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Putting Learning in Student Pockets: The Case for Mobile Learning. Berlin Fang Luke Hartman H eartland Conference March, 2010. If Mobile learning is the answer, what is the question?. The ME-Generation Mobile+Electronic. Mobile workforce. Jesus taught anywhere, anytime.
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Putting Learning in Student Pockets:The Case for Mobile Learning Berlin Fang Luke Hartman Heartland ConferenceMarch, 2010
Academic value for students 97% of our students (N=428) think that having a laptop is useful for them academically.
Problems with restrictive approaches • “An Apple [the computer] a day keeps professors away” : Professor vs. Laptop? • “Innovator, early adopter, early majority, late majority, my professor” • “I don’t trust you can put learning in your own hands”
Delicious distraction “Historically accumulating structural tensions within and between activity systems…generate disturbances and conflicts, but also innovative attempts to change the activity.” Jyri Engestrom University of Helsinki
Medium Message Method
Tool Subject Object Outcome Community Division of Labor Rule Anatomy of an activity
How not to integrate mobile technology • Failing to motivate • Creating fear of job security • Having a bad introduction • Taking vendor promises too literally • Leaving technology take charge • Failing to adapt to change • Having technology dominate teaching
Integration into the classroom • Motivate learners • Organize content • Be the model • Institute rules • Leverage tools • Evaluate results
Inclusive approaches:Contract with Students “If your cellular phone is heard by the class, you are responsible for completing one of two options: 1. Before the end of the class period you will sing a verse and chorus of any song of your choice or, 2. You will lead the next class period through a 10-minute discussion on a topic to be determined by the end of the class. (To the extent that there are multiple individuals in violation, duets will be accepted).”
References • Brown, J. (2010). Can You Hear Me Now? [Article]. T+D, 64(2), 28-30. • Cole, M. and Engeström, Y. “A Cultural-Historical Approach to Distributed Cognition,” in Distributed Cognitions, Psychological and Educational Considerations, Gavriel Salomon, ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993), pp. 1–46. • Fang, B. (2009). From Distraction to Engagement: Wireless Devices in the Classroom. Educause Quarterly, 32(4). • Li, J . (2007). Red Flag Canal Winding through Mountains (Photograph): People’s Net. • Murph, D. (2010a). OU professor submerses laptop in liquid nitrogen, smashes it to prove a point. Engadget. • Murph, D. (2010b). VTech launches kid-friendly MobiGo handheld gaming system, Flip e-reader • 互动百科. (2010). Gun (鲧)
THANK YOU Berlin Fang Berlin.fang@oc.edu Luke Hartman Luke.hartman@oc.edu Oklahoma Christian University