How does distance education help meet professionals' needs for continuing
education? People who need continuing professional education generally are dispersed
and unable to come often to a central location. Recent technological advances have allowed
distance programs to bring professional continuing education closer to practitioners.
Two examples of such programs suggest their diversity:
- In Canada the Telemedicine program at Memorial University in Newfoundland delivers
continuing medical education throughout a large, sparsely populated province with
difficult geographic and climatic conditions.
- In the United States the National Technological University, a consortium of most of the
country's major engineering schools that is based in Fort Collins, Colorado, delivers
graduate programs and continuing professional education in engineering throughout the
country and, increasingly, overseas.
Such innovations are seldom the direct work of government, though governments have
generally been supportive of them. Most professional continuing education is provided at
the behest of practitioners and their professional associations.
- More on continuing professional education
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- Grundling, J. & Govender, D. Continuing Professional Learning As A
Means Of Creating A Learning Culture In A Distance Learning Environment Paper presented at the 1st National NADEOSA Conference held 11-13 August
1999
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