Education in Chile: Towards the Virtualization of our Educational Future?
Roxana Aglaee Rebolledo Font de La Vall1, Fabián Avelino González Araya2, Eugenio Tassara Hoy3
1,2Department of Mathematics, Physics, and Computing, Faculty of Natural and Exact Sciences, University of Playa Ancha.
Avda. Leopoldo Carvallo 270, Playa Ancha, Valparaíso – Chile. Telephone: 56322205518
3Department of Integrated Arts; Faculty of Arts, University of Playa Ancha.
ABSTRACT: This article proposes a study of the evolution of educational offers of undergraduate and postgraduate degrees in a virtual or semi-virtual mode in Chile, based on its explosive increase, analyzed data, and breakdown of implications.
Higher education, after this analysis, evidently expresses a new context of reality in professional training; we are experiencing a new era, educational offer that perhaps responds to the demands of productive dynamism, customs, and experiences of the tremendous technological immersion by our young people, in response to programs that seek to approach this need but with a low level of development and organization quality.
KEYWORDS: Online Education, Blended Learning, E Learning, Evolution Offers Online, E Learning And Productive Dynamism.
INTRODUCTION
The training process concerning professional construction and qualification for the labor market is undergoing a profound transformation, allowing access to content and learning activities through Internet platforms and facilitating online programs. Concerning promoting their access to the freedom of movement or physical presence, it is a system that allows our young people, who are more accustomed to using and connecting to the Internet, to enroll in virtual or semi-virtual professional training with great flexibility.
Based on this need and the flexibility of studies, the growth of the offer of online training programs has increased significantly.
ANALYTICAL CONTEXT AND DATA
In Chile, today, more than 360 professional careers are offered, including Engineering in virtual or semi-virtual mode, and 175 virtual or semi-virtual master’s degrees in postgraduate studies, which shows an exponential growth of online programs in recent years, this being something unexpected, with a significant impact on the understanding of the educational process, understanding that the old paradigms of attendance, infrastructure, and provision of physical resources no longer make sense in today’s world.
Table 1. Offer of Engineering, professional careers, and online degrees from 2011 to 2021 in Chile.
2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | |
e-Learning | 64 | 74 | 80 | 91 | 129 | 144 | 175 | 190 | 193 | 207 | 293 |
b-Learning | 29 | 39 | 63 | 62 | 70 | 64 | 67 | 66 | 61 | 53 | 68 |
Total | 93 | 113 | 143 | 153 | 199 | 208 | 242 | 256 | 254 | 260 | 361 |
Source: Own elaboration based on data from Subsecretaría de Educación Superior, 2011 to 2021.
Between 2011 and 2021, this offer grew, leading to the presentation of 168 engineering careers, 130 Master’s programs, and another 193 professional careers in non-face-to-face format by the end of 2021. This situation poses a little studied reality, implying the great challenge of leading quality online training programs based on the emerging growth of the non-face-to-face training offer with recognized qualifications for professional job performance.
Are we risking the educational future in virtuality?
Indeed, the growth of the offer, with the flexibility of face-to-face attendance and dedication to a professional training or online postgraduate program, is increasing exponentially; in just ten years, we have quadrupled the offer of programs in these flexible training modalities. Furthermore, the Comisión Nacional de Acreditación (CNA) has already advanced by accrediting some programs, adapting the standards to measure suitability through suitable indicators that guarantee procedures and quality development in virtual or blended learning; defining precise guidelines for Professional Institutes, Technical Training Centers, and Universities; but the reality is that the percentage of these accredited programs does not exceed 5% (17 programs).
Table 2. The evolution offers online Master’s Programs from 2011 to 2021.
2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | |
e-Learning | 21 | 42 | 62 | 53 | 42 | 48 | 49 | 185 | 58 | 62 | 91 |
b-Learning | 23 | 20 | 42 | 41 | 43 | 80 | 75 | 95 | 104 | 86 | 84 |
Accredited | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 10 | 6 | 9 | 13 | 9 | 11 |
Unaccredited | 43 | 61 | 103 | 93 | 84 | 118 | 146 | 271 | 149 | 139 | 164 |
Total | 44 | 62 | 104 | 94 | 85 | 128 | 152 | 280 | 162 | 148 | 175 |
Source: Own elaboration based on data from Subsecretaría de Educación Superior, 2012 to 2021.
It is essential to clarify that to exercise a career or profession in Chile, it is only necessary to have the title or certificate issued by the respective training institution, but the program does not need to be accredited, except if the student requires a scholarship to attend the program.
The delivery of official qualifications without quality accreditation.
To practice professionally in Chile, the degree does not need to come from an accredited program, which is only required for degrees in health and education. Still, technical, engineering, and other humanities areas are not required.
In practical terms, the accreditation of careers not in the health or education area only affects the situation of their students about not being able to apply for state scholarships.
