enabling flexible learning with mobile and wireless technologies - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 29
About This Presentation
Title:

enabling flexible learning with mobile and wireless technologies

Description:

overview of issues for institutions to consider when using mobile and wireless ... Foldable keyboards are essential for written reflections ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:83
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 30
Provided by: johntr4
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: enabling flexible learning with mobile and wireless technologies


1
enabling flexible learning with mobile and
wireless technologies
  • John Traxler
  • University of Wolverhampton

2
overview of issues for institutions to consider
when using mobile and wireless technologies to
support more flexible learning
3
based on
  • JISC Landscape Study on the use of mobile and
    wireless technologies for learning and teaching
    in the post-16 sector
  • Mobile Learning A Handbook for Educators and
    Trainers
  • Both with Agnes Kukulska-Hulme of IET, OU

4
PSPs
5
PSPs
Project started April 2003 Roger Kneebone Harry
Brenton
6
PSPs at Imperial
  • A new role, the Perioperative Specialist
    Practitioner (PSP), will expand the surgical
    team, providing preoperative/ postoperative care
    through the patients journey.
  • PSPs will become key surgical team members,
    providing continuity of care. Work will include
  • Preoperative assessment
  • Communication with patients and their relatives
  • Performing procedures
  • Recognising and managing routine postoperative
    problems
  • Calling for help when necessary
  • Managing discharge process
  • Teaching members of the surgical team

7
PSPs at Imperial
  • The majority of PSPs had not used a PDA before
    the project
  • Participants like using PDAs, but only if they
    save time
  • Foldable keyboards are essential for written
    reflections
  • Current technical problems in activity logging
    are a significant obstacle to everyday use
  • Ready access to medical reference material would
    be valued
  • From observation and interview studies

8
Using Personal Digital Assistants to Support
Students
9
the issues
  • non-traditional students
  • parents, mature, no formal qualifications
  • unused to higher education
  • substantial part-time work
  • attendance and performance at-risk
  • personal information management skills
  • complexity of mass HE
  • rooming
  • modularity
  • timetabling

10
handheld computers
  • because
  • performance/ functionality
  • memory/ speed/ battery
  • build quality/ reliability
  • image/ style
  • leisure/ entertainment
  • preloaded applications
  • software costs and choice
  • And SONY sponsored us!

11
smartphones at Sussex
  • SMILE Project
  • Sussex Mobile Interactive Learning Environment
  • Sussex University COGS
  • course Interactive Learning Environments
  • students
  • 19 third-yr u/g, 9 p/g students
  • Rose Lucking et al

12
smartphones at Sussex
  • O2 XDA with full Internet access
  • MS Office, email, browser, logging, GPRS, yahoo
    group, QuickTime, media player
  • based on conversational theory

13
smartphones at Sussex
  • Students logged onto course web-site at normal
    lecture time and followed PowerPoint presentation
  • used interactive polls
  • joined online discussion
  • Issues (from feedback)
  • ownership
  • reliability
  • ergonomic
  • functionality

14
mobile learning
  • any educational provision where the sole or
    dominant technologies are handheld or palmtop
    devices
  • including mobile phones, smartphones, personal
    digital assistants (PDAs) and their peripherals
  • not stable, no consensus, too technocentric

15
mobile learning
  • mobile learning is technology supported learning
  • spontaneous, personal, portable, lightweight,
    situated, bite-sized, unobtrusive, disruptive,
    ubiquitous, informal, pervasive
  • constrained, minimal, primitive
  • costs differently

16
mobile learning
e-learning
PC
m-learning
MMS
Tablet PC
laptop
SMS
PDA
smartphone
17
mobile learning
a new paradigm???
e-learning
intelligent
personalised
interactive
media-rich
m-learning
institutional
structured
spontaneous
multimedia
usable
?
situated
portable
massive
hyper-linked
context-aware
lightweight
accessible
informal
personal
connected
18
mobile learning modes
usability
PC
laptop
PDA
latency
connectivity
SMS
19
mobile learning modes
Based on Code of Practice for the assurance of
academic quality and standards in higher
education Collaborative provision, and
flexible and distributed learning (including
e-learning)
predominantly FDL e-modes
predominantly f2f modes
cohort learners
on-site learning
off-site learners
lone learners
20
mobile learning - pedagogies
  • supports a range of
  • conceptions of teaching
  • styles of learning
  • has a range of affordances
  • depending on institution, curriculum, devices,
    costs etc
  • deserving a place in the blend
  • uniquely enables situated learning
  • exploits dead time

21
strategic issues - overview
  • those issues that the mobile learning community
    must address if mobile learning is to become
    viable on a large-scale sustainable basis
  • issues governed by
  • Resources
  • ie finance
  • Culture
  • ie organisation, its practices, values and
    procedures
  • Organisational change
  • does technology-based change in HE/FE differ from
    other organisational change?
  • does mobile/wireless-based change in HE/FE differ
    from other technology-based change?

22
strategic issues - overview
  • implies parity with other forms of provision and
    delivery in terms of
  • costs, funding, resourcing
  • quality, validation
  • reliability
  • scaling and sustaining
  • monitoring and evaluation
  • legal expectations

23
strategic issues - resourcing
  • projects
  • fixed-term/small-scale access to funds
  • perhaps refine or answer research questions
  • part of institutional project economy
  • niches
  • small-scale but sustainable
  • specific subjects
  • eg nursing, TP
  • specific pedagogies
  • fieldwork
  • particular constituencies
  • eg EO, assistivity, WP, full-cost added-value

24
strategic issues possible trends
  • Popular, retail and commercial markets driving
    mobile device design and pricing
  • Education appropriating/adapting mobile devices
  • intended for commercial, business, leisure
    markets
  • Slowly increasing urban and campus connectivity
  • favouring laptops over PDAs and phones

25
strategic overview possible trends
  • Institutional caution on mobile learning with
    PDAs
  • SENDA, usability
  • network security
  • diversity/fluidity of devices, platforms and
    systems
  • lack of staff expertise
  • interoperability with VLEs, portals,
    e-Portfolios, learning objects
  • procurement, maintenance, ownership issues

26
strategic overview possible trends
  • PDAs in education squeezed by
  • smarter phones (PIM functions, universal
    ownership),
  • USB sticks (content delivery, cheap),
  • laptops (wireless connectivity, reformist
    technology)

27
strategic overview possible trends
  • SMS breaking through to institutional/large-scale
    use,
  • assuming tariffs stable
  • operators trying to develop GPRS, MMS and 3G
    markets (and recoup licence fees)
  • increasing but unsupported PDA use by academic
    staff but possibly even greater laptop usage (and
    home-working)
  • continued concern about cost issues, working day,
    stress

28
strategic overview possible trends
  • continued difficulties funding second-generation
    pilots or large-scale trials with PDAs in FE/HE
  • eg across institutions, across subjects
  • inclusion arguments for funding mobile
    technologies gaining some ground in HE/FE
  • WP, EO, SENDA etc
  • retention

29
Thanks for your attention
  • Questions and Reactions?
  • John Traxler
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com