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E-learning quality is often approached in terms of content or resources, whereas quality is ultimately dependent on the decisions and behaviours of learning and teaching practitioners and participants. The quality of resources needs to be framed within and guided by an understanding of the broader quality of learning activity. Current quality criteria and evaluation methods may not be appropriate in new situations. Moreover, perception of quality often depends heavily on context and local culture, making the development of wide-ranging quality criteria difficult on a transnational scale.

This second thematic dossier deals with the issue of quality criteria for e-learning following on from presentations and discussions at the Policy and Innovation Committee (PIC) meeting in Birmingham (16–17 October 2005) that took place in conjunction with the first Xchange conference. [download PDF

Insights Thematic Dossiers' is a new feature of the portal which aims to analyse a specific theme thanks to contributions from various experts and EUN policy analysts. The thematic dossiers offer a one-place insight into a specific education-related issue. Other themes will be added in the future and past themes will be archived. We would like to hear your feedback about the new thematic approach of the insight portal, please contact us at insightteam@eun.org.


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This paper and that which follows it are linked. They report two significant and generic contributions to the work of better understanding the pedagogic quality of e-learning. The work has been developed for Becta, the strategic education and communications technology agency for...
Evaluation is key to any form of innovation. There needs to be a proper fit between values and goals and innovation. Evaluation serves to measure whether outcomes correspond to expectations, and to reassure funders and investors that their investment has been worthwhile. Assessing...
This paper follows from the preceding paper on the common quality framework for e-learning. It focuses upon the pedagogic aspects of the framework and articulates a set of ten core principles which express, in an economic and elegant fashion, the underpinning values that can apply...
The Finnish national strategy for education, training and research in the information society has reached its third programme period. The period 2004–2006 emphasises e-learning and improving its accessibility and quality at all levels of education. The Finnish National Board...
This short summary of the paper “A Framework for Quality of Learning Resources”, which appears in European Handbook for Quality [CEDEFOP 2006], looks into the different processes of a typical usage scenario of a digital learning resource (figure 1) and identifies major...
This article(1) starts from the notion that “quality” is not so much a characteristic of a learning object(2), but rather a characteristic of how such an object is used in a particular context. Many facets influence the quality of a learning object in a particular context:...
The Common Evaluation Framework (CEF) aims to assist schools in coming to an objective view of the extent to which ICT is embedded in their practice. The framework covers policy, planning and practice to maximise the potential of ICT to enhance all aspects of a school’s work,...
This paper presents the TRIANGLE project, the European Foundation for Quality in e-learning and focuses on a Special Interest Groups on the Framework for Quality of Learning resources. TRIANGLE is an e-learning programme project founded by the European Commission within the call...