Policy and Programs Institutional policy
In distance education systems institutional policy provides the basis for almost all activities associated with providing education and training to students. These policies are normally framed within national or regional policies and an institutional mandate or mission. But the policies that govern an institution's relationships with its main components-faculty and students, for example-are usually established by the institution itself, as in conventional education. Such policies must recognize that the nature of distance education-with the physical gap between an institution and its students-often necessitates a view of teaching and learning and of supporting activities that is very different from that adopted by conventional institutions.

A key to ensuring that mandates or missions are carried out and that institutional policies are implemented is development of a strategic plan. This plan becomes one of the primary instruments of institutional policy and provides the framework for allocating and managing resources and accommodating institutional change and development.

Discussions of institutional policy issues need to address such questions as these:

See Related South African Quality Criteria:

More Resources:

ZINADOL. 1997. Constitution of the Zimbabwe National Association for Distance and Open Learning

Zimbabwe Open University (no date) The Mission of the Open University

ZINADOL. 1998. Zimbabwe National Association for Distance and Open Learning (ZINADOL). Fact Sheet no. 1. March 1998.

Magagula, C.M. 1997. The establishment of the Institute of Distance Education at the University of Swaziland.

Dodds, T. 1996. The University of Namibia for the People of Namibia: A Vision of Development for the Centre for External Studies.

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