6533b822fe1ef96bd127cd4a
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Negotiating the symbolic power of information and communication technologies (ICT): The spread of Internet-supported distance education
Ståle Angen Ryesubject
Knowledge managementPublic AdministrationHigher educationVDP::Social science: 200::Economics: 210Computer sciencebusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectDistance educationDeveloping countryVDP::Technology: 500::Information and communication technology: 550DevelopmentPublic relationsModernization theoryComputer Science ApplicationsNegotiationInformation and Communications TechnologyThe InternetbusinessSymbolic powermedia_commondescription
Submitted version of an article in the journal: Information Technology for Development The deposited fulltext is a preprint of the definitive article at Wiley Interscience http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/itdj.20110 The Internet may be, as typically suggested, important in distance education for facilitating connections between groups of students, educational institutions, and external learning resources. This article, however, reveals why this is not the only reason for applying information and communication technologies (ICT) in higher education in a remote area in a developing country. In addition, the Internet seems to be of great importance in symbolizing modernization and progress, thereby adding symbolic power to such education. Empirical sources originate from an explorative case study of an Internet-supported distance education program in the province of Bangka Belitung in Indonesia. Based on a translation perspective on the spread of pheromones, the analyses of empirical sources show how the Internet has contributed to the spread of distance education, but paradoxically this has not had much effect on the use of Internet by students in peripheral areas, at least not in the short term
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2009-01-01 | Information Technology for Development |