The case for engaging online tutors for supporting learners in higher education in refugee contexts

International development initiatives such as the Sustainable Development Goals for 2030 are helping to position higher education as a key solution available to policy makers in their efforts to alleviate various ongoing refugee crises around the world. As technology develops and higher education em...

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Main Author: Paul O’Keeffe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association for Learning Technology 2020-08-01
Series:Research in Learning Technology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.alt.ac.uk/index.php/rlt/article/view/2428/2720
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spelling doaj-e8b949967e354363907751df95b341952020-11-25T03:39:30ZengAssociation for Learning Technology Research in Learning Technology2156-70772020-08-0128011510.25304/rlt.v28.24282428The case for engaging online tutors for supporting learners in higher education in refugee contextsPaul O’Keeffe0InZone, Université de Genève, Sciences II, Genève, SwitzerlandInternational development initiatives such as the Sustainable Development Goals for 2030 are helping to position higher education as a key solution available to policy makers in their efforts to alleviate various ongoing refugee crises around the world. As technology develops and higher education embraces new forms of delivery, such as blended learning approaches, university courses can be accessed in far-flung places and reach more people than ever before. With this increased emphasis on higher education solutions and more refugees taking advantage of these solutions, there is a growing awareness among practitioners that digital learning requires adequate support beyond merely transmitting educational materials to learners. This support or scaffolding requires the input of various instructional and administrative actors to create a successful collaborative learning model. Using InZone’s collaborative learning ecosystem for enabling higher education refugee contexts as a case study, this study examines the role of online tutors in such scaffolding. Various factors that shape online tutoring are explored and data collected from nine courses enabled in Azraq and Kakuma refugee camps in 2017 and 2018 are presented to support the use of online tutoring for improving course completion rates and ultimately making the case for engaging online tutors for higher education in refugee contexts.https://journal.alt.ac.uk/index.php/rlt/article/view/2428/2720blended learningrefugeescollaborative learningpedagogyonline tutors
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language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paul O’Keeffe
spellingShingle Paul O’Keeffe
The case for engaging online tutors for supporting learners in higher education in refugee contexts
Research in Learning Technology
blended learning
refugees
collaborative learning
pedagogy
online tutors
author_facet Paul O’Keeffe
author_sort Paul O’Keeffe
title The case for engaging online tutors for supporting learners in higher education in refugee contexts
title_short The case for engaging online tutors for supporting learners in higher education in refugee contexts
title_full The case for engaging online tutors for supporting learners in higher education in refugee contexts
title_fullStr The case for engaging online tutors for supporting learners in higher education in refugee contexts
title_full_unstemmed The case for engaging online tutors for supporting learners in higher education in refugee contexts
title_sort case for engaging online tutors for supporting learners in higher education in refugee contexts
publisher Association for Learning Technology
series Research in Learning Technology
issn 2156-7077
publishDate 2020-08-01
description International development initiatives such as the Sustainable Development Goals for 2030 are helping to position higher education as a key solution available to policy makers in their efforts to alleviate various ongoing refugee crises around the world. As technology develops and higher education embraces new forms of delivery, such as blended learning approaches, university courses can be accessed in far-flung places and reach more people than ever before. With this increased emphasis on higher education solutions and more refugees taking advantage of these solutions, there is a growing awareness among practitioners that digital learning requires adequate support beyond merely transmitting educational materials to learners. This support or scaffolding requires the input of various instructional and administrative actors to create a successful collaborative learning model. Using InZone’s collaborative learning ecosystem for enabling higher education refugee contexts as a case study, this study examines the role of online tutors in such scaffolding. Various factors that shape online tutoring are explored and data collected from nine courses enabled in Azraq and Kakuma refugee camps in 2017 and 2018 are presented to support the use of online tutoring for improving course completion rates and ultimately making the case for engaging online tutors for higher education in refugee contexts.
topic blended learning
refugees
collaborative learning
pedagogy
online tutors
url https://journal.alt.ac.uk/index.php/rlt/article/view/2428/2720
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