Abstract:
This article argues that the distance education (DE) delivery model has the potential
to offer education and training to a greater majority of Malawians who, for one
reason or another, cannot be accommodated in the traditional face-to-face delivery
model. Motivated by the need to understand the delivery models employed by DE
institutions in the country, the technologies they employ, and the need to gauge
major successes of this model of provision, an audit study involving Mzuzu University,
the Domasi College of Education, the Malawi College of Distance Education, the
Department of Teacher Education and Development, Chancellor College, the
Malawi Polytechnic, and Aggrey Memorial School was conducted in 2012. This was
necessitated by the need to establish the nature and effi cacy of distance education
in Malawi. The major fi nding of the study is that, although this model of delivery
has allowed access to education and training for people who otherwise would have
been denied the opportunity because of the restrictive nature of the face-to-face
delivery mode, DE institutions in Malawi continue to face challenges pertaining to
the use of basic, rudimentary and often obsolete technologies, which make the
delivery model cumbersome for both tutors and learners. The implication is that
the full potential of this delivery model has been attenuated by the use of such
instructional technologies. The paper recommends that Malawi must invest in the
requisite infrastructure and appropriate technologies to enhance the effi cacy of
distance education and e-learning as a means of broadening and increasing access
to education and training.
Description:
Proceedings of the 5th biennial International Conference on Distance Education and
Teachers’ Training in Africa (DETA) held at the University of Nairobi, Nairobi, Kenya, 30 July - 1 August 2013.