E-learning in Higher Education. Key concepts, European trends, and guidelines

http://hdl.handle.net/11380/1211854Overview
E-learning plays an increasingly important role in the changing landscape of Higher Education in the European area. In the three main provision areas (degree education, continuous professional development, and open education), Higher Education Institutions find in e-learning the possibility of supporting both the shift towards flexibility in learning paths and modalities, and the transition towards student-centered learning and active teaching methods.
It is now well established that e-learning in itself is not a panacea, nor, on the contrary, a catastrophe for educational systems, and it is generally accepted that it is not equally suitable for all educational settings, for all subjects and for all learners, but evidence from research can be found regarding its effectiveness under certain conditions. Furthermore, as was already known from decades of research into distance education and educational technologies, it is clear that pedagogical awareness and educational purposes must guide the choice and development of technical solutions, not the other way around. Such awareness allows education professionals to take full advantage of the affordances and possibilities of blended and online education for specific types of students, subjects and contexts.
The purpose of this study is to provide Higher Education Institutions and practitioners, policy makers, and education funders in the Republic of North Macedonia with design principles and effective implementation models for online and blended courses and programmes, based on widely accepted learning theories, available evidence from research, and best practice.
Most of the solutions covered in this study tend to have a wide range, a strong user base and evidence of impact in Higher Education settings.
The study is divided into three main sections.
Part 1 provides a conceptual framework for describing the variety of phenomena that go under the umbrella term of e-learning.
Part 2 focuses on current trends and future prospects for e-learning in the European Higher Education Area.
Part 3 gives insights into teaching and learning activities, people & roles, and technology in e-learning. Finally, relevant instructional and multimedia design principles are presented, as well as valuable guidelines for course development, implementation, and evaluation.
Feasibility study
Overview
The Feasibility Study is divided into two fundamental sections, respectively drafted by the Beneficiary and the Know-how provider.
Part 1. Overview of economic, technical and operational feasibility from the Beneficiary’s perspective: economic feasibility, SWOT analysis, potential risks, technical and operational feasibility.
Part 2. Provider’s online resources. Overview of UNIMORE’s online resources, platforms and technological infrastructure.

