For over
80 years it’s been quietly delivering formal and informal learning to millions
worldwide, especially the poor and marginalised. Far from being an old technology it is now transforming itself through podcasts, digital and internet radio.
Formal learning
Radio is a broadcast medium and so has several practical, educational
advantages:
·
has huge geographic reach
·
reaches very large numbers of people
·
audio is cheap to produce
·
audio is cheap to transmit
·
radios are cheap
·
local languages can be used
·
can be self-sustaining
Formal learning, where radio is used on its own or is integral
to a blend of distance learning materials that deliver formal courses, has been
delivered for many decades. Unsurprisingly, it has long been used In large,
sparsely populated rural areas, where schooling is difficult to organise, such as
Australia and in most developing countries. Radio remains the most popular and
accessible form of educational technology in Africa.
International Educational Systems has taken radio into
marginal populations, such as refugees, nomads and those who simply cannot
afford to go to school. Women have also been reached in some societies, where
schooling is impossible or difficult, for example the Somalia Distance
Education Literacy Programme (Somdel) supported by the BBC Worldwide Education
Trust, where 70% of those who passed the course were women.
However, much radio in rural areas is used directly by
schools, as it can deliver consistent and high quality content. Radio has been
of particular use in health education, especially HIV/AIDS. Farming and food
distribution has been taught in 39 African countries through Farm Radio
International.
There has been radio delivered teacher training in Mali and training
for health and education stakeholders in Sudan. One of the features of many of
these initiatives is their delivery in local languages and their sensitivity to
local cultures. In some cases, such as the Sudan Radio Services, radio time has
been sold to pay for the educational services making it truly sustainable.
However, one of the criticisms of radio education is its
focus on outside originated content, abstracts life skills and a lack of
practical vocation content, especially farming, as the majority of children are
the sons and daughters of farmers. Cheap wind-up or solar powered radios are
now widely available from developers such as The Freeplay Foundation. This
gives radio a real edge over TV and computer technology. Typical target audiences
are in the tens or hundreds of thousands, some in their millions.
Audio and learning
Audio also has several cognitive advantages in learning:
·
listening is a universal skill
·
note taking is easy
·
imagination has to be used
·
great for visually impaired
·
easy to deliver in multiple languages
·
good in language learning
·
obviously essential for music
The use of the imagination is a fascinating point as it has
been argued that this leads to deeper processing and higher retention in some
subjects. The obvious downside is the lack of images and the fact that
broadcast media are not under the control of the learner. The lack of control
has been remedied by recording and podcasts have significantly improved the
power of radio to teach and inform at the learner’s own pace.
A whole culture has developed around radio learning to
include ‘listening groups’ and support materials such as comics and workbooks. In
Australia, short-wave radio was used to transmit and receive between farmsteads
and therefore among groups of teachers and learners, sometimes mimicking traditional
teacher-classroom arrangements. Increasingly, for example in Zambia, we have
seen radio’s power amplified by the supplementary use of iPods and mobile
phones.
Informal learning
Radio is still used to educate in formally. The BBC’s R4 has
over 10 million listeners a week and purely educational broadcasts, such as the
highly academic ‘In Our Time’ have
been running for years with many hundreds of podcasts now free on iTunes, covering
science, philosophy and history. Radio has also been used, by the likes of the
Open University and others for successful local advertising.
Radio and propaganda
Of course educational radio is not always worthy as it has
also been used for propaganda. Major and minor powers still use radio as a form
of educational colonialism. The Nazis were the first to see the totalitarian
power of radio with Goebbels claim that, "radio
will be to the twentieth century what the press was to the nineteenth". The Japanese
used ‘Tokyo Rose’ and the North Vietnamese "Hanoi
Hannah" against US troops and the Nazis Lord Haw-haw, against the British.
The US has used radio for propaganda against many countries including Panama,
Cuba and Iraq.
Radio and new media
Podcasting is the true heir to radio. To timeshift an audio
experience and put it in the hands of the learner, gives them is convenience
and control. Internet radio has given many access to distant radio stations and
led to growth in stations with a very specific focus. Far from being a dead or
dying medium it is finding new purposes and new channels.
Conclusion
Radio is scalable, in the broadcasting sense. It’s low cost
and reach have seen widespread use, not only in the developing world but in developed
countries like the UK, where radio has long been respected as a source of high
quality educational content. Video is very far from killing the radio star.
4 comments:
Good one!
Radio is a great solution for cost-effective dissemination of learning and information. Your blog made me recall what my Mom said to have experienced and the positive impact that radio had on them. During 1960-70s, for someone living in a remote Indian village without a TV, or no continuous electricity, with only a weekly regional magazine - radio seemed to be a blessing that educates and entertains them throughout the day and night. The variety of programs aired, ranged from devotion, political situations, health and hygiene, emotional well-being, revision of primary education, music, etc and all these were delivered as interviews, granny stories, narratives, songs, folklore etc. Typically, they were rendered in simple and easily understandable language, considering the uneven levels of literacy in the country. All these without a commercial element in between, made it uninterrupted for the audiences.
I can still see a high adoption of radio, but the nature and quality of programs have diminished over years. Nevertheless, an uptake of radio for informal and lifelong learning can still be effective in the premise of cognitive benefits mentioned by you.
Good one!
Radio is a great solution for cost-effective dissemination of learning and information. Your blog made me recall what my Mom said to have experienced and the positive impact that radio had on them. During 1960-70s, for someone living in a remote Indian village without a TV, or no continuous electricity, with only a weekly regional magazine - radio seemed to be a blessing that educates and entertains them throughout the day and night. The variety of programs aired, ranged from devotion, political situations, health and hygiene, emotional well-being, revision of primary education, music, etc and all these were delivered as interviews, granny stories, narratives, songs, folklore etc. Typically, they were rendered in simple and easily understandable language, considering the uneven levels of literacy in the country. All these without a commercial element in between, made it uninterrupted for the audiences.
I can still see a high adoption rate of radio, but the quality of programs has diminished over years. Nevertheless, an uptake of radio for informal and lifelong learning can still be effective in the premise of cognitive benefits mentioned by you.
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http://www.result.pk/
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