Abstract :
Proponents have marketed e-learning by focusing on its adoption as the right
thing to do while disregarding, among other things, the concerns of the potential
users, the adverse effects on users and the existing research on the use of
e-learning or related innovations. In this paper, the e-learning-adoption proponents
are referred to as the technopositivists. It is argued that most of the
technopositivists in the higher education context are driven by a personal
agenda, with the aim of propagating a technopositivist ideology to stakeholders.
The technopositivist ideology is defined as a ‘compulsive enthusiasm’ about
e-learning in higher education that is being created, propagated and channelled
repeatedly by the people who are set to gain without giving the educators
the time and opportunity to explore the dangers and rewards of e-learning
on teaching and learning. Ten myths on e-learning that the technopositivists
have used are presented with the aim of initiating effective and constructive
dialogue, rather than merely criticising the efforts being made