fortunately, new solutions for handling
information are also emerging which have made it possible to keep pace with the
information growth. New hardware and software keep appearing in the market
capable of handling order of magnitude bigger volume of information than what
is possible with the existing machines. The new computers have faster speed and
come at a price lesser than that of their earlier versions.
The most remarkable
development that has changed the world since the invention of the printing
press and the postal communication is the Internet. The world has been wired electronically. The Internet has already
connected a sizable population of the world. Online contact between individuals
within their countries and with equal ease with others, cutting across
political and geographical boundaries, has become a reality and that too at
near zero communication costs. People are sharing information by merely
connecting their computers with the Internet by using a variety of linking
technologies employed by their Internet Service Providers. Network uses
satellites, radio frequency transmission, optical fibres, telephone lines etc.,
and new ways of accessing the Internet keep emerging on the scene. Gradually
even those who are outside its reach today will be able to access the Internet
and the digital divide will get bridged with time. The revolution in
information and communication technology has changed life styles and influenced
almost all human activities in the developed and developing countries alike. It
is being used for almost all human activities. The prominent are e-governance,
e-commerce, e-mail, education, and for offering different types of services
such as banking, travel, payment of utility charges etc.
The challenge now
is to use its full potential in education. Educational institutions so far have
been using the Internet for putting up on the web their Homepage for giving
institutional profile, courses and admission information, communication with
the students, providing access to the Internet to their students and teachers
and consultancy services offered by them. I want to point out that now
solutions are available for putting on the web learning resources comprising
text, visuals, and animations arranged for interactive learning. Software tools
are available for preparing multimedia lessons that can be accessed from the
web even with a low bandwidth Internet connection.
What is multimedia?
Multimedia is
digital integration of voice, visuals, text and animations. In a multimedia
lesson teachers would synchronise their voice with slides, which may contain
pictures, mathematical equations, tables, charts, text etc. What is now needed
is that our teachers develop an appropriate instructional technology and use it
for preparing multimedia lessons. For this to happen software tools have to be
made available so that even those teachers who are not media experts are able
to prepare lessons by themselves without going to studios for audio recording
of the lesson or taking help of computer professionals for tasks such as
editing of audio files and for their conversion into web deliverable format.
Teachers would be able to prepare slides themselves without depending on the support of media professionals and would be able to synchronise slides
with audio track and reconvert sound files in a form that will let voice stream
down even with low bandwidth Internet connection and make slides open up at
pre-fixed times when the audio track is playing.
There are many
ways of preparing a multimedia lesson and its delivery. I would like to share
my experience of producing multimedia lessons and experiments of teaching using
different technologies for delivery of the lessons to distant learners and of
virtual classroom. In November 2001 I used the Direct Media Service (DMS) of
the WorldSpace. The Asia Star satellite of the WorldSpace allows a low
bandwidth streaming of digital data and CD-quality sound in a beam which has a
footprint of 14 million square kilometre. The digital data can be received in
computers with an antenna, which is only 10 cm wide and can be easily pointed
in the direction of the beam coming from the satellite. Voice streamed down from
the WorldSpace satellite can be heard using special digital audio receivers. In
another experiment data was delivered using the satellite transmission but
sound was delivered using the FM transmission of the All India Radio Banglore.
In this experiment interaction of the students with the expert was arranged
using phone-in. It may be appreciated that these approaches to delivery of
lessons require a synchronous classroom. Another method of delivering
multimedia lessons is to put them on a CD-ROM, which can be used for
asynchronous learning. Yet, another method for asynchronous delivery of
multimedia lesson is using the Internet. In the demonstration lecture I will
present brief snippets of lessons, which were delivered using the WorldSpace,
CD-ROM and the Internet.
Steps
involved in preparation of multimedia lessons are the following:
·
Expert
·
Lesson plan
·
Audio recording of lesson
·
Editing of audio file (wave file)
·
Conversion of wave file into Windows Media Audio (Microsoft WMA) file
·
Preparation of slides based on
the blackboard work of the expert (pictures, text, equations, charts, tables
etc.)
·
Synchronisation of audio file with slides using authoring tool software
·
FTP transfer of files of the lesson on to the web
The
key person in the preparation of web based multimedia course is the expert.
What needs to be done is to make available the good teaching of the experts to
the students many of whom might be learning without the benefit of quality
teaching at their institutions. The other key to developing web based
multimedia course are the authoring tools such as the EzeeNow and conversion of
8000 Hz 16 bits wave files into wma files. The wma files stream down into the
user’s computer from the Internet at the rate of 6.5 kbps, which indeed is a
very low bandwidth Internet connection requirement. The full course that could
consist of a set of lessons once put on the web would allow asynchronous
learning. Interaction with the expert can be arranged in chat mode at pre-announced
times. The text to voice conversion software now available can be used in
arranging voice interaction of students with experts in accents of the users by
converting text to voice software.
The
task ahead is to take the help of teachers who are good communicators for
preparing multimedia lessons and making available courses through the Internet
and on CD-ROM.