Abstract

PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to make an assessment of the challenges in disseminating higher education to the learners in tribal communities, and problems solving capacity of Open and Distance Learning (ODL) by strategically making use of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) taking a case of Madhya Pradesh (MP), which is the most tribal dominated state of India. The paper offers valuable insight in to the usage of ICT as a strategy for the ODL system presenting an account of how it can be utilized effectively to disseminate higher education in tribal communities.Design/methodology/approachExploratory and descriptive techniques were utilized in this paper adopting the research strategy of case study in terms of the strategic potentialities of ICT in disseminating higher education in tribal communities by ODL using it as a strategy for their empowerment and development.FindingsThe findings of the paper reveal that dissemination of higher education in tribal areas is a challenging task especially due to their socioeconomic conditions and ethno cultural settings in addition to numerous infrastructural and access related issues. In view of the need of integrating education with the Indigenous perspectives, ICT can be used as an effective strategy by ODL for disseminating higher education amongst learners in those communities by reaching out to them.Practical implicationsThis paper concludes that ICT can help ODL immensely in developing countries such as India strategically in reaching the tribal learners surpassing financial and geographical constraints with a learner centric approach increasing the capacity, quality and cost effectiveness of education system bringing the concept of strategy to center stage, at a time when ICT has fundamentally changed the strategies of different sectors including education with the unprecedented growth in its use.Originality/valueThis paper concludes that ICT has fundamentally changed the strategies of different sectors including higher education with the unprecedented growth in its use. It also concludes that Indian higher educational sector faced with multitude of challenges is not insulated from the effect of ICT, and its emancipatory and transformative potentials in higher education can play a major substantive role by extending support to meet the increasing higher educational needs of the tribal communities by sufficiently embedding it so that their greater contributions to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) can be ensured.

Highlights

  • The emergence of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) has fundamentally changed the strategies and practices of businesses and governments but education sector

  • Most of the tribes tend to engage their children for ancillary services that would bring in some added income for their starving families instead of facilitating them to enroll for higher education

  • Dependence of the evolution of traditional knowledge including traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) possessed by tribal communities on the need to feed – clothe–transmit unique values through successive generations over thousands of years can be helpful if greater engagements of tribal communities are enhanced more for climate mitigation and adaptation actions while attempting to meet the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) related to education, equity, equality, inclusiveness and partnerships with the effective use of ICT eliminating constraints and enhancing access and capacity in the era of knowledge and technology-based economy (Kant, 2020)

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Summary

Paper type Case study

© Subash Ranjan Nayak, Nikhil Kant and Kumari Anjali. Published in Asian Association of Open Universities Journal. The full terms of this licence may be seen at http:// creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode

Introduction
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