Title: Hellenic Open University Technologies for Open
1Hellenic Open UniversityTechnologies for Open
Distance Learning
- Presenter Panayiotis Siafarikas
- President of the HOU
2Presentation Synopsis
- The Hellenic Open University
- Organization of HOU
- Schools of HOU
- Courses organisation
- Basic e-Learning Technologies
- Module portals
- Students fora
- Webcasts
- State-of-the-art e-Learning Technologies
- E-Classrooms (virtual classrooms)
- Peer-to-peer collaboration (virtual collaboration
space) - Conclusions
3Part 1
- The Hellenic Open University
4The Hellenic Open University Today (2004)
- 4 Schools
- 6 Bachelor Courses
- 18 Postgraduate Courses (24 in year 2005)
- Approximately 12,000 students
- 1,000 tutors
- Over 20,000 students (within the next 3 years)
5The Hellenic Open University Schools
- School of Sciences Technology
- School of Humanities
- School of Social Sciences
- School of Applied Arts
6The Hellenic Open University Courses Organisation
- Course Coordinator (Faculty Member)
- Tutors (each tutor responsible for 10 to 30
students) - 5 Face-to-face meetings
- 4-6 Projects (distance)
- Face-to-face final exams
7Cities for face-to-face meetings
8The Hellenic Open University Students tasks
- Students study learning material from distance
(books and e-content) - Communicate frequently with their tutor (e-mail,
phone, fora) - Submit (electronically) 4-6 projects per course
- Receive feedback from their tutor
- Meet in face-to-face meetings
- Attend the final exams
9The Hellenic Open University Educational Material
- Books appropriate for ODL (study from distance)
- Over 500 books developed by the HOU
10Part 2
- Basic e-Learning Technologies
11Basic e-Learning Technologies
- From module portals to the central students
portal - Students fora
- Video lectures (streaming video webcasts)
- E-mail, Distribution Lists, e-Panels, etc.
12From module portals to http//online.eap.gr
Free area contains information for the public
Module portal for INF10 Introduction to Computer
Science
Registered students area Requires password
13From module portals to http//online.eap.gr
Module portal for INF10 Introduction to Computer
Science Registered Students area
Additional Education Material, projects, results,
solutions, hints, etc.
14From module portals to http//online.eap.gr
The central HOU portal (based on IBM
WebSphere) Available from 2004
The student logs in and then has access only to
the areas (modules) that (s)he attends
15Students Fora
Forum for a students group. The students may ask
questions, or reply to questions asked by other
students, or read the tutor responses. Here a
student asks and the tutor responds, etc.
16Web Casts
Web casts (or video-Lectures) combine a series of
transparencies with narrative and a simple video
(mostly the speaker).
17Part 3
- State-of-the-art
- e-Learning Technologies
18State-of-the-art e-Learning Technologies
- Virtual classrooms
- Collaboration space
19Virtual Classrooms
A group of 32 students, geographically
distributed over Greek Islands. The first meeting
of this group was held in Athens, while all the
rest were held in a virtual classroom, where the
students had the opportunity attend the meeting
from their island. All meetings were recorded and
made available through the groups web site in
order for the students to be able to review them
later, or be briefed on what was discussed.
20Virtual Classrooms
The tutor explaining to 16 participants in this
virtual classroom an algorithm. The students can
see the slides and the tutor in the video frame.
21Virtual Classrooms
A student asking a question - this image was
extracted from the recording of the virtual
classroom, available to all students of this
group.
22Virtual Collaboration Space
Student pairs that collaborate in the design of a
software system, sharing (from distance) a common
working space. The geographic distribution of
the pairs that participated in a project.
23Actors Components
The main components are shown together with the
main actors that took part in the project (tutor,
facilitator and students). For this purpose, a
technological framework was used to facilitate
peer-to-peer interaction, which supports
collaborative activities of partners at a
distance over low-bandwidth connections.
24The ExperimentParticipants
- Optional assignment (involved collaborative
building of an algorithm for a bus-ticket venting
machine using a flowchart representation) - From the active student population
(approximately 350), 150 students expressed their
intent to participate - 130 students submitted the solutions
25Solutions
26Analysis Tutors view
The tutor is able to see the solution, the
collaboration (each student actions are marked
using different colour i.e. red and blue) and the
discussion (chat)
27Part 4
28Conclusions
- In the case of the Hellenic Open University, the
evolution from a traditional distance-learning
model to an e-learning model was not the goal.
The main objective was the constant improvement
of the education quality and in certain cases
improvement cannot be achieved without the use of
current technology and the exploitation of
e-learning infrastructures. The careful
introduction of e-learning facilities in the
courses educational procedure can aid in
overcoming major problems such as the limited
participation in face-to-face meetings, the
constant demand for updated material available
even on daily basis, and the high dropout rates
of geographically remote areas.
29Links
- Papers presenting the use of e-Learning
technologies in the HOU can be found at - http//quality.eap.gr
- The HOU main page at
- http//www.eap.gr
- The students portal at
- http//online.eap.gr
- The students fora at
- http//forum.eap.gr
30THANK YOU