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Mobile Learning: A World in Motion. and the “learning2go” with it. adult literacy & computer science Evaluator, EU mlearning Project Conference Chair, mLearn2008 , Ironbridge Board, LSN MoLeNET; Panel, JISC EPED Director, LearningLab Current Projects: Wolverhampton, Africa.
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Mobile Learning: A World in Motion and the “learning2go” with it
adult literacy & computer science • Evaluator, EU mlearning Project • Conference Chair, mLearn2008, Ironbridge • Board, LSN MoLeNET; Panel, JISC EPED • Director, LearningLab • Current Projects: Wolverhampton, Africa
two viewpoints the first viewpoint sees mobile learning from the outside-in and explores the profound impact of pervasive and near-universal mobile technologies across most of the world’s societies and cultures on the nature and at the impact of these on notions of education and learning, and the synergy with new technologiesthe second viewpoint, perhaps inside-out, looks at the growing ability of practitioners, researchers and developers to define the unique contributions that mobile learning, as currently exemplified by pilots and projects globally, can make to diverse groups
mobile learning from the outside-in the first viewpoint
changes/increases in domestic/social use of personal wireless & mobile devices and technologies • relentless marketing and take-up of each new gadget, network, connectivity • new forms of commerce, commodity, employment, crime, artistic expression, political organisation; new artefacts and economic assets
Tony Blair stepped into the mobile phone era when he took part in a live text chat with thousands of callers. After admitting his texting skills were underdeveloped, Mr Blair relied on a team of helpers during the 35-minute forum set up by phone giants O2. • http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/4042963.stm • Nov 2004
SMS Riot: Transmitting Race on Sydney Beach 11 December 2005, as Sydney was settling into early summer haze, there was a race riot on the popular Cronulla beach in the city’s southern suburbs. Hundreds of people, young men especially, gathered for a weekend protest. Their target and pretext were visitors from the culturally diverse suburbs to the west, and the need to defend their women and beaches in the face of such unwelcome incursions and behaviours. In the ensuing days, there were violent raids and assaults criss-crossing back and forth across Sydney’s beaches and suburbs, involving almost farcical yet deadly earnest efforts to identify, respectively, people of “anglo” or “Middle Eastern” appearance (often specifically “Lebanese”) and to threaten or bash them. At the very heart of this state of siege and the fear, outrage, and sadness that gripped those living in Sydney were the politics of transmission. The spark that set off this conflagration was widely believed to have been caused by the transmission of racist and violent “calls to arms” via mobile text messages.
Personal Change • discourse • identity • community
Ever since mobile phone services were introduced in KwaZulu-Natal some parents have named their children after some of the terms used by mobile services providers. According to Home Affairs statistics some of the children born from 1993 when mobile services were introduced in the province (and the rest of SA) have the following names: Network Madondo Subscriber Zulu Nokia Khumalo Siemens Mdlalose Motorola Buthelezi Dial Magubane Vodacom Mkhize Call Later Ndlovu Voicemail Ngobese Simcard Makhathini Scratchcard Mlaba Talktime Luthuli Send Ndebele Paging Nyawose Cellphone Mpungose Message Gumede SMS Mabaso Phonebook Dlamini Ringtone Khoza MTN Shezi Prepaid Zwane Pay as you go Mfeka Please Call Me Cetshwayo Contract Mabaso Charger Ngobese Hands Free Tshabalala Unavailable Masondo Switchoff Mabuza Sim-Rejected Hlongwane Airtime Zwelithini Internet Mthethwa Server Mkhize
Changes to Knowledge access to information, data, knowledge is ….. • easy and convenient • but chunked & structured differently • & consumed differently • anytime/anywhere • just-in-time/just-for-me
It stores tunes and plays your favourite music wherever you go Yes dear, it’s called the Grenadier Guards