Abstract

Distance education in Brazil has evolved more slowly than distance education offerings in other developing countries. This is because all aspects of Brazil’s publicly-funded educational system are excessively regulated, highly bureaucratic, and tightly centralized. Such highly centralized bureaucracy and strict control has resulted in tremendous hurdles that work to thwart the adoption, provision, and diffusion of distance education. This is not good news: Like many developing countries, Brazil is also characterized by wide gaps in wealth distribution, with 20 percent of its population functionally illiterate and living below the poverty line. Distance education, therefore, could be used to help train Brazil’s citizens. Brazil’s emerging status in the global economy, however, is generating enormous opportunities that are fueling demand for change. For example, in their quest to be competitive in the emerging global economy, Brazil’s corporate sector has addressed this challenge by establishing corporate universities to train and educate their employees; much of this corporate training and education takes place online and at a distance. The established and emerging educational opportunities provided by Brazil’s corporate sector, in turn, is fuelling the demand for the provision of distance education throughout Brazil. Indeed, most Brazilians are ready for distance education. Many Brazilian households own television sets and cellular telephones, and its expanding communication infrastructure has capacity to support distance and continuing education models. Moreover, this capacity is currently being used by Brazil’s rapidly expanding corporate university sector. In spite of Brazil’s emergence in the global marketplace and its private-sector educational success stories, Brazil’s public educational institutions have not kept pace. This is due to Brazil’s long-standing stringent regulation of its public education sector. Recent public initiatives, however, such as the Open University of Brazil, do hold promise in fueling the growth of distance education to meet the needs of its citizens, poor and rich alike. This paper analyzes the evolution of distance education in Brazil. It explores interrelationship between the nation’s corporate and publicly-funded higher-education sectors, and the influences Brazil’s highly regulated distance education practices has on the corporate environment. The paper concludes with a broad-brushed overview of ‘success stories’ of Brazil’s corporate universities.

Highlights

  • Brazil is the largest country in South America and the fifth largest country in the world (National Geographic, 2007)

  • In spite of all the challenges currently facing Brazil, its economy currently surpasses those of all other South American nations

  • This paper provides examples of distance education in Brazil, and draws parallels from both the public and private educational sectors to illustrate its argument

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Summary

Introduction

Brazil is the largest country in South America and the fifth largest country in the world (National Geographic, 2007). Brazil’s current population is approximately 190 million; 68 percent are between the ages of 15 to 64 years (The World Fact Book, 2007). The period is marked by a constitutional democracy, where presidents from the two major agricultural South Eastern states of Minas Gerais and São Paulo would alternate in power It was time of major economic dependence on mono-agriculture cycles, such as rubber and coffee, where the “colonel” – that is the landowner – was the main prominent and influential figure. In spite of Brazil’s economic emergence in the global economy and related economic growth, there remain wide gaps in income distribution; Brazil currently has a Gini index of almost 60i (The World Fact Book, 2007). One of the greatest challenges facing Brazil is that a significant portion of its citizens are illiterate and live below the poverty line In spite of this apparent “digital divide,” Litto (2002a) predicted that because. This paper provides examples of distance education in Brazil, and draws parallels from both the public and private educational sectors to illustrate its argument

Education in Brazil
Brazilian Distance Education
Findings
Conclusions
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