The Bloomsbury Learning Exchange (BLE) joined forces again with the Centre for Online and Distance Education (CODE) and the London International Development Centre (LIDC) to extend the conversation around the decolonisation of digital education, which started last year with our first joint webinar. On 17th April, our follow-up webinar, Decolonising Digital Education – Lessons from Distance Learners, focused on distance and online education, and specifically on the experiences of remote learners. We were delighted to convene a panel comprising three students who had recently completed or were currently pursuing online courses offered by the University of London. What followed was a lively and engaging panel discussion, chaired by CODE Fellow and vice-principal for Equality, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) at the Royal Veterinary College, Dr Christine Thuranira-McKeever, with thought-provoking questions posed by the audience.
Our student panelists each introduced
themselves and presented the ways in which they have experienced decolonisation
in respect to technologies used to deliver online courses. Conrad Francis is an
Australian Sri-Lankan dual Olympian (Sydney 2000, Athens 2004) who has coached across
the world, working in schools and universities in countries including China,
Indonesia, Japan and South Korea. Conrad completed a PGCE in International
Sports Management at the University of London in 2022 and provided a truly
international perspective.
Dr Swati Aggarwal holds a doctorate in
AI and has extensive experience in research and teaching in India. Moving to a
teaching position in Norway in 2023, she completed the online Postgraduate
Certificate Learning and Teaching in Higher Education provided by the
University of London. As an educator herself, Swati drew on her experiences of decolonisation
both in delivering and being a recipient of learning. She
Finally, Sanjeeva Singh, an Olympian
Archer, shared his experiences of working towards a Post Graduate Certificate
in International Sports Management at the University of London whilst studying
at a distance in India.
The audience posed many interesting questions regarding access to digital technology, differences in cultures, and how institutions can ensure inclusivity and promote diversity to prevent prejudice and bias towards Western approaches to learning and teaching.
Dr Linda Amrane-Cooper (Director of the University’s Postgraduate Certificate Learning and Teaching in Higher Education) responded to the need to acknowledge sensitivities and apply feedback from learners in order to ‘decolonise’ the professional framework in which educational providers must work. Taking on board these lived experiences can only improve the quality of the courses that are delivered. As Elizabeth Charles (Assistant Director of Library Services at Birkbeck) reported, the panelists’ “different perspectives were a wonderful cross-section of learning from theory and applying to their individual loci and how enriched they felt as a result of this. Linda’s contribution was also very welcome; that level of engagement of acknowledging where the programme or institution is located and starting from, given the validation requirements, yet not shying away from the need to turn that critical lens on the epistemological pillars that support the programme”.
You can watch a recording of the event here:
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