Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Participants
- Welcome and Opening Address
- Astronomy Education: an International Perspective
- Special Lecture: Sundials in London – Linking architecture and astronomy
- 1 University Education
- 2 Distance Learning and Electronic Media in Teaching Astronomy
- Distance Education in Astronomy: At-a-distance and on campus, a growing force
- Teaching Astronomy at the University of South Africa
- A Multi-Resource System for Remote Teaching in Astronomy: its aims, its design, the point of view of the learners
- Use of the World Wide Web in Astronomy Teaching
- On-Line Resources for Classroom Use: data and science results from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope and other missions
- Bringing the Universe into the Laboratory – Project CLEA: contemporary laboratory exercises in astronomy
- Project LINK: a live and interactive network of knowledge
- Computer as a Tool in Astronomy Teaching
- Mathwise Astronomy and the Teaching and Learning Technology Project: aiding or degrading education
- A Virtual Telescope for the Open University Science Foundation Course
- The Presence of Multimedia in Astronomy Teaching
- 3 The Student Learning Process
- 4 Planetarium Education and Training
- 5 Public Education in Astronomy
- 6 Teaching Astronomy in the Schools
- Posters
- Final Address
- Authors
Distance Education in Astronomy: At-a-distance and on campus, a growing force
from 2 - Distance Learning and Electronic Media in Teaching Astronomy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 June 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Participants
- Welcome and Opening Address
- Astronomy Education: an International Perspective
- Special Lecture: Sundials in London – Linking architecture and astronomy
- 1 University Education
- 2 Distance Learning and Electronic Media in Teaching Astronomy
- Distance Education in Astronomy: At-a-distance and on campus, a growing force
- Teaching Astronomy at the University of South Africa
- A Multi-Resource System for Remote Teaching in Astronomy: its aims, its design, the point of view of the learners
- Use of the World Wide Web in Astronomy Teaching
- On-Line Resources for Classroom Use: data and science results from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope and other missions
- Bringing the Universe into the Laboratory – Project CLEA: contemporary laboratory exercises in astronomy
- Project LINK: a live and interactive network of knowledge
- Computer as a Tool in Astronomy Teaching
- Mathwise Astronomy and the Teaching and Learning Technology Project: aiding or degrading education
- A Virtual Telescope for the Open University Science Foundation Course
- The Presence of Multimedia in Astronomy Teaching
- 3 The Student Learning Process
- 4 Planetarium Education and Training
- 5 Public Education in Astronomy
- 6 Teaching Astronomy in the Schools
- Posters
- Final Address
- Authors
Summary
Introduction
Distance education has a track record in astronomy and is already making a significant contribution worldwide. It will make an even greater contribution in the future, not only at-a-distance, but through greater use of self-study materials on- campus, where it will liberate staff for more appropriate forms of face-to-face teaching, and help overcome the need to do more and more with less and less resource. Distance education offers huge promise in meeting the educational needs of a burgeoning world population, and because low costs can be achieved there is no need for people in areas of material deprivation to face mental deprivation also. The IAU and The Open University can be proactive in promoting the spread of distance education, and of self-study on campus.
What is (successful) distance education?
Distance education is NOT as shown in Figure 1, though its distinctive feature is that the student is remote from the university or college! But in place of a megaphone a mixture of media is used in which printed texts usually carry the bulk of the educational material. There can also be audiovisual and computing media (including use of the Internet and of “multimedia”), and practical work. It is important to play to the strengths of the various media – a current pitfall is that multimedia can turn out to be little more than an expensive book.
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- Chapter
- Information
- New Trends in Astronomy Teaching , pp. 44 - 53Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1998