In this way, in the sectors of industrial productivity, engineering, or service attention, the professions do not need to be certified with a quality accreditation by the National Accreditation Commission (CNA); it is simply necessary that the institution that dictates the program be accredited.
Table 3. Students enrolled in professional careers, engineering, and online degrees from 2011 to 2021 in Chile
2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | |
e-Learning | 4542 | 6135 | 6547 | 9153 | 11708 | 13449 | 15159 | 18387 | 23246 | 27126 | 33567 |
b-Learning | 1055 | 1565 | 2355 | 3283 | 3331 | 3521 | 3119 | 3040 | 2864 | 2784 | 3683 |
Total | 5597 | 7700 | 8902 | 12436 | 15039 | 16970 | 18278 | 21427 | 26110 | 29910 | 37250 |
Source: Own elaboration based on data from Subsecretaría de Educación Superior, 2011 to 2021.
Table 3 shows the great growth of students enrolled in online professional training programs, what evidence an increase in online enrollment, stronger than face-to-face education (table 4).
Table 4. Comparison between face-to-face and online professional degree programs for students enrolled in the first year from 2011 to 2021 in Chile
2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | |
online | 1930 | 2332 | 3602 | 5133 | 5081 | 6114 | 7768 | 9089 | 9918 | 9968 | 17862 |
face to face | 188447 | 184011 | 181147 | 173833 | 170374 | 176281 | 176933 | 176882 | 174636 | 163480 | 165550 |
Source: Own elaboration based on data from Subsecretaría de Educación Superior, 2011 to 2021.
The assessment of face-to-face education, is the value of face-to face and off-line social interaction (Calzada, I., Cobo, I. 2015); but, the increase in enrollment in online programs is evident, having a growth over 1000% in the last decade. It is important to associate economic and productive growth to justify online growth, it is important to associate economic and productive growth to justify online growth.
The growth and supply of training programs as a result of a requirement of the production system?
In a cross-sectional analysis of productive growth, associating employability and an increase in the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) between the years 2011 and 2021, measured growth is evident, which is not consistent with the growth of virtual training enrollments in higher education in the same period.
Table 5. Active population in the work market 2011 to 2021 in Chile
2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | |
Employees (Millions) | 8.08 | 8.16 | 8.28 | 8.43 | 8.54 | 8.65 | 8.84 | 8.99 | 9.09 | 8.53 | 8.50 |
% growth (2011- 2022) |
0% | 0,99% | 1,47 % | 1,81 % | 1,30 % | 1,28 % | 2,19 % | 1,6 % | 1,11 % | -3,83 % | -0,64 % |
Source: Own elaboration based on the World Bank 2022.
The population of employees has not grown as much percentage in the last decade (table 5), similarly, economic growth in the same period (table 6), these growths are lower than the 1000% growth of online education (table 4).
Table 6. GDP (US$) 2011 to 2021 in Chile
2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | |
GDP
(US$ Billions) |
251.22 | 267.18 | 277.24 | 259.41 | 242.50 | 249.30 | 276.36 | 295.40 | 278.58 | 252.73 | 317.06 |
% growth (2011- 2022) | 0% | 6,35 % | 3,76 % | -3,56 % | -3,48 % | 2,80 % | 10,8 % | 6,88 % | 4,30 % | -10,7 % | 25,4 % |
Source: Own elaboration based on the World Bank 2022.
The need to participate socially in the 21st century require that, in terms of productivity, we must work in coherence with a globally connected world, in a new ecology of being and being, demanding communication literacy and handling of new media in the context of intelligent machines and systems, where Artificial Intelligence is proposing new ways of operating the access and production of information in a context or ecology of a computational, digital, virtual world (Ballestar, M. T., Díaz-Chao, Á., Sainz, J., & Torrent-Sellens, J. 2020).
Faced with this great dynamism and an attempt to be qualified according to labor demands, living is not understood except in permanent educational construction, in which the improvement, the formative restructuring, and the destructuring of new skills in the workplace labor and technology give us certainties to live in coherence with continuous change (Putro, H. P. N., Hadi, S., Rajiani, I., & Abbas, E. W. 2022). In such a way, face the degree of uncertainty with the hope of facing the accelerated demands of the environment. (Bulger, M., Bright, J., & Cobo, C. 2015).
For educational institutions, this requirement is not a new challenge, they have already survived several decades in the face of a changing world, with which they have demonstrated their ability to survive, but it is not a minor issue that today there is an online education and an online education, or a more permanent concern for training beyond the classroom, and even in an immaterial space such as virtual education. (Cobo Roman & Moravec, 2011).
New challenges in the face of the demand for new changes.
They arise with a high demand for change, varying the approach to teaching from enabling new learning ecosystems, considering environments implemented remotely with technologies that facilitate the management and generation of information, and moving towards the development of empowerment skills. (D. Tapscott 2009)
Moreover, in such a way, formal learning is falling into disuse, and progress is being made within a context of ubiquitous and digital extended learning.
