E-Learning for Developing Countries is Focus of MIT Workshop

February 5, 2003

In addition to senior MIT faculty and policy makers from USAID, the

World Bank, corporations and foundations, the following countries

will be represented: Algeria, Armenia, Canada, France, Hong Kong,

Japan, India, Ireland, Iran, Israel, Kenya, Mexico, Niger, Pakistan,

Russia, Syria and the United Arab Emirates.

Professor Richard Larson, Professor of Electrical Engineering

at MIT and Co-Editor of Internet Forum 2001, created the concept of

LINC to address the needs of the growing youth oriented population

demographic in developing countries and the fact that developing

countries will be left further behind unless their youth receive

quality higher level education.

Speakers, who will address distance learning initiatives in

their respective countries, include Dr. Milad Fares Sebaaly, Provost,

Syrian Virtual University; Dr. Naveed Malik, Rector, Virtual

University of Pakistan and Dr. S. Sohail Naqvi, (Ministry of Science

and Technology, (Pakistan); Dr. Judy Dori, Technion University

(Israel); Dr. El-hadi Khaldi, Rector, Universite de la Formation

Continue (Algeria); Dr. Magdallen Juma, African Virtual University;

Ali Meghdari, senior faculty, Sharif University (Iran); and Yolanda

Martinez de Hernandez, Virtual University (Mexico). Participants will

also hear the latest developments on OpenCourseWare, MIT’s

large-scale, web-based electronic publishing initiative to make MIT

course materials freely available for educators, students, and

individual learners around the world. A full agenda, list of thirty

speakers and their topics and bios are available at

http://ken.mit.edu/linc (go to General Information).

Membership in LINC is open to individuals and institutions

and will be supported financially by membership dues, foundation

support, corporate funding and governmental institutions. Some of

its early activities will include the creation of collaborative

educational web sites, starter R&D projects in developing countries

aimed at new initiatives such as alternative pedagogical models in

e-learning; and the provision of technical assistance in training the

trainers who will serve as initial key e-learning project managers.

The workshop is made possible by a generous grant from the

Lounsbery Foundation.


MIT Contact:

Janet Wasserstein

Associate Director for Foundation Relations

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

77 Massachusetts Avenue Building 4 Room 240

Cambridge MA 02139

Tel: 617-253-4789

EMail: Janetw@mit.edu