The overwhelming traditional knowledge delivery system for higher education in the Arab world demonstrates the pronounced information technology (IT) gap between Arab countries and the developed world. This study demonstrates the problems and possibilities of implementing e‐learning in Arab educational institutions through analysing the attitudes of university professors (n = 294) in Lebanon towards three a priori e‐learning dimensions. Favourable attitudes towards e‐learning attested to faculty members’ interest to get engaged in a fully‐fledged e‐learning programme in a country where the primary delivery educational model is essentially traditional. Discusses these attitudes in the light of the social, political and economic hindrances that impede the implementation of e‐learning in the Arab region. A series of K‐independent Kruskal‐Wallis tests yielded significant attitudinal variations between males and females as well as between computer daily users and occasional users. Furthermore, daily computer users documented more favourable attitudes towards e‐learning than their occasional user counterparts. Offers recommendations for the implementation of e‐learning in “traditionally” demarcated educational systems in countries where the deployment of information and communications technologies is not widespread.
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1 March 2004
Case Report|
March 01 2004
E‐learning challenges in the Arab world: revelations from a case study profile Available to Purchase
Kamal Abouchedid;
Kamal Abouchedid
Kamal Abouchedid is Director of the Office of Tests, Measurement and Evaluation at Notre Dame University, Zouk Mosbeh, Lebanon.
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George M. Eid
George M. Eid
George M. Eid is Vice President for Academic Affairs and Professor in Mathematics, at Notre Dame University, Zouk Mosbeh, Lebanon.
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-7662
Print ISSN: 0968-4883
© Emerald Group Publishing Limited
2004
Quality Assurance in Education (2004) 12 (1): 15–27.
Citation
Abouchedid K, Eid GM (2004), "E‐learning challenges in the Arab world: revelations from a case study profile". Quality Assurance in Education, Vol. 12 No. 1 pp. 15–27, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/09684880410517405
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