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E-Learning and North-South collaboration: the experience of two public health schools in France and Benin

INTRODUCTION: Distance learning (e-learning) can facilitate access to training. Yet few public health E-learning experiments have been reported; institutes in developing countries experience difficulties in establishing on-line curricula, while developed countries struggle with adapting existing cur...

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Autores principales: Edouard, Guévart, Dominique, Billot, Moussiliou, Paraïso Noël, Francis, Guillemin, Khaled, Bessaoud, Serge, Briançon
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: African Field Epidemiology Network 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2984294/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21532714
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author Edouard, Guévart
Dominique, Billot
Moussiliou, Paraïso Noël
Francis, Guillemin
Khaled, Bessaoud
Serge, Briançon
author_facet Edouard, Guévart
Dominique, Billot
Moussiliou, Paraïso Noël
Francis, Guillemin
Khaled, Bessaoud
Serge, Briançon
author_sort Edouard, Guévart
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Distance learning (e-learning) can facilitate access to training. Yet few public health E-learning experiments have been reported; institutes in developing countries experience difficulties in establishing on-line curricula, while developed countries struggle with adapting existing curricula to realities on the ground. In 2005, two schools of public health, one in France and one in Benin, began collaborating through contact sessions organised for Nancy University distance-learning students. This experience gave rise to a partnership aimed at developing training materials for e-Learning for African students. The distance-learning public health course at Nancy teaches public health professionals through a module entitled “Health and Development.” The module is specifically tailored for professionals from developing countries. To promote student-teacher exchanges, clarify content and supervise dissertations, contact sessions are organized in centres proximate and accessible to African students. The Benin Institute’s main feature is residential team learning; distance-learning courses are currently being prepared. OUTCOME: The two collaborating institutions have developed a joint distance-learning module geared toward developing countries. The collaboration provides for the development, diffusion, and joint delivery of teaching modules featuring issues that are familiar to African staff, gives the French Institute credibility in assessing research work produced, and enables modules on specific African issues and approaches to be put online. LESSONS LEARNED: While E-learning is a viable educational option for public health professionals, periodic contact can be advantageous. Our analysis showed that the benefit of the collaboration between the two institutions is mutual; the French Institute extends its geographical, cultural and contextual reach and expands its pool of teaching staff. The Benin Institute benefits from the technical partnership and expertise, which allow it to offer distance learning for Africa-specific contexts and applications.
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spelling pubmed-29842942010-11-30 E-Learning and North-South collaboration: the experience of two public health schools in France and Benin Edouard, Guévart Dominique, Billot Moussiliou, Paraïso Noël Francis, Guillemin Khaled, Bessaoud Serge, Briançon Pan Afr Med J Short communication INTRODUCTION: Distance learning (e-learning) can facilitate access to training. Yet few public health E-learning experiments have been reported; institutes in developing countries experience difficulties in establishing on-line curricula, while developed countries struggle with adapting existing curricula to realities on the ground. In 2005, two schools of public health, one in France and one in Benin, began collaborating through contact sessions organised for Nancy University distance-learning students. This experience gave rise to a partnership aimed at developing training materials for e-Learning for African students. The distance-learning public health course at Nancy teaches public health professionals through a module entitled “Health and Development.” The module is specifically tailored for professionals from developing countries. To promote student-teacher exchanges, clarify content and supervise dissertations, contact sessions are organized in centres proximate and accessible to African students. The Benin Institute’s main feature is residential team learning; distance-learning courses are currently being prepared. OUTCOME: The two collaborating institutions have developed a joint distance-learning module geared toward developing countries. The collaboration provides for the development, diffusion, and joint delivery of teaching modules featuring issues that are familiar to African staff, gives the French Institute credibility in assessing research work produced, and enables modules on specific African issues and approaches to be put online. LESSONS LEARNED: While E-learning is a viable educational option for public health professionals, periodic contact can be advantageous. Our analysis showed that the benefit of the collaboration between the two institutions is mutual; the French Institute extends its geographical, cultural and contextual reach and expands its pool of teaching staff. The Benin Institute benefits from the technical partnership and expertise, which allow it to offer distance learning for Africa-specific contexts and applications. African Field Epidemiology Network 2009-10-14 /pmc/articles/PMC2984294/ /pubmed/21532714 Text en Copyright © 2009 Guevart Edouard et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ The Pan African Medical Journal - ISSN 1937-8688. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Short communication
Edouard, Guévart
Dominique, Billot
Moussiliou, Paraïso Noël
Francis, Guillemin
Khaled, Bessaoud
Serge, Briançon
E-Learning and North-South collaboration: the experience of two public health schools in France and Benin
title E-Learning and North-South collaboration: the experience of two public health schools in France and Benin
title_full E-Learning and North-South collaboration: the experience of two public health schools in France and Benin
title_fullStr E-Learning and North-South collaboration: the experience of two public health schools in France and Benin
title_full_unstemmed E-Learning and North-South collaboration: the experience of two public health schools in France and Benin
title_short E-Learning and North-South collaboration: the experience of two public health schools in France and Benin
title_sort e-learning and north-south collaboration: the experience of two public health schools in france and benin
topic Short communication
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2984294/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21532714
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