Abstract:
computers" is the buzzword of our time. Never before has technology spread
( so rapidly. Never has an invention enabled so many people to do so many
things that are strategically important to life in the information society. So
strategic that being able to use a computer has become a basic skill, even a
literacy in is own right (Hofstetter 1998:xii; Long and Long 1999:xvii; Shelly
1999:1.1).
The term "digital divide" is increasingly being used in articles, discussions and
conferences. The digital divide is defined as "the technology gulf that
separates the computer-literate rich from the world's poor masses". (ltano
2001 :6) South African president Thabo Mbeki has announced that the
reduction of this digital divide is a top priority, and states that technological
literacy should be a key feature for South Africa's future in an increasingly
globalising world (Ita no 2001 :6 ).
Trying to build a technological infrastructure, however, does not have any
meaning without people knowledgeable enough to utilise the technology.
Providing the training to build a computer literate society is thus of utmost
importance. Although the ideal situation would be for children to start using
computers at a very young age, the reality in South Africa is that many adults
have never been exposed to using computers, neither did they have the
opportunity to undergo computer literacy training. These adults are no longer
part of the formal schooling system and may not be able to attend full-time
classes at a college or university. Furth~rmore, the National Qualifications
Framework (NQF) has introduced a new approach to education and training,
called life-long education. This new approach strives to provide opportunities for individuals to learn regardless of age, circumstances or previous level of
education (lsaacman 1996:3). One way of achieving the goal of life-long
education is for educational institutions to present programmes in distance
learning mode.
Distance learning (cf 1.6.3) presents an ideal alternative to people who, for
some reason, cannot attend contact tuition on a daily basis. Many computer
literacy programmes were, and are still taught at various training colleges and
tertiary institutions in South Africa, but because of the practical nature of the
training, most of these programmes are taught on a full-time basis through
contact tuition. With the growing number of distance learning students, the
need to design an effective computer literacy programme in distance learning
mode, is becoming a matter of urgency.
An important aspect of this study is not only to develop a distance learning
computer literacy programme, but an outcomes-based computer literacy
programme that can be presented in distance learning mode. The South
African government has recently decided to bring about a paradigm shift in
the education system (Department of Education 1997a:3). In 1998 a new
outcomes-based curriculum was implemented in Grade 1 and the principles
underlined by outcomes-based education are meant to filter through to the
highest level of education. The change to an outcomes-based education
system is seen to be an acknowledgement that the processes of teaching and
learning must be functional, relevant and accountable (Malan 1997:8). The term outcome generally refers to the result/product/output of some or
other process. Roy Killen, an Australian expert on outcomes-based education
(Killen 2001 :2) defines outcomes in education as "that what the student can
do and understand - the contextually demonstrated end-products of the
learning process. Outcomes can thus be seen as the result of the learning
process: knowledge, skills, attitudes and values within a particular context so
that knowledge is applied, skills developed into competencies and attitudes
and values harmonise with those of the workplace". Bearing this definition in
mind, it is clear that teaching a computer literacy programme can no longer only be a matter of disseminating knowledge about computers, but that there
is no alternative than to bring students to the computer and teach them how to
productively use the computer as a tool (Spear 1999:2).
With the introduction of outcomes-based education in 1998, the South African
government has constituted the South African Qualifications Authority
(SAQA). The aim of SAQA is to accredit all programmes that are presented by
South African educational institutions. One of the challenges in this study
would thus be to develop the proposed programme in such a way that it will
ultimately be approved by SAQA to form part of future distance learning
programmes at Higher Institutions.