CONCLUSIONS
An education must be rethought from new perspectives, forms, and ideas, so today, we know how to coexist with the technology students take to classrooms and training spaces in their own pockets. The socio-productive transformation in the 21st century poses a paradigmatic change based on new practices, which must be built in this new digital learning ecology, requires pedagogical and didactic diversification, with flexible, creative, and technological teaching environments, but always considering that technology does not solve by itself the great problem of education, but complements it.
Unquestionably, the virtualization of training programs contributes to enriching the teaching proposals. This is a call to rethink to advance in flexible and integrated processes, with resources that allow interaction with the knowledge desired to be reflected in a competence associated with technology. We just do not know what future jobs will be, but we can predict that they will use technology as a professional tool (Grigorievna, B. T., Alekseevna, P. N., & Sotnikova, L. V. 2021)
One of the main challenges for Chile is to find a way to deepen experiences that are increasingly closer to digital culture, without losing academic traditions that facilitate natural processes of inclusion in our higher education institutions.
Although the virtualization of teaching generates a provocation for the teacher, it is decisive to highlight the benefits that it entails, particularly in this historical period in which time increasingly collides with the representation that each one makes of life (Garcia, 2022). From this perspective, it is necessary to carry out a training process in digital skills for teachers with an emphasis on an aggressive and innovative culture of “CyberLearning,” and for this, the interdisciplinary promotion of communities of CyberLearning researchers and specialists is recommended; inculcate the use of a platform of activities in perspective with CyberLearning; to emphasize the transformational power of digital technologies for Learning, finally that programs and policies should be adopted to promote open educational spaces and resources, assuming responsibility for maintaining specific standards of safety, quality, sustainability or performance by sponsoring innovations.
REFERENCES
- Ballestar, M. T., Díaz-Chao, Á., Sainz, J., & Torrent-Sellens, J. (2020). Knowledge, robots and productivity in SMEs: Explaining the second digital wave. Journal of Business Research, 108, 119-131.
- Bulger, M., Bright, J., & Cobo, C. (2015). The real component of virtual learning: motivations for face-to-face MOOC meetings in developing and industrialised countries. Information, Communication & Society, 18(10), 1200-1216.
- Calzada, I., Cobo, I. (2015). Unplugging: Deconstructing the smart city. Journal of Urban Technology 22 (1), 23-43
- Cobo Romaní, Cristóbal; Moravec, John W. (2011). Unseen Learning. Towards a new ecology of Education. Collección Transmedia XXI. Laboratori de Mitjans Interactius / Publicacions i. Edicions Universitat Barcelona. Barcelona.
- Tapscott (2009). Grown Up Digital: How the Net Generation is Changing Your World. New York: McGraw-Hill Education.
- Grigorievna, B. T., Alekseevna, P. N., & Sotnikova, L. V. (2021). Distance learning as a strategic channel for the development of tutoring services. Linguistics and Culture Review, 5(S1), 529-537. https://doi.org/10.21744/lingcure.v5nS1.1437
- Putro, H. P. N., Hadi, S., Rajiani, I., & Abbas, E. W. (2022). Adoption of e-learning in Indonesian higher education: innovation or irritation?. Educational Sciences: Theory & Practice, 22(1), 36-45.
- The World Bank. (2022). ILOSTAT database [Data set]. En Labor force, total – Chile. https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SL.TLF.TOTL.IN?locations=CL
- Undersecretary of Higher Education, Ministry of Education of Chile (2018, june). Matrícula 2018 (Pregrado y Posgrado) (1,0) [Data sheet xls]. Ministry of Education of Chile. . https://www.mifuturo.cl/wp-content/uploads/2018/SIES/informes_anuales/matricula/informe_matricula_2018_sies.xlsx.
- Undersecretary of Higher Education, Ministry of Education of Chile. (2017, july). Matrícula 2017 (Pregrado y Posgrado) (1,0) [Data sheet xls]. Ministry of Education of Chile. https://www.mifuturo.cl/wp-content/uploads/2018/SIES/informes_anuales/matricula/informe_matricula_2017_sies.xlsx.
- Undersecretary of Higher Education, Ministry of Education of Chile (2016, september). Matrícula 2007 a 2016 (Pregrado y Posgrado) (1,0) [Data sheet xls]. Ministry of Education of Chile. https://www.mifuturo.cl/wp-content/uploads/2018/SIES/informes_anuales/matricula/informe_matricula_2007_a_2016_sies.xlsx.
Education in Chile: Towards the Virtualization of our Educational Future?
Roxana Aglaee Rebolledo Font de La Vall1, Fabián Avelino González Araya2, Eugenio Tassara Hoy3
1,2Department of Mathematics, Physics, and Computing, Faculty of Natural and Exact Sciences, University of Playa Ancha.
