World Bank Study
ELearning in Russia's Schools
Moscow (RU), May 2009 - So far, the transition to a new economic system has brought little tangible benefit to Russia's education system. Disorganisation, underfunding, and a brain drain have made it difficult to adapt. In this situation, the authorities have launched a major effort to improve the employment of ICT to foster reform of Russia's education system and to help it catch up with standard practices in other countries.
The following summarizes a World Bank study that reviews this task and discusses policy options and recommendations designed to support the implementation of eLearning in Russian schools.
Three issues are commonly distinguished that need to be addressed to establish an education system suited to meet the challenges of the modern world:
- granting equal access to education of good quality
- ensuring the introduction of new methods of teaching and learning appropriate for the modern information age
- ensuring the development of ICT skills among the students at the different levels of a national education system
How to implement eLearning?
Of course, the three goals and the means to achieve them are interconnected. To this end, the integration of any ITC-related program into the general strategy of education reform is necessary. The three central points provide a rational and convenient framework, but at this moment, they are not sufficiently integrated in Russia's e-education program, and they don't play a vital role in guiding related policy papers.
Without integrating the use of new technologies into the overall education strategy, it will become more difficult to ensure that investments made in ICT are effective. In addition, Russia's huge landmass, thinly spread population, lack of available finances, and regional diversity already complicate installing effective connectivity and digital networks.
However, Russia also has comparative educational advantages, among which are high educational demands from its people, high technological and engineering standards, good quality basic training of teachers, as well as a high capacity for training teachers and for developing new teaching resources in the regions.
In particular the following steps would help in freeing up Russia's potential: