Welcome to the Virtual Education Wiki ~ Open Education Wiki
Nauru: Difference between revisions
Tag: Undo |
({{#set:In Commonwealth=1}}) |
||
Line 221: | Line 221: | ||
[[Category:VISCED]] | [[Category:VISCED]] | ||
{{#set:In Commonwealth=1}} |
Revision as of 15:02, 5 May 2023
by Nikki Cortoos of ATiT
Partners and Experts in Nauru
Nauru in a nutshell
Nauru, officially the Republic of Nauru and formerly known as Pleasant Island, is an island nation in Micronesia in the South Pacific. Its nearest neighbor is Banaba Island in Kiribati, 300 km to the east.
Nauru is the world's smallest island nation, covering just 21 square kilometres (8.1 square miles).
The population of Nauru is 9,378 (July 2012 estimate according to CIA's World Factbook).
Its capital is Yaren.
Settled by Micronesian and Polynesian people, Nauru was annexed and claimed as a colony by the German Empire in the late 19th century. After World War I, Nauru became a League of Nations mandate administered by Australia, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom. During World War II, Nauru was occupied by Japanese troops who were bypassed by the Allied advance across the Pacific, and after the war ended, it entered into trusteeship again. Nauru was declared independent in 1968.
Throughout the first half of the 20th century, Nauru was a "rentier state". Nauru is a phosphate rock island, with deposits close to the surface, which allow for simple strip mining operations. This island was a major exporter of phosphate starting in 1907, when the Pacific Phosphate Company began mining there, through the formation of the British Phosphate Commission in 1919, and continuing after independence. This gave Nauru back full control of its minerals under the Nauru Phosphate Corporation, until the deposits ran out during the 1980s. For this reason, Nauru briefly boasted the highest per-capita income enjoyed by any sovereign state in the world during the late 1960s and early 1970s.
When the phosphate reserves were exhausted, and the environment had been seriously harmed by mining, the trust established to manage the island's wealth became greatly reduced in value. To earn income, the government resorted to unusual measures. In the 1990s, Nauru briefly became a tax haven and money laundering centre. From 2001 to 2008, it accepted aid from the Australian government in exchange for housing a detention centre that held and processed asylum seekers trying to enter Australia.
From December 2005 to September 2006, Nauru became partially isolated from the outside world when Air Nauru, the only airline with service to the island, ceased to operate. (The only outside access to Nauru was then by ocean-going ships.) The airline was able to restart operations under the name Our Airline with monetary aid from Taiwan.
In December 2009 Nauru became the fourth country to recognise Abkhazia, and South Ossetia, regions of Georgia which had been de facto independent since the early 1990s and were recognised as such by Russia.
Education in Nauru
The small republic faces immense economic and budgetary challenges to providing educational services to its small and remote population. During 2000-2005, Nauru's crisis caused a near-collapse of the education system and schools on the island barely functioned. Schools at all levels closed and the most skilled teachers left. Nauru is gradually rebuilding it educational systems following this period; it could be argued that this will take 5-10 years before some stability returns and students exit the secondary system of education seeking higher education.
Source: Regulatory Frameworks for Distance Education: A pilot study in the Southwest Pacific/South East Asia Region. Final Report, DEHub, the Australasian Council for Open and Distance Education (ACODE), the Australian Universities Quality Agency (AUQA) and the International Network for Quality Assurance Agencies in Higher Education (INQAAHE), the International Council for Open and Distance Education (ICDE), December 2011, http://www.icde.org/projects/regulatory_frameworks_for_distance_education/final_report, April 2012.
Schools in Nauru
Attendance at school is compulsory for Nauruan children from 5 to 16 years old. Two types of schools are available, both coeducational: those run by the government and those by the Roman Catholic Church. Education is provided free by the government. In the early 1990s, Nauru had six pre-primary and two primary schools, one secondary school, and a technical school, as well as a mission school.
Education on Nauru is available up to the intermediate level.
Further and Higher education
Universities in Nauru
Higher education mainly takes place overseas, primarily in Australia, assisted by the government in the form of competitive scholarships.
There is also a university extension centre affiliated with the University of the South Pacific USP Nauru Campus.
Polytechnics in Nauru
Colleges in Nauru
Education reform
Schools
Post-secondary
Administration and finance
Schools
Post-secondary
Quality assurance, inspection and accreditation
Schools
Post-secondary
Information society
Telecommunications on Nauru have been extremely poor. Recently however, mobile phone services and basic Internet connectivity together with island-wide radio and TV coverage has become available.
Source: Regulatory Frameworks for Distance Education: A pilot study in the Southwest Pacific/South East Asia Region. Final Report, DEHub, the Australasian Council for Open and Distance Education (ACODE), the Australian Universities Quality Agency (AUQA) and the International Network for Quality Assurance Agencies in Higher Education (INQAAHE), the International Council for Open and Distance Education (ICDE), December 2011, http://www.icde.org/projects/regulatory_frameworks_for_distance_education/final_report, April 2012.
- or online: http://www.icde.org/projects/regulatory_frameworks_for_distance_education/country_profiles/nauru/
ICT in education initiatives
- Despite Nauru's financial and educational challenges , innovative solutions to provision of distance education are gaining momentum as evidinced by the community radio station and the Nauru Government support for projects such as the COL’s Virtual University for the Small States of the Commonwealth (VUSSC). It can be argued that Nauru’s challenges in education can only be met by distance education.
Radio Pasifik-Nauru
A successful innovation is Radio Pasifik-Nauru, Triple 9 FM, an educational community radio station that was started in April 2007, and which distributes audio recordings of lectures.
This community-based educational radio station was designed to assist students on Nauru to overcome isolation, frequent power cuts and the scarcity of transportation and fuel. Students from secondary schools and the University of the South Pacific (USP) can get help through the radio with their course work.
The station broadcasts a range of programming, including lectures and tutorials recorded weekly at the USP in Fiji. Each week, these recordings are sent digitally to Nauru and re-broadcast over Radio Pasifik-Nauru. USP lectures and tutorials comprise about half the station’s programming. The rest consists of local programming or pre-recorded segments on current affairs and topical interests. Most interestingly, programming includes audio files produced by universities in Australia, UK, Canada, US and New Zealand and from social media sites. Radio Pasifik-Nauru demonstrates that innovative approaches can succeed in delivering distance educaton even under conditions of extreme isolation.
Drawing on the University's satellite-communications network (USPNet), 2 staff members from Suva, Fiji and several volunteers from Nauru side blended live audio and video conferences, email, web/online resources and on-site tutoring in software and computer skills through training conducted by Nauru campus information technology (IT) staff. This training covered the basics of on-air announcing, script writing, broadcast ethics, simple audio-editing software, equipment operations, etc.
It is a sister station to USP’s main student and community radio station, Radio Pasifik, Triple 8 FM, located at
the Laucala Campus in Suva, Fiji. Radio Pasifik is the University of the South Pacific’s educational community-based radio station, which began broadcasting in 1996 as an educational, non-profit community radio station. The University provided financial assistance of F$90,000 to redevelop Radio Pasifik, which had temporarily closed in 2010 until December 2011. The new station will be broadcasted in six languages and streamed via internet to reach listeners around the region.
Sources:
- Radio Pasifik Nauru begins on a wave of success, USPBeat Volume 7, Issue 4, The University of the South Pacific, April 2007, April 2012
- Regulatory Frameworks for Distance Education: A pilot study in the Southwest Pacific/South East Asia Region. Final Report, DEHub, the Australasian Council for Open and Distance Education (ACODE), the Australian Universities Quality Agency (AUQA) and the International Network for Quality Assurance Agencies in Higher Education (INQAAHE), the International Council for Open and Distance Education (ICDE), December 2011, http://www.icde.org/projects/regulatory_frameworks_for_distance_education/final_report, April 2012.
- Radio Pasifik-Nauru, The Communication Initiative Network, June 2007, http://www.comminit.com/node/135145, April 2012
- University opens radio station, The University of the South Pacific, Marketing & Communications Office, 29 December 2011, http://www.usp.ac.fj/news/story.php?id=931, April 2012
- 2007, http://www.apdip.net/resources/case/rnd13/view (currently not available)
Virtual initiatives in schools
Virtual initiatives in post-secondary education
Lessons learnt
General lessons
Notable practices
References
- Regulatory Frameworks for Distance Education: A pilot study in the Southwest Pacific/South East Asia Region. Final Report, DEHub, the Australasian Council for Open and Distance Education (ACODE), the Australian Universities Quality Agency (AUQA) and the International Network for Quality Assurance Agencies in Higher Education (INQAAHE), the International Council for Open and Distance Education (ICDE), December 2011, http://www.icde.org/projects/regulatory_frameworks_for_distance_education/final_report, April 2012.