Avda. Leopoldo Carvallo 270, Playa Ancha, Valparaíso – Chile. Telephone: 56322205518
3Department of Integrated Arts; Faculty of Arts, University of Playa Ancha.
Vol 02 No 10 (2022): Volume 02 Issue 10 October 2022
Article Date Published : 1 October 2022 | Page No.: 508-511
Abstract :
This article proposes a study of the evolution of educational offers of undergraduate and postgraduate degrees in a virtual or semi-virtual mode in Chile, based on its explosive increase, analyzed data, and breakdown of implications.
Higher education, after this analysis, evidently expresses a new context of reality in professional training; we are experiencing a new era, educational offer that perhaps responds to the demands of productive dynamism, customs, and experiences of the tremendous technological immersion by our young people, in response to programs that seek to approach this need but with a low level of development and organization quality.
Keywords :
Online Education, Blended Learning, E Learning, Evolution Offers Online, E Learning And Productive Dynamism.References :
- Ballestar, M. T., Díaz-Chao, Á., Sainz, J., & Torrent-Sellens, J. (2020). Knowledge, robots and productivity in SMEs: Explaining the second digital wave. Journal of Business Research, 108, 119-131.
- Bulger, M., Bright, J., & Cobo, C. (2015). The real component of virtual learning: motivations for face-to-face MOOC meetings in developing and industrialised countries. Information, Communication & Society, 18(10), 1200-1216.
- Calzada, I., Cobo, I. (2015). Unplugging: Deconstructing the smart city. Journal of Urban Technology 22 (1), 23-43
- Cobo Romaní, Cristóbal; Moravec, John W. (2011). Unseen Learning. Towards a new ecology of Education. Collección Transmedia XXI. Laboratori de Mitjans Interactius / Publicacions i. Edicions Universitat Barcelona. Barcelona.
- Tapscott (2009). Grown Up Digital: How the Net Generation is Changing Your World. New York: McGraw-Hill Education.
- Grigorievna, B. T., Alekseevna, P. N., & Sotnikova, L. V. (2021). Distance learning as a strategic channel for the development of tutoring services. Linguistics and Culture Review, 5(S1), 529-537. https://doi.org/10.21744/lingcure.v5nS1.1437
- Putro, H. P. N., Hadi, S., Rajiani, I., & Abbas, E. W. (2022). Adoption of e-learning in Indonesian higher education: innovation or irritation?. Educational Sciences: Theory & Practice, 22(1), 36-45.
- The World Bank. (2022). ILOSTAT database [Data set]. En Labor force, total – Chile. https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SL.TLF.TOTL.IN?locations=CL
- Undersecretary of Higher Education, Ministry of Education of Chile (2018, june). Matrícula 2018 (Pregrado y Posgrado) (1,0) [Data sheet xls]. Ministry of Education of Chile. . https://www.mifuturo.cl/wp-content/uploads/2018/SIES/informes_anuales/matricula/informe_matricula_2018_sies.xlsx.
- Undersecretary of Higher Education, Ministry of Education of Chile. (2017, july). Matrícula 2017 (Pregrado y Posgrado) (1,0) [Data sheet xls]. Ministry of Education of Chile. https://www.mifuturo.cl/wp-content/uploads/2018/SIES/informes_anuales/matricula/informe_matricula_2017_sies.xlsx.
- Undersecretary of Higher Education, Ministry of Education of Chile (2016, september). Matrícula 2007 a 2016 (Pregrado y Posgrado) (1,0) [Data sheet xls]. Ministry of Education of Chile. https://www.mifuturo.cl/wp-content/uploads/2018/SIES/informes_anuales/matricula/informe_matricula_2007_a_2016_sies.xlsx.
Author's Affiliation
Roxana Aglaee Rebolledo Font de La Vall1, Fabián Avelino González Araya2, Eugenio Tassara Hoy3
1,2Department of Mathematics, Physics, and Computing, Faculty of Natural and Exact Sciences, University of Playa Ancha.
Avda. Leopoldo Carvallo 270, Playa Ancha, Valparaíso – Chile. Telephone: 56322205518
3Department of Integrated Arts; Faculty of Arts, University of Playa Ancha.
Article Details
- Issue: Vol 02 No 10 (2022): Volume 02 Issue 10 October 2022
- Page No.: 508-511
- Published : 1 October 2022
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.55677/ijssers/V02I10Y2022-02
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Education in Chile: Towards the Virtualization of our Educational Future?. Roxana Aglaee Rebolledo Font de La Vall, Fabián Avelino González Araya, Eugenio Tassara Hoy , 02(10), 508-511. Retrieved from https://ijssers.org/single-view/?id=7412&pid=7405
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International Journal of Social Science and Education Research Studies