Indigenous Knowledge - Cross - Regional Distance Learning Course (India, Sri Lanka, Uganda and Tanzania)
Indigenous knowledge (IK) is usually shared among local communities and transferred from one generation to the next, through oral traditions and story-telling. The IK distance learning course was an effort to facilitate this process across four countries and two continents. Information communications technology (ICTs) enabled the bridging of the geographical and perceptional distance between the 102 participants, through the videoconference facilities of the global development learning network. The course effectively demonstrated how leveraging traditional and modern knowledge systems can help address development challenges.
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Language: | English |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2005-09
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Subjects: | AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH, AGRICULTURE, COLLABORATION, COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGIES, DEVELOPMENT PROJECTS, DIET, DISEASES, DISTANCE LEARNING, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, ENGINEERS, FARMERS, FOOD PROCESSING, FORESTRY, GENDER, HEALTH CARE, IMMUNITY, INDIGENOUS KNOWLEDGE, INNOVATION, INNOVATIONS, INSTITUTIONALIZATION, INTEGRATION, INTERVENTION, KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT, KNOWLEDGE USE, LEGISLATION, LIVESTOCK, MEDIA, MEDICINE, MENTAL HEALTH, MORTALITY, NGOS, NURSES, PARTNERSHIP, PATIENTS, POLICY MAKERS, POLICY MAKERS, PRODUCTIVITY, PROGRAMS, PROPERTY RIGHTS, RURAL DEVELOPMENT, SAFETY, SCHOOLS, SCIENTIFIC COMMUNITY, SUSTAINABLE USE, UNIVERSITIES, |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/09/6261515/indigenous-knowledge-cross-regional-distance-learning-course-india-sri-lanka-uganda-tanzania https://hdl.handle.net/10986/10750 |
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Summary: | Indigenous knowledge (IK) is usually
shared among local communities and transferred from one
generation to the next, through oral traditions and
story-telling. The IK distance learning course was an effort
to facilitate this process across four countries and two
continents. Information communications technology (ICTs)
enabled the bridging of the geographical and perceptional
distance between the 102 participants, through the
videoconference facilities of the global development
learning network. The course effectively demonstrated how
leveraging traditional and modern knowledge systems can help
address development challenges. |
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