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The Internet Dilemma
The Internet raises major issues and challenges for education,
not just in China but across the globe. Yet it simply
cannot be ignored in terms of the opportunities and resources
that it can offer.
We can divide the main issues facing education systems
into three groups - access, quality and responsibility.
Let us consider the Internet in relation to each of them.
First, access. Through the Internet, practically the
whole world can be brought into your classroom. Using
email makes it possible to have a class whose members
are spread all over the world and who may never meet either
the teacher or each other face to face. It can put students
in one country in easy contact with students in another.
The information resources available are almost limitless.
Through the Internet, students and teachers can access
the wisdom, experience, skulls, and even guidance of others
in a way that was only possible for a very privileged
few.
Next, quality. The Internet does pose serious problems
of quality for education systems. Obviously, there is
a lot of material on the Internet that no one would want
children or students to have uncontrolled access to, but
there are other problems which are much harder to solve.
The first is how to handle the sheer quantity of information
available, and how to make it manageable.
Since anyone can put information on the Internet, and
there are no limits on quantity, it can be almost impossible
to find exactly the information that one wants. Teachers
and students cannot afford to waste time on fruitless
searching.
How can we identify the information which will be most
useful without overloading ourselves and our students
with unnecessary information? How to we select the best
information from all that is available?
This raises the issue of responsibility. There are few
editors or quality controllers on the Internet. The ultimate
responsibility for selection and judgment falls to the
user, whether teacher or student. Teachers, and still
less students, are not experts in every field; what we
select may not be what we really want, perhaps is out-of-date,
even wrong.
Any profession must take some collective responsibility
in resolving these problems. Conscious and deliberate
efforts have to be made to share information between teachers
about useful sites and about the best way to use them.
Those who have found something useful or of high quality
should not keep the information to themselves, but share
it as widely as possible.
There are many professional discussion groups active
on the Internet which aim to do this. Access to them by
teachers should be actively encouraged. This will require
investment by institutions in giving easy access to the
Internet and email to all teachers. Without this investment,
educators - and ultimately students - will be deprived
of a vital resource for the development of education in
the future.
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