Using digital technologies to implement distance education for incarcerated students: a case study from an Australian regional university

<p>As universities become increasingly reliant on the online delivery of courses for distance education, those students without access to the Internet are increasingly marginalised. Among those most marginalised are incarcerated students who are often from low socio-economic status backgrounds...

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Main Authors: Helen Sara Farley, Joanne Doyle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Council for Open and Distance Education (ICDE) 2014-11-01
Series:Open Praxis
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.openpraxis.org/index.php/OpenPraxis/article/view/134
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spelling doaj-c4de22ac9f644085a505201bf85a04c22020-11-24T23:04:33ZengInternational Council for Open and Distance Education (ICDE)Open Praxis2304-070X2014-11-016410.5944/openpraxis.6.4.13477Using digital technologies to implement distance education for incarcerated students: a case study from an Australian regional universityHelen Sara Farley0Joanne Doyle1University of Southern QueenslandUniversity of Southern Queensland<p>As universities become increasingly reliant on the online delivery of courses for distance education, those students without access to the Internet are increasingly marginalised. Among those most marginalised are incarcerated students who are often from low socio-economic status backgrounds and have limited access to resources. This article reports on four projects that incrementally build on each other, three of which are completed, at the University of Southern Queensland that seek to provide access to higher education for incarcerated students. These projects developed a modified version of Moodle, called Stand Alone Moodle (SAM), which doesn’t require Internet access, but provides the same level of access and interactivity as regular Moodle. EBook readers were also used in two of the projects. A description of the projects, a summary of the results and issues is provided. The projects will be extended to deploy Stand Alone Moodle and tablet computers to correctional centres across Australia with a focus on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students.</p>http://www.openpraxis.org/index.php/OpenPraxis/article/view/134access to education, digital divide, distance education, higher education, incarcerated students
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Helen Sara Farley
Joanne Doyle
spellingShingle Helen Sara Farley
Joanne Doyle
Using digital technologies to implement distance education for incarcerated students: a case study from an Australian regional university
Open Praxis
access to education, digital divide, distance education, higher education, incarcerated students
author_facet Helen Sara Farley
Joanne Doyle
author_sort Helen Sara Farley
title Using digital technologies to implement distance education for incarcerated students: a case study from an Australian regional university
title_short Using digital technologies to implement distance education for incarcerated students: a case study from an Australian regional university
title_full Using digital technologies to implement distance education for incarcerated students: a case study from an Australian regional university
title_fullStr Using digital technologies to implement distance education for incarcerated students: a case study from an Australian regional university
title_full_unstemmed Using digital technologies to implement distance education for incarcerated students: a case study from an Australian regional university
title_sort using digital technologies to implement distance education for incarcerated students: a case study from an australian regional university
publisher International Council for Open and Distance Education (ICDE)
series Open Praxis
issn 2304-070X
publishDate 2014-11-01
description <p>As universities become increasingly reliant on the online delivery of courses for distance education, those students without access to the Internet are increasingly marginalised. Among those most marginalised are incarcerated students who are often from low socio-economic status backgrounds and have limited access to resources. This article reports on four projects that incrementally build on each other, three of which are completed, at the University of Southern Queensland that seek to provide access to higher education for incarcerated students. These projects developed a modified version of Moodle, called Stand Alone Moodle (SAM), which doesn’t require Internet access, but provides the same level of access and interactivity as regular Moodle. EBook readers were also used in two of the projects. A description of the projects, a summary of the results and issues is provided. The projects will be extended to deploy Stand Alone Moodle and tablet computers to correctional centres across Australia with a focus on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students.</p>
topic access to education, digital divide, distance education, higher education, incarcerated students
url http://www.openpraxis.org/index.php/OpenPraxis/article/view/134
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